Definition of Entrepreneurship
Definition of Entrepreneurship
Definition of Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship refers to all those activities which are to be carried out by a person to establish and
to run the business enterprises in accordance with the changing social, political and economic
environments.
Entrepreneurship includes activities relating to the anticipation of the consumers likes and dislikes,
feelings and behaviours, tastes and fashions and the introduction of business ventures to meet out all
these expectations of the consumers.
Entrepreneurship is considered as a ‘new product’ that would enable businessmen to develop new
form of business organization and new business activities catering to the changing needs of the
society. The liberalization of cultural rigidities are mainly due to this new product
‘entrepreneurship’.
Entrepreneurship is the ability of entrepreneurs to assess the risks and establish businesses which
are risky but at the same time suits perfectly to the changing scenarios of the economy.
The two major factors determine the entrepreneurship developments are:
1. Risk taking ability of entrepreneurs and
2. Power of achievement of entrepreneurs
Definition of Entrepreneurship
In a changing environment, the entrepreneurship development activities are getting multiplied.
Since the dawn of industrial revolution to till date, we encountered certain drastic changes in the
economic activities. Thus, it is not an easy task to give a comprehensive definition for the word
‘entrepreneurship’. Despite that, relevant definitions of entrepreneurship are listed here.
The word ‘Entrepreneurship’ is very often confused with the word Entrepreneur’. They look alike
but carry different meanings. Entrepreneurship is nothing but all those activities which are to be
undertaken by an entrepreneur. The prevailing socio, political and economic activities act as a
propelling force for the aspiring personalities to become entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurship
development is the outcome of the entrepreneurs. In other words, the entrepreneurs give birth to
entrepreneurship. This statement is partially true because certain activities of the entrepreneurs are
due to the existing policies and programmes of the Central as well as the state governments and not
only by the entrepreneurs themselves. Under such circumstances, it is not the entrepreneurs who
give birth to entrepreneurship. Instead, it is the existing entrepreneurship development programmes
that give birth to entrepreneurs. The emergence of entrepreneurs and the level of entrepreneurship
development are also the far reaching changes that are taking place in the social and political
activities rather than changes taking place in the economic activities.
Entrepreneur cannot emerge from the vacuum. Entrepreneurship development depends upon the
environment (both external and internal) within which the entrepreneurs have to do their business.
Entrepreneurs are closely associated with the existing as well as the past entrepreneurial activities of
the society. Business opportunities are identified from the social, political and economic crisis and
in turn these crisis become the favourable climate for the entrepreneurs to innovate new business
ventures. From this perspective, it is true that entrepreneurial activities are the resultant efforts of
the prevailing entrepreneurship development programmes. On the other hand, entrepreneurs keenly
observe the society and its economic activities and try to elicit innovative business opportunities.
They try to make use of the modern technology and manufacture new products which are hitherto
unknown to the market and induce the consumers to buy them and thereby improving their standard
of living. It is possible for entrepreneurs to find new market, new product and introduce a new form
of organization. Therefore, the entrepreneurship development is due to the innovative thoughts and
actions of the entrepreneurs. Thus the term entrepreneur and entrepreneurship are different and
complementary with each other. Let us see the need and scope of entrepreneurship development in
the forthcoming pages.
1. The entrepreneurial activities ‘and opportunities could be identified by the planner of the
Government. The Government through various economic policies and programmes like
‘Globalisation’, ‘Privatisation’, ‘Liberalisation’, ‘Free Export and Import of Goods and Services’
inviting NRI’s capital introduction of innovation in the stock market activities, and the
establishment of SSI identifies entrepreneurship opportunities. These programmes give ample
opportunities for the entrepreneurship development.
2. To liberalise the existing licensing policies and offer incentives and thereby attract multinational
companies of various countries to develop new industries in the backward regions.
3. To encourage the researchers of entrepreneurship development to find new opportunities for the
business and industrial development.
4. To identify the existing and the emerging economic, social and political crisis and find out a
suitable remedial measure to overcome the crisis.
5. To offer training to the first generation entrepreneurs and encourage them to enter into new
business ventures.
6. To find out the entrepreneurial activities of the neighbouring countries and the international
financial institutions and other associated activities like bilateral agreements, SAARC countries
Agreement, Common Wealth Countries agreements and Non- Aligned Nations agreements and
the like.
7. To encourage the institutions engaged in the industrial development to find avenues for
entrepreneurship development. The institutions informing entrepreneurial opportunities are: The
Government’s sponsored institutes. University Departments and entrepreneurship development
institutions.
Entrepreneurs can be made by means of allowing them to undergo rigorous training. The level of
entrepreneurship development especially in all underdeveloped countries depends upon the extent
with which the aspiring men are given training. Through training, they can be able to improve their
power of achievement and power of affiliation. Training of this type shall be given to the young
pupil even at the school level. The training enables entrepreneurs:
a. To know as how to search the innovative business ideas.
b. To know the various sources available for new business ideas.
c. How to process and find out the best ideas.
d. To know the various input requirements for the proposed business.
e. To find out the location for the proposed business.
f. To know as how to fulfil the various legal formalities.
g. To know as how best to make use of the existing infrastructural facilities.
h. To know the various sources of finance available for the new business venture.
i. To know as how best to overcome the resistance, and
j. To know as how to assess the market and future trend.
Entrepreneurship development could be possible through the setting up of both social and economic
infrastructural facilities for the aspiring entrepreneurs. The following infrastructural facilities are
worth noting:
1. Impart entrepreneurship education to the pupils at the school level so as to enable them to
develop the entrepreneurial talents.
2. Establish a separate Department of Entrepreneurship Development or School of
Entrepreneurship Development at the College/ University level and allow the academics to’
undertake researches on ‘Entrepreneurship Development’ and its allied activities.
3. Conduct the ‘Entrepreneurship Development Programmer’s through the setting up of
Entrepreneurship Training Institutions at least at the taluk level in all parts of the country.
4. The State Governments shall give special attention to the entrepreneurship development
programme. They can in collaboration with the neighbouring states, chalk out a programme of
action for developing entrepreneurial activities in a phased manner.
5. The existing financial institutions especially the commercial banks situated in rural areas shall
take utmost care in identifying the aspiring entrepreneurs and offer not only the required
financial assistance but also the required managerial techniques so as to enable them to establish
new business and withstand in the market.
6. Institutions which are engaged in the development of small industries shall frame long range
planning in developing entrepreneurial talents. They should monitor the changing industrial and
business scenarios and determine the future course of actions to be taken to improve the
entrepreneurship development.
7. The role of R & D institutions is not only to innovate but also to inform the entrepreneurs as how
best to make use of the innovation and apply in the manufacturing process. These institutions
should act as entrepreneur and all its activities constitute entrepreneurship.
8. Entrepreneurship development depends upon the existence of a stable Government so that
industrialists and business magnets planning as how best to help the young entrepreneurs to avail
these infrastructure facilities.
Definition of Entrepreneur
The term ‘entrepreneur’ is defined in different manners by different experts. “Entrepreneur is one
who innovates, raises money, assembles inputs, chooses managers and sets the organisation going
with his ability to identify them and opportunities which others are not able to identify and is able to
fulfil such economic opportunities. Innovation occurs through i) Introduction of a new quality in a
product of ii) new product iii) discovery of fresh demand and fresh sources of supply and iv) by
change in the organisation and management”.
The word "entrepreneur" is derived from the French verb enterprendre. It means "to undertake". In
the early 16th century, the men who organised and led military expeditions were referred to as
"entrepreneurs". Around 1700 A.D., the term was used for architects and contractors of public
works. Quesnay regarded the rich farmer as an entrepreneur who manages and makes his business
profitable by his intelligence, skill and wealth. In many countries, the entrepreneur is often
associated with a person who starts his own, new and small business. Business encompasses
manufacturing, transport, trade and all other self-employed vocations in the service sector. But not
every new small business is entrepreneurial or represents entrepreneurship. The term "entrepreneur"
was applied to business initially by the
According to J. B. Say, "an entrepreneur is the economic agent who unites all means of production,
the labour force of the one and the capital or land of the others and who finds in the value of the
products which results from their employment, the reconstitution of the entire capital that he utilises
and the value of the wages, the interest and the rent which he pays as well as profit belonging to
himself. He emphasised the functions of co-ordination, organisation and supervision. Further, it can
be said that the entrepreneur is an organiser and speculator of a business enterprise. The
entrepreneur lifts economic resources out of an area of lower into an area of higher productivity and
greater yield.
According to E.E. Haggen, an entrepreneur is an economic man who tries to\maximise his profits by
innovations. Innovations involve problem-solving and the entrepreneur gets satisfaction from using
his capabilities in attacking problems.
The New Encyclopaedia Britannica considers an entrepreneur as "an individual who bears the risk
of operating a business in the face of uncertainty about the future conditions." Leading economists
of all schools, including Karl Marx, have emphasised the contribution of the entrepreneurs to the
development of economies, but Joseph Schumpeter, who argues that the rate of growth in an
economy depends to a great extent on the activities of entrepreneurs, has probably put greater
emphasis on the entrepreneurial function than any other economist.
Joseph A. Schumpeter thus writes: "The entrepreneur in an advanced economy is an individual who
introduces something new in the economy - a method of production not yet tested by experience in
the branch of manufacture concerned, a product with which consumers are not yet familiar, a new
source of raw material or of new markets and the like." Schumpeter further states that entrepreneur's
function is to "reform or revolutionise the pattern of production by exploiting an invention or more
generally, an untried technological possibility for producing a new commodity.
Mr. Peter Drucker has aptly observed that, "Innovation is the specific tool of entrepreneurs, the
means by which they exploit changes as an opportunity for a different business or a different
service. It is capable of being presented as a discipline, capable of being learned, capable of being
practised. Entrepreneurs need to search purposefully for the sources of innovation, the changes and
their symptoms that indicate opportunities for successful innovation. And they need to know and to
apply the principles of successful innovation." Systematic innovation, according to him, consists in
the purposeful and organised search for changes and in the systematic analysis of 'the opportunities
such changes might offer scope for economic and social innovation.
Functions of an Entrepreneur
An entrepreneur is expected to perform the following functions.
1. Risk Absorption
The entrepreneur assumes all possible risks of business. A business risk also involves the risk due to
the possibility of changes in the tastes of consumers, techniques of consumers, techniques of
production and new inventions. Such risks are not insurable. If they materialise, the entrepreneur
has to bear the loss himself. Thus, Risk-bearing or uncertainty-bearing still remains the most
function of an entrepreneur. An entrepreneur tries to reduce the uncertainties by his initiative, skill
and good judgment.
2. Formulate Strategic Business Decisions
The entrepreneur has to decide the nature and type of goods to be produced. He enters the particular
industry which offers from he best prospects and produces whatever commodities he thinks will pay
him the most employs those methods of production which seem to him the most profitable. He
effects suitable changes in the size of the business, its location techniques of production and does
everything that is needed for the development of his business.
Characteristics of Entrepreneur
1. An especially skilful person: The entrepreneur is recognized as a person having a special skill
and at the same time a person providing others for motivation. He may be either a single individual
or an individual in a group. Whatever he may be, he possesses that special skill which is not
generally found in common man.
4. Decision-making person: The entrepreneur is such a person who is endowed with a power to
make a proper decision as regards the establishment of a business, its management, and
procurement of different factors, methods of distribution and coordination of various scarce
resources. Since he has a strong power of decision-making, he can take decisions on various maters
rapidly. His achievement largely depends on the ability of his decision making.
5. Creative personality: As the term implies, he is known as an employer who makes optimum
utilization of economic resources and thus carries on productive activities. He has a quality of
creating something new and as such he is a person of creative personality. For this, he is known as a
creative innovator. He creates new ideas, nurtures them in the light of his own experience,
knowledge and intellect. Through all such activities, his creative personality and mentality are
exposed.
8. Dynamic leader: He provides proper motivation to his workers by means of leadership so that the
workers can give their best efforts to the interest of the organisation.
9. Creator of wealth: The entrepreneur uses various resources for running his products or services
are produced. Hence, the entrepreneur creates his personal wealth and at the same time he helps to
increase social wealth, because new wealth is created due to increase in demand for product or
services. As such, creation of wealth is one of the basic features of an entrepreneur.
10. Self-confident and ambitious: One of the important features of an entrepreneur is that he should
be self-confident as well as ambitious. Self-confidence is regarded as one of the remarkable
characteristic features for his success. This self-confidence leads him to face any situation boldly.
Self-confidence relates to harmonize between word and work. Similarly, he should always have in
himself, high ambition.
11. Risk-bearer: It is needless to say that an entrepreneur has to bear the various risks concerning
the enterprise. Without risk bearing, his enterprise activities cannot be conducted. The capacity of
an entrepreneur to bear the risks is his inherent feature. He has to bear always the risks in case of
production of any new product or service. There are various types of risks to be borne by him.
These are risks associated with procurement of raw materials and capital and marketing of goods,
etc. this risk bearing is the prerequisite to his success. This is the part and parcel of his daily
activities.
12. Adventurer: After thinking over various matters, an entrepreneur undertakes his venture and
after evaluating pros and cons of all the matters, he selects the most suitable one. While making
selection, he requires to be a bit adventurer. This quality is such an outlook, which leads him to
accept the challenge in various adverse situations.
The enterprise is the basic unit of an economic organisation. It produces goods and services worth
more than the resources used. Thus, any development effort for it to bear fruit, must ultimately
affect directly or indirectly individual enterprise. Enterprise is an undertaking, especially one which
involves activity, courage, energy. It involves the willingness to assume risks in undertaking an
economic activity. It also involves innovation. It always involves risk-taking and decision making.
Thus, entrepreneur and enterprise are inter-linked, enterprise being the offshoot of an entrepreneur.
Its success is dependent on the entrepreneur.
Types of Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurs are classified as under different heads as given below. This helps the potential
entrepreneurs to choose his own nature and style of entrepreneurship.
Business Entrepreneur
Business entrepreneurs are individuals who conceive an idea for a new product or service and then
create a business to materialize their idea into reality. They tap both production and marketing
resources in their search to develop a new business opportunity. They may set up a big
establishment or a small business unit. Trading entrepreneur is one who undertakes trading activities
and is not concerned with the manufacturing work. He identifies potential markets, stimulates
demand for his product line and creates a desire and interest among buyers to go in for his product.
He is engaged in both domestic and overseas trade.
Industrial Entrepreneur
Industrial entrepreneur is essentially a manufacturer who identifies the potential needs of customers
and tailors product or service to meet the marketing needs. He is a product oriented man who starts
in an industrial unit because of the possibility of making some new product.
Corporate Entrepreneur
Corporate entrepreneur is essentially a manufacturer who identifies the potential needs of customers
and tailors product or service to meet the marketing needs. He is a product oriented man who starts
in an industrial unit because of the possibility of making some new product.
Corporate entrepreneur is a person who demonstrates his innovative skill in organising and
managing a corporate undertaking. A corporate undertaking is a form of business organisation
which is registered under some statute or Act which gives it a separate legal entity.
Agricultural Entrepreneur
Agricultural entrepreneurs are those entrepreneurs who undertake such agricultural activities as
raising and marketing of crops, fertilizers and other inputs of agriculture. According to the use of
Technology.
Technical Entrepreneur
A technical entrepreneur is essentially an entrepreneur of “Craftsman type”. He develops a new and
improved quality of goods because of his craftsmanship. He concentrates more on production than
marketing. He does not care much to generate sales by applying various sales promotional
techniques. He demonstrates his innovative capabilities in matters of production of goods and
rendering services.
Non-technical Entrepreneur
Non-technical entrepreneurs are those who are not concerned with the technical aspects of the
product in which they deal. They are concerned only with developing alternative marketing and
distribution strategies to promote their business.
Professional Entrepreneur
Professional entrepreneur is a person who is interested in establishing a business but does not have
interest in managing or operating it once it is established.
b) According to Motivation
Motivation is the force that influences the efforts of the entrepreneur to achieve his objectives. An
entrepreneur is motivated to achieve or prove his excellence in job performance. He is also
motivated to influence others by demonstrating his power thus satisfying his ego.
Pure Entrepreneur
A pure entrepreneur is an individual who is motivated by psychological and economic rewards. He
undertakes an entrepreneurial activity for his personal satisfaction in work, ego or status.
Induced Entrepreneur
Induced entrepreneur is one who is being induced to take up an entrepreneurial task due to the
policy measures of the government that provides assistance, incentives, concessions and necessary
overhead facilities to start a venture. Most of the entrepreneurs are induced entrepreneurs who enter
business due to financial, technical and several other several other provided to them by the state
agencies to promote entrepreneurship.
Motivated Entrepreneur
New entrepreneurs are motivated by the desire for self-fulfilment. They come into being because of
the possibility of making and marketing some new product for the use of consumers. If the product
is developed to a saleable stage, the entrepreneur is further motivated by reward in terms of profit
and enlarged customer network.
Spontaneous Entrepreneur
These entrepreneurs start their business out of their natural talents and instinct. They are persons
with initiative, boldness and confidence in their ability which motivate them to undertake
entrepreneurial activity.
Growth Entrepreneur
Growth entrepreneurs are those who necessarily take up a high growth industry. These
entrepreneurs choose an industry which has substantial growth prospects.
Super-Growth Entrepreneur
Super-growth entrepreneur are those who have shown enormous growth of performance in their
venture. The growth performance is identified by the liquidity of funds, profitability and gearing.
First-Generation Entrepreneur
A first generation entrepreneur is one who starts an industrial unit by means of an innovative skill.
He is essentially an innovator, combining different technologies to produce a marketable product or
service.
Modern Entrepreneur
A modern entrepreneur is one who undertakes those ventures which go well along with the
changing demand in the market. They undertake those ventures which suit the current marketing
needs.
Classical Entrepreneur
A classical entrepreneur is one who is concerned with the customers and marketing needs through
the development of a self-supporting venture. He is a stereotype entrepreneur whose aim is to
maximize his economic returns at a level consistent with the survival of the firm with or without an
element of growth.
Innovating Entrepreneurs
Innovating entrepreneurship is characterized by aggressive assemblage of information and analysis
of results, deriving from a novel combination of factors. Men/women in this group are generally
aggressive in experimentation who exhibit cleverness in putting attractive possibilities into practice.
One need not invent but convert even old established products or services, by changing their utility,
their value, their economic characteristics, into something new, attractive and utilitarian. Therein
lies the key to their phenomenal success. Such an entrepreneur is one who sees the opportunity for
introducing a new technique of production process or a new commodity or a new market or a new
service or even reorganization of an existing enterprise.
Imitative Entrepreneurs: Imitative entrepreneurship is characterized by readiness to adopt successful
innovations by innovating entrepreneurs. They first imitate techniques and technology innovated by
others.
Fabian Entrepreneurs
These categories of entrepreneurs are basically running their venture on the basis of conventions
and customary practices. They don’t want to introduce change and not interested in coping with
changes in environment. They have all sorts of inhibitions, shyness and lethargic attitude. They are
basically risk avoider and more cautious in their approach.
Drone Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurs who are reluctant to introduce any changes in their production methods, processes
and follow their own traditional style of operations. Though they incur losses and loses their market
potential, will not take any effort to overcome the problem. Their products and the firm will get
natural death and knockout.
Forced Entrepreneurs
Sometimes, circumstances made many persons to become entrepreneurs. They do not have any
plan, forward looking and business aptitude. To mitigate the situational problem, they are forced to
plunge into entrepreneurial venture. Most of the may not be successful in this category due to lack
of training and exposure.
Intrapreneurship
The term ‘intrapreneur’ emerged in during the seventies. Several senior executives of big
corporations left their jobs to start their own small businesses because the top bosses in these
corporations were not receptive to innovative ideas. These executives-turned-entrepreneurs
achieved phenomenal success in their new ventures, posing a threat to the corporations they had left.
These types of entrepreneurs came to be known as ‘intrapreneurs’. This kind of brain drain
phenomena is not limited to the US, but has spread all over the world. Companies, as a result, have
started devising ways and means to stop this outflow of talent, experience and innovation.
The notion of intrapreneurship requires that managers inside the company should be encouraged to
be entrepreneurs within the firm rather than go outside. For an entrepreneur to survive in an
organization he/she needs to be sponsored and given adequate freedom to implement his ideas.
Otherwise, the entrepreneurial spark will die. The entrepreneur who starts his own business
generally does so because he aspires to run his own show and does not like taking orders from
others. What is needed in large bureaucratic companies is a strong and healthy risk-taking culture,
where risk-taking managers are assured security and rewards. An entrepreneurial culture requires a
constant generation of ideas. It needs managers who listen and respond to new ideas and are willing
to risk their future, a system that rewards managers who may fail but who have generated and
experimented with ideas.
Intrapreneuring means the entrepreneurial activities that acquire organizational sanctions and
commitments of resources for the sole objective of innovative results. Intrapreneuring aims at
boosting the entrepreneurial spirit within the limits of organization, thus creating an environment to
develop. Intrapreneur is a person within a large corporation who takes direct responsibility for
turning an idea into a profitable finished product through assertive risk-taking and innovation.
“Intrapreneurship is Entrepreneurship practiced by people within established organizations”.
Intrapreneurship revolves around the restructuring and re-emergence of the firm’s capacity to
develop innovative skills and new ideas. Intrapreneurship is not just limited to the germination of
new ideas, but includes even the implementation of those ideas.
Characteristics of Intrapreneurs
Intrapreneurs thrive and vibrate in all organizations (big or small): Several executives with rich
experience and expertise in corporations leave their jobs to own small business, because the top
management in these corporations were not receptive of their innovative ideas. These executives
termed as ‘entrepreneurs’ achieved phenomenal success in their new ventures, posing a threat to the
corporations they had left. Companies, as a result, started devising ways and means to stop this
outflow of talent, experience and innovation and therefore nested the development of intrapreneurs.
Through their expertise and rich experience in the organization: Intrapreneurs understand the needs
and wants of the customers. They generate innovative ideas from these needs and wants.
Intrapreneurs do not just limit their energies to the development of these innovative ideas as they
have an insatiable desire to achieve and succeed. They are hungry to see their ideas materialize into
business enterprise. Venture capitalists with their wide open eyes welcome them with open arms.
And hence the organization not only loses rich experience and expertise but also creates competitors
for itself.
Intrapreneurs are the “dreamers who do.” In most organizations people are thought to be either
dreamers or doers. Both talents are not generally required in one job. But the trouble with telling the
doers not to bother about their dreams is that they dream anyway. When they are blocked from
implementing dreams of how to help your company they’re dreaming dreams of revenge. A mind is
meant to imagine and then act. It is a terrible thing to split apart the dreamer and the doer.
Intrapreneurs ask questions such as: “Who would I need to help me with this? How much would it
cost? What things have to happen first?” and so forth. They may ask “Could we release this
technology – onto the marketplace in product form aimed at such-and-such a customer need?
Entrepreneur v/s Intrapreneur
A person can become a professional manager by the acquisition of knowledge. Knowledge can be
gained through formal education. An owner-manager can achieve success due to his personal and
cultural traits. Many great entrepreneurs are self-made, for they were not handicapped by their lack
of formal education but came out as successful entrepreneurs due to their skill and intelligence. One
can easily identify such an entrepreneur manager in any profession, may it be bidi or agarbatti
manufacturing, polishing or grinding, retailing or wholesaling. A professional manager is required
to possess specific management knowledge relating to (a) Technical processes, products, materials,
equipment and procedures; (b) Economics, knowledge about the basic objective of the entrepreneurs
and its position in the economic and social system within which it is operating; (c) Human
knowledge about employee motivation, moral and delegation of authority; and (d) Administrative
knowledge about application and analysis of data. This will facilitate him to deal with various
problems of the organisation in an effective manner.
Entrepreneurship Stimulants
A variety of social, economic, political and cultural factors are stimulating entrepreneurial activity
and thus generating more robust economic development. These stimulants are as follows:
Entrepreneurial behaviour is the result of entrepreneurial motivation refers to the inner urge that
ignites and sustain behaviour to satisfy need. Motivation has been derived from the word motive
which implies the inner state of mind that activates provokes and directs our behaviour towards the
goal.
Theories of Motivation
Need is the starting point of motivation. A satisfied need does not motivate an individual. It is only
the unsatisfied need which creates tension and stimulates drives within the individuals for the
satisfaction of the need and reduction of tension. Several studies have been undertaken to identify
the factors that motivate people to start their own enterprises. P.N Sharma has identified nine
motivating factors which are as under:
1. Educational background.
2. Occupational experience.
3. Desire to do work independently.
4. Desire to branch out to manufacturing.
5. Family background.
6. Assistance from government.
7. Assistance from financial institutions.
8. Availability of technology/ raw material.
9. Other factors demand of the particular product, utilisation of excess money earned from
contractual estate business, started, manufacturing to facilitate trading/ distribution business
since the product was in short supply, unstable policy of the foreign government for non
residents and no chance for further promotion
The above nine factors were grouped into two major categories-internal and external. First five
motivating factors were termed as internal and the last four factors as external. The internal
motivating factors like education, occupational experience, family background, the desire to do
something independently together make the personality of the entrepreneur. These factors generate
an inclination to adopt entrepreneurial activity. The presence of internal factor is a necessary
condition for the entrepreneurial activity to take place. But entrepreneurial ideas cannot fructify or
take real shape without a proper or conducive environment which provide support in terms of
financial assistance, technology and raw material and infrastructural facilities. These facilities from
external motivating factors and serve as a spark in igniting the entrepreneurial idea. These factors
give a boost to the entrepreneurial activities.
It is clear from the above that majority of the new entrepreneurs were tempted to enter industry
because of three main factors viz.
The entrepreneurial motivation level is primarily impacted by two factors i) Personal goals –
referring to the objectives of the individual behind starting an enterprise. Such objectives could
include the aspects of being independent, becoming a change agent in society and a strong desire to
become a technological pioneer. ii) Personal Characteristics – These include those traits in an
individual which affect their ability to become an entrepreneur. Risk taking ability, leadership,
decision making capacity, foresight are a few of these important traits.
The link between idea and entrepreneurial motivation is two-way. This states that often motivation
leads to an idea or the high level of innovation in the idea can also motivate an individual to start
their own venture. After the idea-motivation ground is developed, the individual forms certain
expectations about the formation and the future growth of the firm. However it is also seen that the
various internal and external factors of the environment also has a potential impact on both the
motivation level as well as entrepreneurial activity. Lastly, it is quite important for the idea to
transform into a viable business, only if there is a perfect match between the expectations and then
market dynamics. Otherwise the idea needs to be though upon, based on feasibility factors.
Entrepreneurial Personality
Research on the personality traits of entrepreneurs took off in the mid-20th century, unifying
approaches from economics, psychology, sociology, and business management to answer the
questions: Who is an entrepreneur? What drives them? What traits define them? The first few
decades faced many conceptual challenges as researchers struggled to develop a solid theoretical
framework and appropriate measurement tools. In the 1980s, this discordance in the literature led
some researchers to conclude that there was no correlation between personality and
entrepreneurship.
However, since the start of the 21st century and with the notable rise of public and intellectual
fascination with start-up culture, the entrepreneurial personality literature has enjoyed a resurgence
and convergence toward an increasingly consistent set of theoretical frameworks, with meaningful
insights toward innovation policy and business education. The bulk of recent literature seeks to
answer two main questions:
Since various authors highlight the most important entrepreneurial personality characteristics as the
need for achievement, locus of control and risk-taking propensity, these are the three
characteristics further discussed below.
In his work on economic development, McClelland first identified the need for achievement as a
personality trait. McClelland proposed that achievement motivation is the key to entrepreneurial
behaviour. The need for achievement is usually referred to as a learned, stable characteristic where
satisfaction is acquired by aiming for and accomplishing higher levels of excellence. The need for
achievement was originally conceptualized as a fixed personal characteristic. However, recent
studies have shown that it can evolve over time, especially by obtaining an advanced education. The
theory of the need to achieve claims that individuals who have a strong need to achieve commonly
find their way to entrepreneurship and their success rate is higher than that of other entrepreneurs.
McClelland identified a theory about the situations that stimulate achievement motivation.
High achievers typically choose situations that are linked with responsibility, moderate risk-
taking, knowledge of results of decisions, new instrumental activity and anticipation of
possibilities in the future. An entrepreneur might be driven by the possibility of achievement
satisfaction and not financial gain. Conversely, to some entrepreneurs, monetary gain is an
achievement while to others it can be public recognition.
Entrepreneurs with high levels of need for achievement typically try to set difficult goals for
themselves and intend to achieve these goals, they are enthusiastic and they seek self-
development.
Also, entrepreneurs with a high level of need for achievement have a strong desire to solve
problems by themselves, they like setting and achieving goals and they enjoy receiving
feedback on their achievements.
These individuals are high achievers who like to take responsibility for finding solutions to
issues, who like quick feedback on their performance to know if they have improved or not
and who like to achieve targets that are challenging but not beyond their capabilities.
They do not like to succeed by chance. These high achievers like to achieve challenging
targets but not targets that are over their capabilities. Some high achievers will set up new
business ventures.
b) Locus of Control
Locus of control is another characteristic that is often associated with entrepreneurship. The theory
of locus of control was developed by Rotter in the 1960s. The concept emerged from Rotter’s
‘social learning theory’ of what affect does a person’s perception of control have on their behaviour.
The theory has been abandoned in psychology but it is still considered in entrepreneurship. The
theory of locus of control looks from different angles at the individual’s understanding of the social
environment and the knowledge gained from different situations. The locus of control of an
individual can be either external or internal. The locus of control is understood as a determinant of
the expectation of success. Studies have shown a reasonably important association between internal
locus of control and the likelihood of becoming an entrepreneur. The internal locus of control is said
to be an important characteristic of entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurs with high levels of internal locus of
control usually see themselves as having more power and discretion and being more innovative.
Usually owner-managers have a strong internal locus of control. The externals believe that what
happens to them is a result of forces beyond their control. On the other hand, the internals believe
that the future can be controlled by efforts of their own.
Individuals with an internal locus of control believe that they themselves are in control of
their destiny. On the other hand, individuals with an external locus of control believe that fate
has a strong influence over their lives.
Internal and external locus of control conceptualizes how people see their own actions
affecting events surrounding their lives. People with internal locus of control usually believe
that events are the results of their own actions and people with external locus of control
believe that events are the results of external environmental factors.
An entrepreneur with strong internal locus of control would believe that they themselves can
make things happen and if their business succeeds or fails, it is due to their own actions.
Entrepreneurs with high levels of internal locus of control might not be willing to give up the
control of their businesses or to seek advice from customers, competitors or other external
entities.
These entrepreneurs want to create a competitive organizational culture that is driven by their
own creative and innovative ideas. When believing that an individual has control over their
environment and ultimately their fate, that individual has internal locus of control.
If an individual believes in fate, he/she has external locus of control. This person is usually
less likely to take the risk of starting a new business venture. Sometimes internal locus of
control can have negative aspects.
The individual’s locus of control changes along the external/internal line. However,
researchers have suggested that the external and internal should be studied separately. As the
internal and external control should be treated as two independent dimensions, therefore,
different types of relationships might exist between the two dimensions.
c) Risk-Taking Propensity
Risk-taking depends on the vision of a situation and/or the entrepreneur’s vision of being an
expert. Risk-taking is also related to an entrepreneur’s age, education, motivation, business
experience and the numbers of years in business.
Entrepreneurs with a high level of risk-taking propensity are adventurous and daring, they
look for excitement and stimuli, as well as being optimistic and energetic.
The risk-taking propensity is related to the need for achievement. The creation of a new
business venture is risky and researchers have tried to determine whether entrepreneurs make
riskier decisions than other people.
Human beings do not usually like risk or uncertainty but both owner-managers and
entrepreneurs are willing to take risks and to live with uncertainty. Owner-managers and
entrepreneurs have to live with the fact that they cannot control many aspects of the market
they operate in.
Indeed, entrepreneurship as a career option is more critical to those who may not fit into standard
job profiles for various reasons. The approach and creativity of the education system in innovations
in teaching to create training programs that address this need would make the difference. The
campus must not only foster an environment that allows this career option, but also provide
resources for experimentation. Start-up incubators can support students in developing skills and
provide resources needed at the early-stage. Setting up a start-up incubator in a campus is one of the
first steps on promoting entrepreneurship. Undergraduate students are launching start-ups right after
graduation or sometimes while still at college, and that is a good sign. The field of social
entrepreneurship is also growing. A desire to make a difference in the world is the heart of social
entrepreneurship, and needs as much support and encouragement. In India, social entrepreneurship
has a great role to play in bridging the gaps in our social and economic configurations.
The challenge to come up with ideas that will succeed against all odds and creating new products
and services that dramatically improve people's lives is a great motivator to an entrepreneurial
spirit. It is that potential of creating lasting, transformational benefit to society that attracts the youth
to this field. Increasingly management institutions, science colleges, engineering colleges need to
create a greater awareness of the many issues that affect the world. From environment to pollution,
from poverty to literacy, from financial inclusion to health care, awareness of these issues and
sensitization if done in the educational campus can trigger creative and innovative ideas for
solutions in young minds. Thus instead of taking the typical route, students will find new avenues
that will not only give economic growth but also open new doors to making social impact. This new
life path impacts students, the campus and the community.
There is no age bar to entrepreneurship. But youth is certainly more suited to take up an
entrepreneurial venture because they are technologically precocious, do not fear from change and
challenge, and have greater ability to see things differently.
Leaving aside the pull and push factors leading to entrepreneurship, the fundamental decision to
take up entrepreneurship as a career option gets guided by a three part process in which an
individual weighs the desirability of self-employment with the desirability of working for others,
possession of competencies and capabilities to undertake entrepreneurial venture. The fact remains
that present environment provides great entrepreneurial opportunities and more and more
youngsters are consciously opting for it a as career option.
Being the boss if his own business, they enjoy unlimited powers. He/she can do things in his
own way and he need not take orders from someone else. They can make own decisions and
act on them.
There are numerous opportunities available for self- development.
Working on one’s own and thus getting rewards yields immense satisfaction and pleasure for
more than what he can get in a job.
Monetary rewards can be more than commensurate with his/her capacity and capabilities.
They can command deference and respect of his immediate family and friends. It is a kind of
intangible reward.
Instead of depending on others, they generate employment for others.
They can make significant contribution to the development of the country and be proud of
taking part in nation building activities.
They can be a great achievers realising goals and proving their achievements to the world
and can be recognised for his outstanding efforts.
Though an entrepreneur is his/her own boss, in some respects they are not. It is so because
they are constrained by various people like his financiers, labourers, suppliers, customers and
so on.
They may have to face frustration since the scope of operations is limited by available
resources.
They to work long and hard hours beyond typical timings and the venture tends to absorb all
energy and time. This may affect their social and family life.
At times they may have to face disappointments and frustrations since everything in the
venture may not always work the way he/she would like it to.
They have to always work with tension/stress since there is always the risk of failure.
Entrepreneurial variations cross regions are better understood by considering the social environment
in which the firm is created, because, in addition to economic activity, entrepreneurship is a social
phenomenon. While the economic conditions may explain some of the variation, any convincing
explanation must take account of the social and cultural aspects of entrepreneurial activity. The idea
that individuals and organizations affect and are affected by their social context is not new. It is a
seminal argument in both classic and contemporary sociology, and the argument has been applied to
the study of entrepreneurship.
The concept of social capital is arguably one of the most successful ‘exports’ from sociology
to the other social sciences. Social capital is defined as the tangible and virtual resources that
facilitate actors’ attainment of goals and that accrue to actors through social structure.
In general terms, social networks are defined by a set of actors (individuals and
organizations) and a set of linkages between those actors. Social networks are the
relationships through which one receives opportunities to use financial and human capital –
relationships in which ownership is not solely the property of an individual, but is jointly
held among the members of a network.
Social networks are also a set of relationships that can define the perception of a community,
whether a business community or a more general notion of community in society.
As distinct from rational choice perspectives, the social embeddedness perspective
emphasizes that, in embedded contexts, entrepreneurial agency, that is the ability to garner
entrepreneurial ideas and the resources to develop them, is shaped by implicit norms and
social values. Thus, social capital is conceptualized as a set of resources embedded in
relationships.
This idea raises interesting questions revolving around the entrepreneurial applications of
social capital, in particular, in relation to some less desirable consequences. For instance, the
exploitation of social capital by any one person or entrepreneur, even within contextual rules,
if any, implies both winners and losers.
This view of social capital is closely associated with the emphasis placed by Coleman on
community structures as a mechanism of social control, which, in turn, is also linked with the
predominant culture in a specific society.
The underlying idea is that, although entrepreneurs usually hold some of the resources
necessary to create a business (e.g. ideas, knowledge and competence to run the business),
generally they also need complementary resources which they obtain through their contacts
(e.g. information, financial capital, labour) to produce and deliver their goods or services
In the entrepreneurship network, three elements of network relations stand out as critical to
the entrepreneurial process i) the nature of the content that is exchanged between actors(e.g.
social capital and intangible resources, such as emotional support) ii) the governance
mechanisms in network relationships (e.g. trust between entrepreneurs and venturing
partners) and iii) the network structure created by the crosscutting relationships between
actors (e.g. the ability to use cohesion and structural holes to discover and develop
entrepreneurial returns)
Cultural factors and entrepreneurial activity
Because societies are endowed by nature with different physical environments, members of society
must adopt environmentally relevant patterns of behaviour to achieve success. These
environmentally relevant patterns of behaviour lead to the formation of different cultural values in
different societies, some of which influence the decision to create new businesses. Thus, culture, as
distinct from political, social, technological or economic contexts, has relevance for economic
behaviour and entrepreneurship. One of the difficulties in examining the cultural affects and effects
in relation to entrepreneurial activity is the lack of a precise and commonly understood definition of
culture. Anthropologists suggest that culture is related to the ways in which societies’ organize
social behaviour and knowledge. Cultural values are defined as the collective programming of the
mind which distinguishes the members of one human group from another and their respective
responses to their environments. Several studies have stressed the influence of cultural factors on
entrepreneurship from different perspectives.
According to Hayton culture and entrepreneurship can be linked on three broad dimensions. The
first focuses on the impact of national culture on aggregate measures of entrepreneurship such
as national innovative output or new businesses created. The second stream addresses the
association between national culture and the characteristics of individual entrepreneurs. The third
explores the impact of national culture on corporate entrepreneurship.
According to Hofstede, cultural differences across societies can be reduced to four quantifiable
dimensions: uncertainty avoidance, individualism, masculinity and power distance. The
dimension of uncertainty avoidance represents preference for certainty and discomfort with
unstructured or ambiguous situations. Individualism stands for a preference for acting in the
interest of one’s self and immediate family, as distinct from the dimension of collectivism, which
stands for acting in the interest of a larger group in exchange for their loyalty and support. Power
distance represents the acceptance of inequality in position and authority between people.
Masculinity stands for a belief in materialism and decisiveness rather than service and intuition.
Entrepreneurship is facilitated by cultures that are high in individualism, low in uncertainty
avoidance, low in power-distance and high in masculinity.
According to other authors, the major domains of life and how they affect entrepreneurial
behaviour are conceptualized and measured within the context of distinct institutional orders –
for example the family, the religions, the market, the professions, the state and the corporation
These institutional orders embody competing and conflicting sources of norms, values,
legitimacy and justifications of worth that have consequences for supporting or discouraging
entrepreneurial behaviour.
Organizations Facilitating Entrepreneurship Development
1. NIESBUD:
The National Institute for Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development is a premier
organization of the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship, engaged in training,
consultancy, research, etc. in order to promote entrepreneurship and Skill Development. The
major activities of the Institute include Training of Trainers, Management Development
Programmes, Entrepreneurship-cum-Skill Development Programmes, Entrepreneurship
Development Programmes and Cluster Intervention. NIESBUD has provided training to 11,
46,209 persons as of March 31, 2018 through 44,035 different training programmes since
inception. This includes 4,384 international participants hailing from more than 141 countries
throughout the globe.
Objectives
To standardize and systemize the processes of selection, training, support and sustenance of
potential and existing entrepreneurs.
To support and motivate institutions/organizations in carrying out training and other
entrepreneurship development related activities.
To serve as an apex national level resource institute for accelerating as well as enhancing the
process of entrepreneurship development, to measure the impact of the same within different
strata of the society.
To provide vital information and support to trainers, promoters and entrepreneurs by
organizing research and documentation activities relevant to entrepreneurship and skill
development.
To create a holistic environment to train the trainers, promoters and consultants in diverse
areas of entrepreneurship and skill Development.
To offer consultancy nationally/internationally for promotion of entrepreneurship and small
business development at national and international level.
To provide national/international forums for interaction and exchange of ideas for policy
formulation and its refinement at various levels.
To share experience and expertise in entrepreneurship development across national frontiers
to create awareness on it at national level.
To interchange international experience and expertise in the field of entrepreneurship
development for mapping its development at international levels too.
2. EDII:
Objectives
3. IED:
Institute of Entrepreneurship (IED) was set up in 2005 by a small group of visionaries in order to
promote entrepreneurship as a key factor for the social and economic prosperity in societies.
Since then, it is considered one of the most pioneers in the field. Its participation in numerous
projects gave us the opportunity to produce and collect a large number of innovative tools and
products in all aspects of entrepreneurship and lifelong learning, available to be further
processed and utilized. Utilizing its experience gained from more than 150 large-scale
international and national projects, IED is aiming to establish new collaborations in the field of
EU funding programmes to raise innovation in the entrepreneurial sector. The organization’s
agenda is set all these years towards the development of targeted projects which will have a
valuable impact on primary research and sustainable society.
Objectives
To train the potential entrepreneurs for setting up tiny, rural, small and medium scale
enterprises
To conduct various types of training programme for potential and existing entrepreneurs,
educated unemployed youth, low income group, science and technology graduates, village
artisans and other persons.
To conduct training programmes for employment generation.
To carry out research studies, evaluations, assessments in the field of entrepreneurship and
industrial development as well as social sector.
To conduct workshops, conferences and seminars for MSME
To assess training needs of different departments in industrial development sector and
develop the capacities of their officials at different level.
To disseminate information regarding promotion and development of entrepreneurship
4. CED:
The Centre for Entrepreneurship Development (CED) was set up in the year 2017 in Delhi,
India, a pioneering institute in the field of Entrepreneurship Development, CED provides
seamless service for promoting entrepreneurship movement with belief that entrepreneurs need
not necessarily be born, but they can be trained and developed through well-conceived and well-
directed intervention. CED is associated with State Level Entrepreneurship Development
Organizations, NGOs Voluntary Organizations, Educational Institutions, Financial Institutions
and Business Associations. CED acts as a liaison between Government and Entrepreneurs by
providing necessary information and consultancy services.
Objectives
To Stimulate and augment the entrepreneurial spirits and skills among women and youth to
create new small and medium enterprises in the private sector.
To Enhance Entrepreneurial values among women and youth and facilitate their choosing
Entrepreneurship as a preferred career.
To facilitate introduction of entrepreneurship courses in academic system.
To promote the development of competent entrepreneurship in strategic industries through
research studies and consultancy services.
To Network with national and international agencies, NGOs and Government organizations
for developing & promoting entrepreneurship, facilitating technology transfer, product
development, partnering and market accessibility.
To be a centre of learning for trainers – motivators on entrepreneurship development.
To impart training on Capacity building \ enhancement of entrepreneurship development to
Organizations and NGOs.
To create a conducive business environment for emergence, sustenance and growth of the
enterprises in general and Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in particular.
To Support through active research and consultancy the prospective and existing Businesses,
enabling them strategic planning and managing growth.
To provide support and facilitation services to prospective and existing entrepreneurs in
business related activities.
To become a resource centre to offer capacity building initiatives in developing countries and
neighbouring countries in the area of Entrepreneurship Development, Women empowerment
and micro finance development and small business management.
To build capacities of country level agencies for institutionalization of Entrepreneurship.
To Integrate/Converge and internalize various approaches in Entrepreneurship Development
in different regions to facilitate a visible impact.
5. NSIC
The National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC), an enterprise under the union ministry of
industries was set up in 1955 in New Delhi to promote aid and facilitate the growth of small scale
industries in the country. NSIC offers a package of assistance for the benefit of small–scale
enterprises. National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC), is an ISO 9001-2015 certified
Government of India Enterprise under Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME).
NSIC has been working to promote, aid and foster the growth of micro, small and medium
enterprises in the country. NSIC operates through countrywide network of offices and Technical
Centres in the Country. In addition, NSIC has set up Training cum Incubation Centre managed by
professional manpower.
Functions
NSIC acts as a facilitator and has devised a number of schemes to support enterprises in their
marketing efforts, both domestic and foreign markets.
NSIC applies the tenders on behalf of single MSE/Consortia of MSEs for securing orders for
them. These orders are then distributed amongst MSEs in tune with their production capacity.
NSIC, realizing the needs of MSMEs, is offering Infomediary Services which is a one-stop,
one-window bouquet of aids that will provide information on business & technology and also
exhibit the core competence of Indian MSMEs.
Collect and disseminate both domestic as well as international marketing intelligence for the
benefit of MSMEs. This cell, in addition to spreading awareness about various programmes /
schemes for MSMEs, will specifically maintain database and disseminate information.
To showcase the competencies of Indian SSIs and to capture market opportunities, NSIC
participates in select International and National Exhibitions and Trade Fairs every year.
Bulk and departmental buyers such as the Railways, Defence, Communication departments
and large companies are invited to participate in buyer-seller meets to enrich small
enterprises knowledge regarding terms and conditions, quality standards, etc required by the
buyer.
NSIC's Raw Material Assistance Scheme aims at helping Small Enterprises by way of
financing the purchase of Raw Material (both indigenous & imported).
NSIC is entering into strategic alliances with commercial banks to facilitate long term /
working capital financing of the small enterprises across the country..
NSIC offers small enterprises the following support services through its Technical Services
Centres and Extension Centres:
NSIC has established Software Technology cum Business Parks at New Delhi and Chennai
for providing the space to small and medium enterprises in software development
6. SIDO
Small Industries Development Organization (SIDO) is created for development of various small
scale units in different areas. SIDO is a subordinate office of department of SSI and ARI. It is a
nodal agency for identifying the needs of SSI units coordinating and monitoring the policies and
programmes for promotion of the small industries. It undertakes various programmes of training,
consultancy, evaluation for needs of SSI and development of industrial estates. All these functions
are taken care with 27 offices, 31 SISI (Small Industries Service Institute) 31 extension centres of
SISI and 7 centres related to production and process development.
Activities
7. KVIC
The Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC) is a statutory body formed in April 1957 (as
per an RTI) by the Government of India, under the Act of Parliament, 'Khadi and Village Industries
Commission Act of 1956'. It is an apex organisation under the Ministry of Micro, Small and
Medium Enterprises, with regard to khadi and village industries within India, which seeks to - "plan,
promote, facilitate, organise and assist in the establishment and development of khadi and village
industries in the rural areas in coordination with other agencies engaged in rural development
wherever necessary." In April 1957, it took over the work of former All India Khadi and Village
Industries Board. Its head office is in Mumbai , whereas its six zonal offices in Delhi, Bhopal,
Bangalore, Kolkata, Mumbai and Guwahati. Other than its zonal offices, it has offices in 28 states
for the implementation of its various programmes
Functions
Objectives
In accordance with the provision of Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises Development (MSMED)
Act, 2006 MSME are classified in two Classes: i) Manufacturing Enterprises ii) Service Enterprises
Sickness in SSI
(a) If any of the borrowal accounts of the unit remains substandard for more than six months, i.e.,
principal or interest
(b)There is erosion in the net worth due to accumulated losses to the extent of 50 percent of its net
worth during the previous accounting year
(c)The unit has been in commercial production for at least two years
(d) Continuous decline in gross output compared to the previous two financial years
Industrial Sickness in India: Meaning, Causes and Suggested Remedies
One of the adverse trends observable in the corporate private sector of India is the growing
incidence of sickness. It is causing considerable concern to planners and policymakers. It is also
putting a severe strain on the economic system, particularly on the banks.
There are various criteria of sickness. According to the criteria accepted by the Reserve Bank of
India “a sick unit is one which has reported cash loss for the year of its operation and in the
judgment of the financing bank is likely to incur cash loss for the current year as also in the
following year.”
Causes:
Industrial sickness has become a major problem of the India’s corporate private sector. Of late, it
has assumed serious proportions. A close look reveals that there are, at least, five major causes of
industrial sickness, viz., promotional, managerial, technical, financial and political.
An industrial unit may become sick at its nascent stage or after working for quite some time. For
instance, two major traditional industries of India, viz., cotton textiles and sugar, have fallen sick
largely due to short-sighted financial and depreciation policies. Heavy capital cost escalation arising
out of price inflation accentuates the problem. The historical method of cost depreciation is highly
inadequate when assets are to be replaced at current cost during inflation.
Moreover, since the depreciation funds are often used to meet working capital needs, it does not
become readily available for replacement of worn-out plant and equipment. The end result is that
the industrial unit is constrained to operate with old and obsolete equipment, its profitability is
eroded and, sooner or later, the unit is driven out of the market by the forces of competition.
The causes of industrial sickness may be divided into two broad categories:
1. External
2. Internal
(e) Delay on the part of the Government in sanctioning licences, permits, etc.
(f) Shortages of basic inputs like power and coal. Other causes include
(j) Changes in the policy of the Government relating to movement of goods from one place to
another within the country
a) Large changes in the scale of operation and optimum product mix in the long run and, last but not
the least
c) Differences among various persons associated with the promotion and management of the
enterprise
e) Inability to purchase raw materials at an economic price and at the right time
h) Faulty financial planning and lack of balance in the financial (capital) structure.
Government Policy:
A number of measures have been taken to tackle the problem of industrial sickness. The importance
of detection of sickness at the incipient stage has been emphasised by the RBI. The policy
framework in respect of measures to deal with the problem of industrial sickness has been laid down
in the guidelines issued on October 1981 (which were subsequently modified in February 1982) for
guidance of administrative ministries of the Central Government, State Governments and financial
institutions.
(a) The administrative ministries in the Government will have specific responsibility for prevention
and remedial action in relation to sickness in industrial sector within their respective charges. They
will have a central role in monitoring sickness and coordinating action for revival and rehabilitation
of sick units. In suitable cases, they will also establish standing committees for major industrial
sectors where sickness is widespread;
(b) The financial institutions will strengthen the monitoring system so that it is possible to take
timely corrective action to prevent incipient sickness. They will obtain periodical returns from the
assisted units and from the Directors nominated by them on the Boards of such units. These will be
analysed by the Industrial Development Bank of India and results of such analyses conveyed to the
financial institutions concerned and the Government.
(c) The financial institutions and banks will initiate necessary corrective action for sick or incipient
sick unit based on a diagnostic study. In case of growing sickness, the financial institutions will also
consider taking of management responsibility where they are confident of restoring a unit to health.
The Ministry of Finance will have to issue suitable guidelines for management;
(d) Where the banks and financial institutions are unable to prevent sickness or ensure revival of a
sick unit, they will deal with their outstanding dues to the unit in accordance with the normal
banking procedures. However, before doing so, they will report the matter to the Government which
will decide whether the unit should be nationalised or whether any other alternative- including
workers’ participation in management— can revive the undertaking.
(e) Where it is decided to nationalise the undertaking, its management may be taken over under the
provisions of the Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, for a period of six months to
enable the Government to take necessary steps for nationalisation.
(f) Finally the industrial undertakings presently being managed under the provisions of the
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, will also be dealt with in accordance with the
above principles.
Concessions:
The Government has also provided certain concessions to assist revival of sick units without direct
intervention. For example, the Government has amended the Income-tax Act in 1977 by addition of
Section 72A by which tax benefit can be given to healthy units when they take over the sick units by
amalgamation, with a view to reviving them.
The tax benefit is in the form of carry forward of the accumulated business losses and un-provided
depreciation of the sick companies by the healthy companies after amalgamation. A scheme for
provisions of margin money to sick units in the small-scale sector at soft terms to enable them to
obtain necessary funds from banks and financial institutions to implement their revival scheme has
been introduced from January 1, 1982.
Moreover, financial assistance in the form of long-term equity up to Rs. 15 lakh to units with a
project cost not exceeding Rs. 10 lakhs at a nominal service charge of 1% is available to potentially
viable sick SSI from the National Equity Fund.
Establishment of BIFR:
The Central Government has set up a Board for Industrial and Financial Re-construction (BIFR)
with effect from 12 January 1987 in pursuance of enactment of the Sick Industrial Companies
(Special Provision) Act, 1985. This is a major step for intervening at an early stage and detecting,
preventing, as well as taking ameliorative, remedial and such other measures which to be taken with
respect to sick and potentially viable companies.
The role of the Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) needs a re-look in the face
of a steep rise in the number of industries turning sick. BIFR was constituted to facilitate the revival
of industries deemed sick. When an industry turns sick, BIFR acts as an operating agency (generally
the lead financial institution having the largest loan exposure among the creditors) to devise a
revival strategy proposal.
Progress in the right disposal of sick company cases registered with BIFR has been slow on account
of the conflicting interests between the companies and the creditors (banks and financial
institutions, government bodies/agencies) and certain lacunae in the SIC A Act. The rehabilitation
schemes met with 40-45% failure, as a result of which many of the cases had to be reopened.
The rate of registration/sickness increased substantially during 1997-98 due to (a) the recessionary
trends prevalent in industry, (b) poor financial market conditions, and (c) the tough stance taken by
banks/financial institutions (FIs) towards defaulters/potentially sick companies under their non-
performing assets (NPA) accounts for rescheduling of repayments, etc.
The problem appears even more acute if we take note of potentially sick BIFR companies, as also
the NPAs of FIs and banks. In fact, the NPAs of banks and others have continued to rise.
Upto 1997-98 the outstanding bank credit against sick companies has reached an abnormal’
proportion of over Rs. 23,658 crores, in March’ 2000. Over 15 lakh workers have been affected by
companies turning sick.
IRBI (IIBI):
The Industrial Reconstruction Bank of India (IRBI) set up in 1985 has initiated various steps for
checking the growth of industrial sickness and helping in industrial revival. From April 1997 the
name of IRBI has been changed to Industrial Investment Bank of India (IIBI). By March 2000,
cumulative financial assistance sanctioned and disbursed by it stood at Rs. 10.090 crores and Rs.
7,353 crores, respectively.
A significant measure taken during 1986 was the setting up of Small Industries Development Fund
(SIDF) in the IDBI. This is meant to provide special financial assistance to the small-scale sector.
The Fund would be used for providing refinancing assistance not only for development, expansion
and modernisation, but also for the rehabilitation of the small-scale sick industries.
Modernisation Fund:
The Government has set up two funds, namely the Textile Modernisation Fund and the Jute
Modernisation Fund, for modernisation of the textiles and jute sector. Under these two funds,
assistance is provided not only to the healthy units for modernisation at 11.5% rate of interest; but
also’ to sick but potentially viable units. Special loans are given to the weak units for meeting a part
of the promoters’ contribution.
The Committee on Industrial Sickness and Corporate Restructuring under chairpersonship of Dr.
Omkar Goswami submitted its report in July 1993.
The main recommendations of the Committee with respect to sick companies are:
(a) For early detection of sickness the definition of sickness should be changed to:-
(i) Default of 180 days or more on repayment to term lending institutions, and
(ii) Irregularities in cash credits or working capital for 180 days or more.
(b) Amendment of the Urban Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act, 1976 to improve generation of
internal resources of sick companies.
(c) Empower the BIFR for speedier restructuring, winding-up and sale of assets of companies; and
(d) A sick company’s own reference of BIFR should be voluntary, not mandatory.
The modifications brought in the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act, 1985 by the
1994 Amendment Act pertain to the changes in the definition of SICA, expansion of the term
operating agency, clarification that an enquiry as to sickness shall be deemed to have commenced
on receipt of a reference by the BIFR complete in all respects, scope for reverse merger, “deemed
consent” after the lapse of 120 days, “single window concept” for release of funds by banks/finan-
cial institutions to the sick company, monitoring implementation of sanctioned revival schemes by
BIFR, holding on operations by financial institutions/banks/State Governments, empowering the
Central Government, State Government, banks, institutions, etc., to report cases of potential sick-
ness, etc.
In the definition of sickness the period for the registration of an industrial company as sick has been
reduced from seven to five years. Furthermore, the condition of incurring cash losses during the
preceding two years has been waived. This means that an industrial company would be considered a
sick industrial company once its net worth is completely eroded and has been registered for not less
than five years.
Suggested Remedies:
Some of the effective measures which may be taken for revival of sick units are technical help,
professional counselling and improved management. Also, the role of professionals and experienced
management becomes more important in times of sickness.
In addition to technical and professional consultants, no sick industry will ever be able to recuperate
without sufficient, timely and soft finance. Bankers are the key to the problem. The role of the
bankers needs to be redefined and a new direction needs to be given to support aid and lift sick in-
dustrial units from the situations that befall them. It is also the level of service and support in terms
of financial advice, assistance in related matters of insurance, release of hypothecated assets and
timely finance.
The Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Bill, 1997, passed by Lok Sabha, introduced
encouraging changes. It suggested that a time-bound procedure was to be adopted within which the
scheme has to be sanctioned and BIFR would play the role of a mediator and not a court.
Technical obsolescence and financial mismanagement are also important factors that lead to
industrial sickness. As per the new provisions, an opportunity will be given to get an unanimous
consent to a scheme from all concerned, failing which secured creditors will attempt to form a
scheme and, if all this fails, the undertaking would be sold off. Only if it is not possible to do that,
the BIFR may order winding up of the company.