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Indian American in charge of Wall St bailout effort

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Posted: Oct 07, 2008 at 1637 hrs IST
Neel Kashkari image

Surabhi & Vikas Dhoot

New Delhi, October 7: US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has put an Indian American of Kashmiri origin in charge of the George Bush administration's $700-billion rescue effort for distressed financial institutions.

Neel Kashkari, 35, has been an advisor to Paulson since 2006 and was promoted to the post of second assistant secretary of the Treasury for international affairs this July, on the personal nomination of Bush.

In the six months that he has been appointed for, Kashkari had expected to zero in on a number of initiatives critical to ensuring US and global economic strength. “I look forward to reaffirming America’s commitment to open investment - which stimulates growth, creates jobs, enhances productivity and improves competitiveness,” he had said at the time of his appointment.

With US financial behemoths tumbling one after another over the last month, Kashkari’s stated role puts him in the spotlight of the American political economy with elections a month away and taxpayers crying foul about Main Street bailing out Wall Street.

His investment banking experience prior to joining the Bush administration, where he executed financial and strategic transactions had prepared him adequately for the treasury job. Kashkari was a vice president at Goldman Sachs and Co. in San Francisco where he headed the IT security investment banking practice and also advised companies on mergers and acquisitions and financial transactions.

Advising US and international companies on both debt and equity financing, global mergers and acquisitions, and coaching management teams and boards of directors had lent him a “first-hand insight into the challenges that US companies face as they strive to access markets abroad, while also competing with global players here at home,” Kashkari had said.

Pulling off the Paulson rescue act to everyone’s satisfaction will keep his hands full in coming weeks and months, but Kashkari has actively worked on matters relating to India in his treasury stint till date.

For the Indo-US bilateral investment treaty that has been under discussion for a while now, he was one of the key US negotiators.

At his confirmation hearing, Kashkari had told the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs that since joining the treasury in July 2006, he had led several policy initiatives, including “promoting Indian financial sector liberalisation and free trade through strengthened economic engagement and increased infrastructure investment.”

The Akron, Ohio-born Kashkari, originally hails from Kashmir. His father, Chaman Kashkari, is a retired professor of engineering at the University of Akron while mother Sheila is a pathologist.

Kashkari is an alumnus of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business, where he received his MBA in finance. He has also earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

He has worked as R&D Principal Investigator at TRW in Redondo Beach, California, where he developed technology for NASA space science missions. He went to Wharton after this stint.

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He is a person of Indian origin and not an Indian American! by Rajdeep on 07 Oct 2008

I dont understand why I should be proud or notice this guy's story. Yes, he is successful, if that is of some 'inspiration' then cover that, dont masquerade his success as a success of something Indian. If we need to learn anythning from his story it is to see how anyone can succeed in the US, unlike in India where we are riven by so many divisions with everyone engaged in pulling the others down.Please stop covering such stories, rather look for the success stories in India and see how they are made, the obstacles that have to be overcome here etc.

Proud Parents of Kashmir by GLN on 07 Oct 2008

Chaman Kashkari and Sheila Kashkari ,the proud Parents of Neel kashkari are eye openers for the entire Jammu

USA And India by Ramachandran on 07 Oct 2008

So, is it going to be United States Of India in the west....and America in the east? Ah! yes, the world is a globe and east and west are relative ain't it?? :)Being an Indian, I'm not proud - PS reporter: he's either an Indian or an American - not an Indian-American. Again, the positive of calling him an Indian American is the fact that it unrecognizes America as a country - that it is a conglomerate of 'aliens' (as they themselves would call it) :) - so upto you to call this guy whatever you want. But would that guy agree to it?? :)

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