"Key enablers to this transformation in India are the buoyant venture capital funding eco-system, the ever increasing government support, strong mobility adoption which will cross one billion people, and global digitisation of enterprises," said Girija Pande, Chairman of Apex Avalon Consulting Private Limited, a Singapore business consultancy.
"India is at the cusp of technology transformation and currently ranks third in the global start-up ecosystem," said Pande, adding that the US and China being first and second, respectively.
Singapore, which is developing fast as a"Smart Nation" and creating an innovative start-up culture, will benefit by linking up with India, he observed.
Elaborating, Pande believes the Indian start-up eco-system will lead the next wave of business growths between the two countries with closer links to the Silicon Valley.
He also observed that Bangalore-based tech start-ups are capitalising on Indian ingenuity in information technology (IT) in building a long-term bridge with financially-backed counterparts in Singapore and the Silicon Valley.
"The India-Singapore-Silicon Valley corridor is growing and Indian startups, with innovative low-cost solutions, will play a very important part in this growth story in years to come," said Pande, who leads Apex Avalon consultancy straddling the global network of start-ups which includes ASEAN and China corridor.
"I can see a major interaction and growth in this area of start-ups, especially as Singapore has turned to innovation and value-creating businesses," said Pande who will chair a session "Perspective From The Region" on India at the South Asian Diaspora Convention (SADC) to be held July 18-19 in Singapore.
"The Indian start up environment is innovative and its low-cost solutions are beneficial both for the Indian market and the rest of the world," said Pande, a former President of Tata Consultancy Services for the Asia Pacific region.
