The proposed Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code will make it easier for new entrepreneurs to begin or exit from start-up businesses, Commerce and Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Thursday.
"Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, which is being planned, is going to make it easy to start up as much as to get out of start-ups because if you are not doing well, there shouldn't be a taboo, there should not be a hitch. They should be able to get out faster," she said at the India Today Conclave here.
Noting the government has recently announced a Start-up Action Plan that includes tax holidays, Sitharaman said: "India is the third largest start-up country, only after the US and the UK, thanks to the entrepreneurial skills of Indian youngsters."
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code Bill, designed to provide an easy exit option for insolvent and sick companies, has been referred to a joint committee of parliament.
The bankruptcy code proposes a time-bound framework - 180 days, extendable by another 90 days - to resolve insolvency cases, which, currently in the country, take an average of more than four years to resolve.
Answering questions at the conclave earlier in the day, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said that besides the Goods and Services Tax Bill, the insolvency law was among the last major pieces of reform legislation that remain to be enacted, although he did not visualise any political roadblocks in its passage through parliament.
Sitharaman also said the Niti Aayog will be setting up 70 incubation centres all over the country, which would be ranked in innovations, and the top 10 incubators would get a Rs.10 crore incentive award.
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In this connection, she also said that with "jugaad", or frugal innovation, which the country is known for, Indian youngsters have now brought technology and skills to where these could not reach earlier.
"As a result, today jugaad is the innovation that the government is also recognising," she said.