Business Standard

PM calls start-ups to join in governance

- KARAN CHOUDHURY & SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

If in January 2016 Prime Minister Narendra Modi offered sops and incentives to entreprene­urs at a mega event to usher in a Silicon Valley-like culture into India, he now wants start-ups to have a meaningful role in all aspects of governance —from health care to education, sustainabl­e energy to skill developmen­t. “Our current team in the Central government is keen to learn new things, which is the reason why I’m asking you all to join permanentl­y with the government,” Modi told more than 200 start-up founders on Thursday.

After his Independen­ce Day speech from the Red Fort, promising a New India by 2022, the PM engaged with startups on Thursday to carry the mission forward. The move is meant to draw new ideas from entreprene­urs to bring about a change. Pointing out there is an "app" for filling every gap, the PM said technology and innovation should be harnessed to transform governance.

Along with the PM, Cabinet ministers and top bureaucrat­s watched presentati­ons made by start-up founders on signature themes such as Digital India, Incredible India 2.0 and New India by 2022.

‘Champions of Change’ — the initiative that kept the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), NITI Aayog and several key ministries busy for the past few days — brought together 212 start-up founders. Some called it a rebooted version of last year’s Start-Up India, Stand Up India organised at the capital’s Vigyan Bhawan. This time, the venue shifted to Pravasi Bharatiya Kendra, a new hub in the capital for major government events.

Last year, the special invitees included marquee names including SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son and then Uber chief Travis Kalanick. On Thursday, it was an all-desi affair with Paytm’s Vijay Shekhar Sharma, MobiKwik’s Bipin Preet Singh, Bigbasket’s Hari Menon, Oyo’s Ritesh Agarwal, BookMyShow’s Ashish Hemrajani, and PharmEasy’s Dhaval Shah leading the show.

In a 50-minute speech at the event, organised by the NITI Aayog, Modi charted plans for the start-up ecosystem in India, while asking the entreprene­urs for active partnershi­p in governance. In fact, ministers and government officials discussed "real-world solutions" to problems with start-ups who have founded innovative tech platforms for everything from food delivery to mobile wallets.

While the start-up founders made presentati­ons through six teams, the PM said these groups could be permanentl­y attached to their respective line ministries, so that suggestion­s and advice could be incorporat­ed in policymaki­ng.

“THIS TIME AROUND WE HAVE BEEN ASSURED THAT OUR RECOMMENDA­TIONS WOULD BE INCORPORAT­ED. THE OFFICIALS AS WELL AS MINISTERS HAVE TOLD US THAT THE FEEDBACK WOULD BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY AND A FORUM WOULD BE FORMED. ALSO, THIS WOULD TURN INTO A YEARLY EVENT” Bipin Preet Singh Founder, MobiKwik “THE TONE OF THE EVENT WAS EXTREMELY OPEN AND EXTREMELY FOCUSED AROUND LISTENING TO THE PRIVATE SECTOR AND FIGURING OUT WHAT COULD BE ACHIEVED WITH THE HELP OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR” Suchi Mukherjee CEO & Founder, LimeRoad

He added that the Central government, in the past three years, had made fundamenta­l changes in governance, eliminatin­g the role of middlemen in many areas. “It is the same group (middlemen) which is now crying about low jobs growth,” Modi said.

The start-up bosses indicated that unlike the last event that was more glitzy, this one was more about hearing and registerin­g the ideas of these companies and using them to find solutions. “This time around we have been assured that our recommenda­tions would be incorporat­ed. The officials as well as ministers have told us that the feedback would be taken seriously and a forum would be formed. Also, this would turn into a yearly event,” said MobiKwik chief Bipin Preet Singh.

With a view to incorporat­e digital into every aspect of life, a set of recommenda­tions has been given to the PM on topics ranging from digital payments, digitisati­on of processes, digital infrastruc­ture as well as governance.

“Financial literacy is important for endorsing Digital India. Inclusion of financial literacy as a subject or module in school, college, and skill developmen­t institutes should be explored. School curriculum, government and private, could also include aspects of financial planning and government schemes. Mobile video platforms could be used as an effective and cost-efficient way to promote literacy,” according to a joint report by start-up founders and the government. Health care is another area where the government wants to digitise a host of services. “As a provider of affordable authentic health care, we are pushing for regulation­s for e-access to health care services like medicine and consultati­ons, clarity on remote health care solutions and regulation­s around digital prescripti­ons,” said Dhaval Shah, co-founder of PharmEasy.

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