The Free Press Journal

Indian workforce prefers to be entreprene­urs, says a survey

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Entreprene­urial ambition among the workforce is highest in India, with 56 per cent of respondent­s in a survey indicating that they are considerin­g leaving current jobs to start their own business.

According to the Randstad Workmonito­r survey, 83 per cent of the Indian workforce would like to be an entreprene­ur, higher than the global average of 53 per cent.

“A stable business environmen­t, market-oriented reforms like raising of FDI caps, implementa­tion of GST, and key initiative­s like Make in India and Digital India are fostering a new aspiring and ambitious Indian," Randstad India MD & CEO Paul Dupuis said. He further said a robust SME ecosystem driven by aspiring entreprene­urs has historical­ly seen higher growth for the formal sector,

and has a knock-off effect on the evolution of other companies in the ecosystem.

The workforce in the age group of 45-54 years (37 per cent) are hesitant to start their own business as compared to the workforce in the age group of 25-34 years (72 per cent) and 35-44 years (61 per cent), reports PTI.

Around 86 per cent of the survey respondent­s indicated that the ecosystem to run a startup was favourable in India and 84 per cent said the Indian Government actively supports new startups in the country and provides a favourable entreprene­urial climate.

Regarding workplace preference, MNCs are the most favoured employers for Indian workforce as 84 per cent respondent­s said they prefer to work for a multinatio­nal firm.

Around 76 per cent of the workforce from India stated that they would like to work for a startup, whereas 69 per cent indicated that they would prefer to work for a small or medium enterprise or a privately managed company, the report added.

The Randstad Workmonito­r covers 33 countries around the world.

The study is conducted online among employees aged 18- 65, working a minimum of 24 hours a week in a paid job (not self-employed).

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