Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is expected to announce a plan to invest 5 trillion yen ($42 billion) in India over the next five years during his visit to the country on Saturday, according to a media report.
The 5 trillion yen goal exceeds the 3.5 trillion yen in investment and financing over the five years that the then Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced during his 2014 visit to India, Japan’s Nikkei newspaper reported.
Japan is currently supporting India’s urban infrastructure development and a high-speed railway based on Japan’s shinkansen bullet train technology.
Prime Minister Mr Kishida is due to reveal the public-private funding during an economic forum. The prominent business newspaper said that he is expected to pledge investment growth in value and an increase in Japanese companies expanding into India.
Mr Kishida is also poised to agree to an approximately 300 billion yen loan during his meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. An energy cooperation document concerning carbon reduction is expected to be signed between the two sides.
During Saturday’s public-private forum, Mr Kishida is also expected to express his support to further infrastructure development in India to draw Japanese companies to build factories, the paper said.
India represents the first leg of the Japanese PM’s three-day tour. He is scheduled to visit Cambodia on Sunday to meet with Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Japan and India are party to the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, a security framework known as the Quad that includes the US and Australia. Cambodia serves as this year’s Association of Southeast Asian Nations chair.
Mr Kishida plans to confirm the strengthening of security arrangements with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in mind.
In 2020, Japan and India signed an acquisition and cross-servicing agreement, which allows for reciprocal provisions of food, fuel and other supplies between the Indian Army and Japan’s Self-Defense Forces. The paper said Mr Kishida and Mr Modi are to reaffirm that they will push that deal forward.
Mr Kishida and Mr Modi are expected to agree to convene a two-plus-two meeting between the two countries’ diplomatic and defence chiefs at an early date.
This will be the Japanese PM’s first overseas trip as prime minister since he travelled to Great Britain in November.
Mr Kishida, 64, has been the president of the Liberal Democratic Party since 2021.