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Studies investment, portfolio involvement and exit strategies of venture capital firms investing in high-technology early-stage start-ups in India.
This book is an endeavor to guide and help those, who wish to be updated in Venture Capital and the field, concerned to Indian Economy. Besides, this is also an attempt to enlighten and inform anyone, who have an interest to know about Economy and so more
In recent period Indian economy has witnessed multi fold growth as compared to developed economies in the world. Overall growth registered by the Indian economy is the result of MSME sector's performance and specifically growth in IT and IT enabled services, bio technology, banking and financial services, healthcare and life sciences, manufacturing and retail businesses across the country. Technology driven businesses has attracted the attention of domestic and international investors due to increase in the use of IT enabled services by the majority of population in the country. Use of smartphones and internet penetration has provided ready platform for the sector to take out best of this opportunity. Ecommerce has provided the solution to the problems where the country was stacked since decades. Quality of higher education, entrepreneurial talent, risk taking ability of the younger generation and youth population in the nation has spur the growth of the sector. Information Technology industry has grown exponentially over last few years taking locational advantage of being in operation in cities like Mumbai, Bangalore, Pune, Ahmadabad and Delhi. The important factor which has contributed to the growth of the sector is availability of risk capital in the form of Private Equity and Venture Capital leveraging debt requirement of the venture in start-up phase. PE and VC has played the critical role in the establishment of technology driven businesses in developed countries. Considering the growth of start-up economy, domestic and international PE investors and Venture Capitalists are now looking towards India as world's fastest growing economy.This research analyses the growth of PE and VC investments in the country for last five years with the help of economic data. Research also highlights determinants affecting investments decision of an investor on the basis of the data collected through interview method from investment team members of Venture Capital and Private Equity Firms. This will help entrepreneurs to understand the prerequisites of raising capital from Venture Capitalists and Private Equity investors.
This paper contributes to the debate on the relationship between public-capital accumulation and private investment in India along the following dimensions. First, acknowledging major structural changes that the Indian economy has undergone in the past three decades, we study whether public investment in recent years has become more or less complementary to private investment in comparison to the period before 1980. Second, we construct a novel data-set of quarterly aggregate public and private investment in India over the period 1996Q2-2015Q1 using investment-project data from the CapEx-CMIE database. Third, embedding a theory-driven long-run relationship on the model, we estimate a range of Structural Vector Error Correction Models (SVECMs) to re-examine the public and private investment relationship in India. Identification is achieved by decomposing shocks into those with transitory and permanent effects. Our results suggest that while public-capital accumulation crowds out private investment in India over 1950-2012, the opposite is true when we restrict the sample post 1980 or conduct a quarterly analysis since 1996Q2. This change can most likely be attributed to the policy reforms which started during early 1980s and gained momentum after the 1991 crises.
This book studies diverse categories of venture capital (VC) firms in India based on their ownership type (domestic vs foreign), stage of investment (early vs growth stage) and VC investment team composition (entrepreneurial experience vs investing experience). For each category of VC firms, the nuances in their investment, portfolio involvement and exit strategies are separately analysed. Employing the framework of information asymmetry, the book studies how different categories of VC firms rely on distinct mechanisms such as deal syndication and domain specialization to address the ensuing adverse selection and agency risks. It also delves into the macro context by assessing whether the emergence of VC in India has been driven by 'pull' or 'push' factors. This is accomplished by analysing in depth the supply and demand of VC funds. Finally, it critically reviews the existing policies of entrepreneurial finance and arrives at recommendations for future directions of the same.
This work studies venture capital as a catalyst in the growth of the Indian economy. It is based on an empirical survey of existing literature and experiences of venture capital investors. It seeks to analyse the recent phenomenon of Indian venture capital as an organised industry in relation to the pace and extent of growth of Indian economy during the post-Independence period. It examines Indian venture capital industry in the global context of developed and developing countries, namely USA, UK, Japan, China, Israel, Korea and a few other countries in Europe and Asia.
One of the most important developments in entrepreneurship has been growth of Venture Capital over the past decade. It has had a profound impact on the world economy in terms of job creation, innovative products and services, competitive vibrancy and enhancement of entrepreneurial spirit. It has played a catalytic role in entrepreneurship by disseminating and creating fundamental values that trigger and sustain economic growth and renewal. Specifically, venture capitalists help their investee companies in providing a network, recruiting key management and building a team, developing financial systems, advising on company law and other legal matters, helping co-investment and arranging working capital facilities from bankers, providing marketing links and contacts, sharing the business perspective, providing support and confidence during bad times, helping in long term strategic thinking and planning, helping to create an entrepreneurial climate and devising incentive systems to promote long-term team work. In India, the level of growth has not been found so promising and consistent due to lack of financing the innovative ideas. To get the full advantage of economic reforms and to make the Indian economy more competitive, it is high time that the catalytic role of Venture Capital must be clearly understood. Present study has been undertaken to see in which industry, region, area or stage venture capitalist provide their finance.
India's recent growth rate has been impressive, with real GDP rising by over 8 percent a yearsince 2004. The country is also becoming a top global innovator for high-tech products andservices. Still, India is underperforming relative to its innovation potential. Even a dynamicyoung population--more than half of whom are under 25 years of age--is constrained when skillstraining and higher education are insufficient. To sustain competitiveness, economic growth, andrising living standards over the long term, India needs to aggressively harness its innovation potential. The term innovation is broadly defined in this book to include both the creation andcommercialization of new knowledge and the diffusion and absorption of existing knowledge in newcontexts. A unique feature is the book's focus on inclusive innovation, that is, knowledge creationand absorption activities most relevant to the needs of the poor. Concrete recommendations aremade for increasing productivity and welfare through the disciplining role of competition, includingtraining and education, information infrastructure, and public and private finance as supportmechanisms for broad-based innovation. 'Unleashing India's Innovation: Toward Sustainable and Inclusive Growth' provides nationaland local policy makers, private sector enterprises, academic and research institutions, international organizations, and civil society with a better understanding of the power of innovation to fuel economic growth and poverty reduction.
1.Economic Development : Meaning, Measurement, Indicators and Determinants,2. Underdeveloped (Developing) Economy—Concept of Underdevelopment, 3. Human Development, 4. Indian Economy on the Eve of Independence (Colonial Economy), 5. Structure and Basic Features of Indian Economy, 6. Evaluation of India’s Economic Planning, 7. Import Substituting Industrialisation, 8. Economic Reforms in India : Liberalisation, Privatisation & Globalisation, Demonetisation and GST, 9. Growth, Development and Structural Change in India, 10. Various Means of Transport : Road, Rail, Water and Air, 11. Changes in Policy Perspective in the Role of Institutional Framework After 1991, 12. Economic Growth and Distribution in India, 13. Problems of Poverty in India, 14. Unemployment in India, Nature, Extent and Employment Policy, 15.Economic Development and Environment, 16.Agriculture Growth and Performance in India, 17. Land Tenure and Reforms : Agricultural Holding and Consolidation, 18. Plans and Agriculture Development : Green Revolution, 19. Technological Change and Development in Agriculture (Agriculture Mechanisation), 20. Agricultural Price Policy, 21. Food Problem, Food Policy, Public Distribution System and Food Security, 22. Prominent Large Scale Industries of India—Cotton Textile, Jute, Sugar, Iron and Steel and Cement, 23. Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in India, 24. Foreign Trade of India, 25. India and the World Trade Organisation (WTO), 26. Role of Foreign Direct Investment in India.