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India and the United States took steps to deepen cooperation on technology and artificial intelligence at a high-level roundtable in Silicon Valley this past week, as officials and industry leaders focused on moving faster from strategy to execution.
The closed-door event, convened by the Consulate General of India in San Francisco in collaboration with NASSCOM, brought together senior technology executives, venture capitalists and academic experts from both countries. The session was titled “India-U.S. Technology Partnership: From Strategic Intent to Execution.”
Participants discussed how artificial intelligence is reshaping global trade, labor markets and the Indo-U.S. technology corridor, according to a media release.
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Speakers said AI represents a structural shift in the global economy. They stressed the need for closer coordination among government, industry and academia to ensure growth is inclusive and sustainable, according to a media release.
The NASSCOM delegation was in the San Francisco Bay Area under the NASSCOM U.S. CEO Forum program. It included Rajesh Nambiar, president of NASSCOM; Shivendra Singh, vice president for global trade development; and Mayank Gautam, director for global trade development. Executives from 12 major Indian technology firms also attended, including Infosys, Cognizant, HCL and Nagarro.
India’s consul general in San Francisco, Dr. K. Srikar Reddy, linked the technology discussions to broader geopolitical and economic developments. He referred to the announcement of a finalized India-U.S. trade agreement and India’s upcoming role as host of a global AI summit.
Reddy said the trade deal reduces U.S. tariffs on Indian goods from 50 percent to 18 percent. India will also eliminate or reduce tariffs on U.S. products. He said the agreement is expected to boost bilateral trade and help reach a target of $500 billion in goods and services trade by 2030. That target was set by leaders of both countries in February 2025.
Nambiar highlighted the growing role of Indian technology companies in global digital transformation. He pointed to their contribution to innovation, economic growth and job creation in the United States. He also noted the challenges and opportunities created by generative AI for future cooperation between Indian and U.S. firms.
Speakers said India’s technology sector is a significant contributor to the U.S. economy. Participants cited estimates that Indian tech companies support hundreds of thousands of jobs and contribute about $103 billion to U.S. gross domestic product.
The discussion was moderated by MR Rangaswami, founder of Indiaspora. It focused on the future of Indian IT services and software-as-a-service firms in an AI-driven environment. Participants called for business model changes, workforce reskilling and a shift toward outcome-based, AI-enabled service delivery.
The roundtable also emphasized a “triple helix” approach involving government, industry and academia. Participants said future skills planning, workforce transitions and curriculum updates are critical to keeping pace with rapid technological change.
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