Modi has a chance to redefine Indian politics: US think tanks
Washington: Describing the Narendra Modi-led BJP's electoral
victory as a "breathtaking landslide", eminent American think tanks and
experts have said the win has given him an opportunity to "redefine"
Indian politics. "This is a breathtaking landslide that is a victory not
only for Modi but for the Indian people who have spoken out clearly
against economic mismanagement and policy paralysis," said Ashley Tellis
of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
"Hopefully, Modi's election will open new doors for correcting
the problems in the Indian economy, and if so, that is good news for
US-Indian relations. But Washington still has much work to do before it
can translate what may be welcome news for US business into better
bilateral relations," he noted.
"A single party with an absolute majority gives Modi the
opportunity to re-define Indian politics in a way that the Congress did
for many decades before. And if Modi sticks to his winning formula...he
could remain India's Prime Minister for a long time to come," Tellis
said.
The US business can expect a more stable, friendly environment and will be quick to grow, said Richard Rossow.
The US business can expect a more stable, friendly environment and
will be quick to grow, said Richard Rossow, the Wadhwani Chair in
US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies. "Lots of potential direct investment has been on the sidelines
in the last few years, hoping for a more friendly business environment,"
he said.
"Institutional investors have already been jumping back into
India, with the expectation of a BJP victory. But it is unclear if the
BJP will roll back some of the specific policies (tax, patents, local
manufacturing mandates) that have angered a vocal minority of US
companies," Rossow said.
However, Rossow said the government-to-government relations will
start slowly, particularly those involving the US Department of State,
due to the visa denial hangover. "But we can expect a renewed interest
in defense collaborations, combined with renewed business interests,
which will, once again, drag the US government's attention back toward
India," he said.
Former diplomat couple Teresita and Howard Schaffer, said, "the
'Modi wave' reflects both aspirations and intense disaffection with the
ineffectiveness the Congress government displayed in its second term.
Expectations are high; meeting them will be an unusually great
challenge." "Government decisions can have a great impact on India's
economy but some sticky structural features may not be possible to fix
with short term administrative measures," they said.
Russell Green, the Will Clayton Fellow in International Economics
at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy and an adjunct
assistant professor of economics at Rice, said, "Modi's election victory
in India will be interpreted as a big win for the economy."
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