The proposals, including an agri-tech accelerator fund, underscore the importance of extending technology-led entrepreneurial activity to rural India
India’s Minister of Finance Nirmala Sitharaman on February 1 made several proposals in her Budget for the fiscal year 2023-24, starting April 1, which signal continuity in the government’s push to support technology-led entrepreneurship.
Ahead of the 2024 general elections, some proposals also specifically focus on boosting tech startup activity beyond the larger cities—in rural India. For example, the minister proposed to set up an agriculture accelerator fund “to encourage agri startups by young entrepreneurs in rural areasâ€.
“The fund will aim at bringing innovative and affordable solutions for challenges faced by farmers. It will also bring in modern technologies to transform agricultural practices, increase productivity and profitability,†she said in her Budget speech in Parliament. She didn’t immediately provide details on how much money will be spent in setting up this fund. The government will also expand digital public infrastructure for agriculture as an open-source, open-standard and inter-operable public good, Sitharaman added.
The aim is to bring “inclusive, farmer-centric solutions†through information services for crop planning and health, improved access to farm inputs, credit, and insurance, help for crop estimation, market intelligence, and support for growth of the agri-tech industry and startups.
In other technology-related proposals, Sitharaman said the government will fund the establishment of three centres of excellence in artificial intelligence (AI), and 100 labs in the area of 5G wireless in engineering colleges across the country. And she reiterated that the government will set up a national data governance policy that will provide anonymised data to encourage startups. The government’s work on this policy was announced last year by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology.