The policy aims at facilitating a minimum venture capital funding of Rs 200 crore, and encouraging, facilitating and incubating at least 500 start-ups, an official spokesman said.
He said it plans to attract investments to the tune of Rs 500 crore in the incubation and start-up ecosystem of the state during the policy period.
This will be done by creating a sustainable ecosystem of innovation, research and development and engineering, aligning Haryana with the Centre's Start-up India initiative, the spokesman said.
"It has been proposed that an IT start-up hub in Gurgaon and at least 10 technology, business incubators or accelerators will be setup in different regions of the state," the spokesman said.
The plan is also to have incubation centres in all parts of the state, and develop one million square feet of incubation space, he said.
The spokesman said a start-up according to the draft policy will be an entity that is registered in Haryana not prior to five years and with an annual turnover not exceeding Rs 25 crore.
Applications to register under the policy will be scrutinised by a committee headed by the principal secretary or secretary of the Industries Department, the spokesman said.
The shortlisted start-ups would then have to get a certification from Policy Implementation Committee after which they would be eligible for financial incentives, he said.
The pillars of the draft policy will be infrastructure augmentation, fiscal support, fund of fund creation, regulatory support and student entrepreneurship, the spokesman said.
In fiscal support, the government would provide fiscal incentives to incubators, including capital subsidy, reimbursement for recurring expenses, and exemption on stamp duty and registration, the spokesman said.
Start-ups would also be given interest, lease rental and innovation promotion subsidies, and incentives and provisions under the Enterprises Promotion Policy-2015, he said..
Fund of fund component will provide funding to support start-ups and a corpus of Rs 200 crore will be created, the spokesman said.
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