India-Australia relationship set to grow
Australians would like to export agriculture, manufacturing products, technology, education services to India and connect with the country’s stakeholders post COVID19.
Stating this, A. Gitesh Sarma, the Indian High Commissioner in Canberra (picture above), shared his views of the India-Australia trade potential.
He affirmed that India is the flavor of the season for Australians who want to do serious business with the Indians.
The envoy addressed the PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s Webinar on “India – Australia Business Promotion, Challenges, and Opportunities – Post-COVID 19” on 6 May 2020.
Likewise, PHDCCI aim to foster international relations in social, cultural and economic fields where enterprises, government, and international organizations interact to promote and strengthen cooperation, added Saurabh Sanyal, Secretary-General, PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
In the coming years, the overall relationship between India and Australia will continue to grow and it has the potential to assume greater prominence, Sanyal added.
The India-Australia bilateral relationship has undergone an evolution in recent years, developing along a positive track, into a friendly partnership, said Ajay Poddar, Chairman, International Affairs Committee for ASEAN, East Asia, and Oceania, PHDCCI.
Poddar gave insights about India-Australia’s relationship in terms of economics, exports and imports, trade, education, and many more.
The prospects for bilateral relationships are recognized in both countries as strategically useful, economically productive, and aligned with each other’s new agenda.
The several commonalities and closely aligned values in principles of democracy, liberty, the rule of law, human rights, freedom of speech, free press, and multiculturalism serve as a foundation for a closer co-operation, multifaceted interaction, and enhancement of bilateral relationship said Poddar. fiinews.com