Extraordinary And Plenipotentiary Diplomatist diplomatist vol-7 Issue -9 sep 2019 | Page 12

SPECIAL REPORT popular tourist destination is bound to be fruitful. Investments in popular Indian style Ayurveda/ Yoga / Wellness centres in these hotels could really to cater to the rising demand for such services. Instructors can train local practitioners, which will, in turn, make these centres acceptable. Investments: India’s foreign direct investment to the Caribbean is also generally on the rise though it has seen a moderate decline between 2011 and 2017. However, that is mostly due to the fall in FDI to British Virgin and Cayman islands, associate members of CARICOM. Of the total investments to Latin America and the Caribbean, 70 percent had gone to the British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands alone in 2011, (ECLAC 2011, 44). From April 2011 to November 2017, 46% of the Indian investments went to British Virgin Islands accounting for the largest share among the LAC countries. The total investments between April 2011 to November 2017 in the Bahamas mostly in the construction sector was about US$ 163 million. In the same period, India invested a total amount of about US$ 17.6 million mostly in agriculture and mining in Guyana (Exim Bank of India, 2018, 13). Thus, there is also a change in the sectoral composition of these investments which have shifted towards agriculture and mining. For India, the Caribbean is strategically located for entry into the Latin American market. That is an added advantage that India should not forego. Financial and technical assistance: India signed a contribution agreement with the CARICOM Development Fund (CDF) in January 2019, about ten years after its creation in 2008. India has agreed to grant US$ one million to the CDF’s capital fund. This makes India a development partner of CARICOM. CDF’s directive is to give fi nancial and technical assistance to countries or sectors within the Caribbean Community in areas such as the development of renewable energy or increasing energy effi ciency; providing physical infrastructure to encourage investments and trade; encouraging small and medium enterprises and developing human resources. India had put in a donation of US $ fi ve million to help Haiti reconstruct itself after the disastrous earthquake of 2010. In software and information technology, the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme (ITEC) is one of the prongs of the Development Partnership Administration established in 2012 in the Ministry of External Aff airs, India. Government of India put in US$ 1.166 million worth of information technology and communication infrastructure and computer software at the CARICOM Secretariat in 2005-2006. A few slots for ITEC courses are reserved annually for the CARICOM members. India can also assist in increasing off shore medical centres, pharmaceutical manufacturing, including the supply of anti-retroviral drugs for fi ghting HIV/AIDS. Having the advantage of a sizeable Indian diasporic community in the region along with the natural complementarities of products for trade with the region, this is the right time for closer cooperation and exploring further avenues for interaction for India—both bilateral and multilateral—based on multiple areas of mutual interests and concerns with the CARICOM countries.  References: Export-Import Bank of India, Indian Investments in Latin America and Caribbean: Trends and Prospects, Working Paper No. 75, March 2018. Export-Import Bank of India, Caribbean Community (CARICOM): A Study Of India’s Trade and Investment Potential, Occasional Paper No. 144, January 2011. Ministry of External Aff airs, Government of India, Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme, URL website: https://www.itecgoi.in/index.php. Accessed on 31 August 2019. Singh, Priti and Raymond Izarali, The Contemporary Caribbean: Issues and Challenges (New Delhi: Shipra Publications, 2013). * Author is Chairperson & Associate Professor, Centre for Canadian, US & Latin American Studies, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. 12 • Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 7 • Issue 9 • September 2019, Noida