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GES 2017: Put Indian women entrepreneurs first
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Frank F. Islam | 27 Nov, 2017
On November 28-30 in Hyderabad, India and the US will jointly host the
Global Entrepreneurship Summit. This is the eighth annual summit which
was the brainchild of former US President Barack Obama. It has been held
in other locations such as Istanbul, Dubai and Silicon Valley. The
theme for this year's Summit is "Women First, Prosperity for All".
The
Summit provides India and Hyderabad an excellent opportunity to
showcase the exceptional progress and achievements that have been made
by Indian entrepreneurs in a number of areas such as information
technology, media and entertainment, and health-care and life sciences.
It
also provides the chance to call attention to the fact that there is a
need to do much more in India in order to put Indian women entrepreneurs
first.
The Modi administration has placed some emphasis on women entrepreneurs.
For
example, in April, the administration launched a Stand-up India scheme
which provides loans from Rs 10 lakh ($15,500) to Rs 1 crore to women
entrepreneurs and entrepreneurs from the scheduled castes and scheduled
tribes (SC/ST). The Stand-up India programme is projected to reach up to
250,000 borrowers.
The question is: What percentage of those
borrowers will be women entrepreneurs? This is a central question
because there is a dearth of women entrepreneurs in India and various
studies have shown that women entrepreneurs in the country are among the
most disadvantaged in the world.
In spite of an increase of
women business owners and operators over the past several years,
entrepreneurship still remains a male bastion in India. A recent study
by the National Sample Survey Organisation found that only 14 per cent
of Indian business establishments are run by females. The same study
disclosed that most of the women-run businesses -- 79 per cent -- were
self-financed.
These are bothersome findings. Even more
bothersome is what is discovered when the status of Indian women
entrepreneurs is compared to that of woman entrepreneurs around the
world.
In 2015, The Global Entrepreneurship and Development
Institute (GEDI) issued a report containing its Female Entrepreneurship
Index ranking countries "with respect to the conditions present that
will fuel high potential female entrepreneurship development". India was
near the bottom on that Index, ranking 70th out of 77 countries.
In
2017, MasterCard issued its Index of Women Entrepreneurs ranking
countries based on an assessment of: Women's Advancement Outcomes;
Knowledge Assets and Financial Access; and Supporting Entrepreneurial
Conditions. India ranked 49th out of 54 countries.
The MasterCard
report noted "there is significant potential to harness the untapped
potential of women's entrepreneurship in India".
I would propose
that the public and private sectors in India collaborate to develop a
comprehensive and integrated three-pronged approach to "harness the
untapped potential" and address the critical need to put Indian women
entrepreneurs first. Those prongs should be:
* Educate and empower women to become entrepreneurs
* Ensure adequate financial resources to support their entrepreneurial ventures
* Provide mentoring to promote success in entrepreneurship
The
education for women to become entrepreneurs should be multifaceted,
stressing not only "book learning" but also providing the hands-on
skills and abilities required to run a business. It should also be
directed towards preparing women to enter fields in which there are too
few female business owners today, such as information technology,
manufacturing, and engineering.
Numerous studies have found that
women in emerging markets have much more difficulty in securing loans
than men and have to rely on their own financing. That is why the World
Bank launched a Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative (We-Fi) this year
to provide venture capital support to help women start and grow
businesses. India should tie into and develop a programme to replicate
We-Fi.
Unless they come from a family that has a business or have
worked in a business, women entrepreneurs have seen no role models and
have had no coaching on how to start, run and build a business. A
mentoring programme can fill that gap.
In the US there is a
non-profit organisation called Service Core of Retired Executives
(SCORE) that provides free mentoring services to business owners. India
could establish a programme similar to SCORE dedicated to women
entrepreneurs.
It could recruit both retired and active
professionals from all sectors -- business, government, academia,
nonprofit -- to be mentors in the programme. A programme of this type
could be coordinated through the financial institutions making loans to
women entrepreneurs.
In conclusion, the Global Entrepreneurial
Summit will place the spotlight on the achievements of India's
entrepreneurs and the significant contributions they have made to build
the country's economy. The Summit can also be used as a magnifying glass
to increase the focus placed on women entrepreneurs.
If this is
done and Indian women entrepreneurs are put first, they will
dramatically accelerate the country's economic development in a manner
that will benefit all and put India first.
(Frank Islam is an
entrepreneur, civic leader and thought Leader based in the Washington DC
area. The views expressed are personal. He can be contacted at
ffislam@verizon.net)
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GES 2017: Put Indian women entrepreneurs first
Suma Divakar | Wed Nov 29 05:30:14 2017
Excellent, Kindly update on the support systems available for women entrepreneurs
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