4 emerging trends from India's booming entrepreneur ecosystem
With a cultural mindset shift from job-seeking towards job-creating in India, the gap between male and female entrepreneurs has been narrowing in recent years.
Sreevas Sahasranamam is a Professor at the Adam Smith Business School at the University of Glasgow. His research focuses on understanding the strategic and ecosystem enablers of innovations/start-ups tackling UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs). He is one of the co-authors of the annual Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Global Report.
With a cultural mindset shift from job-seeking towards job-creating in India, the gap between male and female entrepreneurs has been narrowing in recent years.
Recent research shows there are five main drivers that for-profit organizations can use to help alleviate poverty in low- and middle-income countries.
Technology isn't sufficiently concentrated in the developing economies where it is most needed to solve challenges. These four key actions can address technology inequality.
Female entrepreneurs tend to be younger, from low-income countries and driven by job scarcity. They're also more likely to close than start new businesses.
2022年《全球创业观察》(Global Entrepreneurship Monitor)报告评估了全球50个国家的创业状况;今年,阿联酋、荷兰以及芬兰在最适合创业的国家排行榜中名列前茅;政府可以通过在疫情等紧急情况下帮助初创企业与支持女性企业家来鼓励创业。
The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor's 2022 report assesses the conditions for entrepreneurs in 50 countries. Check out the best countries for entrepreneurs as per the latest report.
COVID-19 hit entrepreneurship hard, with fewer people starting new businesses and some failing. Yet some entrepreneurs are seizing emerging opportunities.
5 trends from a study of Indian entrepreneurial resilience include digitization, collaboration and localisation, increased social commitment and well-being.
Across India, entrepreneurs and innovators have quickly devised new apps, robots and ventilators to help overcome the pandemic.