Employees are highly ambitious about entrepreneurship 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.
The survey covers 33 countries around the world and is conducted online among employees aged 18- 65, working a minimum of 24 hours a week in a paid job; other than being self-employed.
Eighty three per cent of the Indian workforce would like to be an entrepreneur, higher than the global average of 53 per cent. The workforce in the age group of 45-54 years (37 per cent) is 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).
Paul Dupuis, MD and CEO, Randstad India said, "A stable business environment, market oriented reforms like raising FDI caps, implementation of GST, and key initiatives like Make in India and Digital India are fostering a new aspiring and ambitious Indian."
He further added that 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.
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.