Jerusalem Post 
 
 
 
 
Israel,  India look to hi-tech 
as trade ties expand 
By DAVID ROSENBERG /  THE MEDIA LINE 
06/02/2011  15:01 

Two countries aim  to marry Israeli innovation with India’s vast manpower 
through trade and  economic cooperation. 


 
 
Israeli and Indian  industry associations signed a memorandum of 
understating on Wednesday aimed at  spurring cross-border innovation and 
entrepreneurship, as the two countries add  high technology to their growing 
network of 
trade and economic  cooperation.

While bilateral trade has grown exponentially, the agreement  between the 
Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), the country’s biggest trade  
association, and the _Israel_ (http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Israel)  High 
Tech  
Industries Association, is unusual in that it focuses on technology.  The  
Indian state of _Andhra Pradesh_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Andhra_Pradesh) , home to the  up-and-coming 
software center of Hyderbad, is close 
to signing  a pact with Israel’s Matimop, a government agency that 
facilitates multinational  research and development ventures.

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High  tech is important to both countries, but their industries are very 
different.  India is focused on software services -- writing code and 
operating systems for  other companies. The National Association of Software & 
Services Cos  (NASSCOM) forecasts will post exports of as much as $70 billion 
in 
the year to  March 2012. The Israeli industry is much smaller but more 
diverse, and focuses  on developing cutting-edge software, telecommunications 
and 
medicine. Exports in  2010 were about $29 billion.

Industry executives see potential to marry  Israel’s innovative prowess 
with India’s huge and talented pool of human  resources.

“There’s a complementary software story.  Indian firms are entirely 
process orientated and Israel firms are much more  about product,” Naushad 
Forbes, 
director of India’s Forbes Marshall and chairman  of CII’s Innovation 
Council, told The Media Line. “If we put those two together,  we can be 
unbeatable worldwide.”

Israel is trying to manage the shifting  balance of world economic power. 
Countries like China and India post faster  growth and present more 
intriguing markets than the older and slower economies  of Europe and the US, 
which 
have been the biggest markets for Israel’s  export-heavy economy. Closer 
trade and business ties also strengthens Israel’s  political standing in the 
global community.

Starting at $200 million  annually when diplomatic relations were 
established in 1992, trade between  Israel and India ballooned to $4.7 billion 
mark 
last year when India vaulted  into second place among Israel’s export 
markets. This does not include defense  sales which are reportedly over $1 
billion 
annually. In the first  quarter of this year the level of trade plummeted to 
just $336 million, the  Israel Export Institute reported on Wednesday, but 
industry figures and  government officials are hopeful that growth will 
resume.

The two  countries are negotiating a free-trade-area agreement (FTA) that 
will remove  barriers to trade. In addition to the agreement with Andhra 
Pradesh, Israel is  negotiating bilateral accords with two other Indian states. 
In March, Israel’s  Finance and Industry Ministries allocated 100 million 
shekels ($29 million) to  promote trade with China and India.

Much of the trade until now has been  focused on defense, where increased 
arms spending has created a natural market  for Israel military technology 
like unmanned pilotless vehicles (UPVs) and early  airborne radar systems. 
These ties will likely deepen because of an Indian  requirement that local 
components account for 30% of any contract, said Forbes.  That will require 
Israeli companies to outsource or set up manufacturing in  India.

Ties between Israeli and Indian technology companies are just  starting, 
but they will likely involve more than sales. Companies will benefit  mostly 
from combining Israeli innovation with India’s vast low-cost  manpower.

“Israeli companies are already operating in India. We can learn  from each 
other. There is a tremendous opportunity for collaboration and joint  
ventures,” Shri Sachin Pilot, the Indian minister of state for communications  
and 
information technology, said in Jerusalem.  

Andhra Pradesh is  already a high tech powerhouse, with software exports 
last year of $8 billion,  equal to half the state’s total. But Ajay Misra, 
principal secretary to the  state’s Information Technology and Communication 
Department, said India had  ambitions to expand out of software into computer 
and telecommunications  hardware. Israeli innovation could help, he said.

“That’s our next step,”  he told The Media Line. “We’ve achieved a lot in 
the software and service  sector, but in hardware we haven’t done anything 
on a big scale.” 

In a  taste of the kind of tie-ups that may be on the way, last 
Bangalore-based Tejas  Networks, _India's_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/India)  
largest  domestic telecom manufacturing company, is planning to acquire Ethos 
Networks,  an Israel-based high-technology company specializing in carrier 
Ethernet and network-management products. Tejas now uses the Ethos team as 
an  Israeli R&D center.

Steven Katz, a principal at the Israeli high  technology investor, Vertex 
Venture Capital, said Israeli companies could also  benefit from closer ties 
with India. But, he cautioned, managers will have to be  careful about when 
and how they do it. It is critical that the most innovative  parts of any 
new technology, where Israel’s comparative advantage lies, be  developed at 
home.

“Once you [the company] get to a certain size and you  need to build a new 
software module and you need 20 engineers, that’s when you  can perform the 
development there,” Katz told The Media Line. “But the  creativity and 
ingenuity should stay in  Israel.”


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