As the Government races towards their first Budget, it must look at Sri Lanka’s startup ecosystem as a way to restart the economy and as a way to create the exponential growth required to pay the debt. The startup ecosystem has grown tremendously in the last decade and it is showing results with successful exits and IPOs. We need not look any further than PickMe, which is now being valued at Rs. 28 billion.
How do we support the startup ecosystem? We can catapult this growth in startups by taking inspiration from India’s highly successful Startup India initiative, which integrates tax benefits and structural support to empower budding entrepreneurs. By adopting a similar framework, Sri Lanka can foster innovation, create jobs, and position itself as a startup-friendly nation in South Asia.
Launched in 2016, Startup India is a flagship initiative by the Government of India to promote entrepreneurship and innovation. It provides an enabling environment for startups through:
These measures have helped Indian startups grow rapidly, creating a thriving ecosystem valued at billions of dollars.
Sri Lanka has the potential to replicate and localise such a framework but we have to consider factors such as limitations of IMF, smaller markets, inefficient infrastructure and problematic labour laws. Considering the above, here are some potential policies.
1.Tax exemptions for startups
n Income tax holiday: Sri Lanka could exempt eligible startups from income tax for their first three to five years. This would reduce the financial burden during the critical early stages of operations. The Tax Holiday could be capped to a particular size of revenue in addition to the number of years, so that it does not get abused by corporate restructuring and spinoffs.
2.Simplified registration and compliance
3.Access to funding
“Without execution, ‘vision’ is just another word for hallucination” (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe).
This policy may seem like an obvious choice, but:
When we focus on all the ways things could fail, we risk never taking the first step to succeed. Most entrepreneurs are bold dreamers who start their businesses fuelled by belief and conviction. As a country, we too must dare to dream. And where better to begin than by supporting these visionary thinkers—the very ones who may lead us out of the challenges we have created for ourselves.
Read the paper article on DailyFT here: