Noting that innovation is the antidote to stagnation, the President said with rapid changes occurring in science, education and research, only those countries having a technological edge will emerge successful in the fiercely competitive global market.
He said with over 4300 Startups, India is the third largest start-up eco-system in the world today and almost 72 per cent of its founders in India are below the age of 35.
"The youth of our country are brimming with ideas and enterprise. They are harnessing technology to find solutions to day-to-day problems of the common man. Ingenuity aided by technology can bring substantial welfare benefits.
"It will also help provide direct and effective intervention to uplift the quality of life among millions of marginalised citizens," Mukherjee said.
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He was speaking at National Technology Day event organised by the Ministry of Science and Technology. On this day, India achieved a technological feat after successful nuclear tests in Pokhran.
Asserting that the possibility of 11,000 start-ups by 2020 is real, he said Start-Up India and Stand-Up India schemes have the potential to trigger another round of socio-economic transformation similar to the initiatives of last decade when rights to job, education and food were provided, backed by legal guarantees.