Sunday, January 23, 2011

Samalkot on Obama’s strategic map

United States President Barack Obama had gained some notoriety for his administration’s sometimes strident views on jobs moving from “Buffalo to Bangalore.” Now the President’s oratory has given birth to a new and more positive sound bite in the realm of strategic geography: “Samalkot to Schenectady”

At a speech in Schenectady, New York, this week Mr. Obama mentioned the small Andhra Pradesh town and industrial complex venue no fewer than five times.

And unlike the references to American jobs getting “Bangalored,” a regular feature of the Obama speeches of 2010, the President struck an optimistic note on the role of U.S.-India commercial relations in spurring domestic job creation.

Speaking about his November 2010 visit to India at a plant of electric goods major General Electric Mr. Obama said, “Part of the reason I wanted to come to this plant is because this plant is what that trip was all about.”

He went on to explain that during that visit U.S. businesses were able to reach agreements on exporting over $10 billion in goods and services to India, and that was, according to him, expected to lead to 50,000 jobs created in the U.S.

Mr. Obama supplied some details of the Samalkot-GE deal in particular, noting that “As part of the deal we struck in India, GE is going sell advanced turbines -- the ones you guys make -- to generate power at a plant in Samalkot, India.”

He quipped, “Most of you hadn’t heard of Samalkot but now you need to know about it, because you’re going to be selling to Samalkot, India.”

“That new business halfway around the world is going to help support more than 1,200 manufacturing jobs and more than 400 engineering jobs right here in this community -- because of that sale,” he added, to loud applause.

More broadly this and other recent speeches by Obama administration officials appear to point to a renewed emphasis on U.S. exports and job creation, said to be a top policy priority for 2011. This was a point that Mr. Obama further underscored in his Schenectady speech, when he said, the Samalkot agreement was a “perfect example of why promoting exports is so important.”

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