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Schedule
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Download Conference Overview |
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Download Conference Detailed Agenda
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June 5,
2009 - Friday
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1600 – 1630 hrs
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Registration
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1630 – 1825 hrs
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Inaugural Session
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1825 – 1940 hrs
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An Overview of ISB-RAND Research Findings
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1940 hrs onwards
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Networking Dinner |
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June 6, 2009 - Saturday
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0815 – 0900 hrs
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Registration
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0900 - 0905 hrs
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Welcome Address
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0905 – 0930 hrs
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Keynote address
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0930 – 1040 hrs
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Focus on Research Findings |
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1040 - 1100 hrs
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Break
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1100 – 1300 hrs
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Entrepreneurship India’s Educational Sector – Policy Framework
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1300 – 1400 hrs
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Break
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1400 – 1600 hrs
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Entrepreneurship in effective
Infrastructure Utilisation – Policy Framework
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1600 – 1615 hrs
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Break
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1615 – 1820 hrs |
The Journey to Action |
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1820 – 1830 hrs
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Vote of Thanks
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Detailed Agenda
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| June 5, 2009 -
Friday
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| 1600 – 1630 hrs |
Registration |
| 1630 – 1640 hrs |
Welcome address
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Ajit Rangnekar, Dean, Indian School of
Business
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| 1640 – 1700 hrs |
Entrepreneurship at ISB and Conference Overview |
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Krishna Tanuku, Executive Director,
Wadhwani Centre for Entrepreneurship Development, ISB
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| 1700 – 1725 hrs |
Entrepreneurship:
Global Trends in Policies
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| Bruce Nardulli, Director, RAND-Qatar Policy Institute and
Senior Political Scientist with the RAND Corporation. |
[ShowBio] |
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Bruce Nardulli is the Director of the RAND-Qatar Policy Institute and a senior
political scientist with the RAND Corporation. Nardulli's efforts focus on
strengthening RAND's relationships in Asia and across the Middle East to
provide evidence-based, objective policy research for the region. Established
in 2003, the RAND-Qatar Policy Institute analyses complex policy problems and
helps implement enduring solutions for clients across the Middle East, North
Africa and South Asia. The institute is a collaborative undertaking of the RAND
Corporation and the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science, and Community
Development, a private, nonprofit organisation dedicated to developing and
utilizsing human potential throughout the greater Middle East. Nardulli has
more than 20 years of experience at RAND and currently serves on the RQPI Board
of Overseers, which is co-chaired by Her Highness Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser Al
Missned and Michael Rich, RAND Executive Vice President. Originally from
Pittsburgh, Pa, Nardulli earned a Bachelor’s degree from Ohio State University,
a Master of Arts degree from Kings’ College, the University of London, and his
Doctorate from Ohio State University.
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| 1725 – 1825 hrs |
Keynote and Special Address
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Keynote
Speaker
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Entrepreneurship and Policies in Economic Growth
Nagarajan Vittal, Ex-Central Vigilance Commissioner, Ex-Chairman of the Public Enterprises Selection Board, Ex-Secretary of Department of Telecommunication, Secretary of Department of Electronics, Ex-Development Commissioner of Kandla Free Trade Zone |
[ShowBio] |
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Nagarajan Vittal, an upright IAS officer of the 1960 batch has been a bureaucrat of high integrity. His contribution as Secretary of Telecommunication and Department of Electronics, to bring the government and the industry closer was remarkable. As head of the Public Enterprises Selection Board, he initiated policy changes which made the selection process transparent and time-bound. Vittal’s motivation wherever he had worked was to make life easier for the people and ensure that the schemes were implemented in right earnest. As the Development Commissioner of Kandla Free Trade Zone, he ensured that exporters were not harassed by cumbersome procedures. He has been a frequent contributor to newspaper columns and has produced three books. His theme mainly focusses on declining standards of governance and soaring corruption. |
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Special
Address
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| 1825 – 1940 hrs |
An
Overview of ISB-RAND Research Findings
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Chair
| Fred Kipperman, Associate Director, RAND Institute for Civil
Justice, US |
[ShowBio] |
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Fred Kipperman is a fellow in the Kauffman RAND Institute for
Entrepreneurship Public Policy (KRI) and the Associate Director of the RAND
Institute for Civil Justice. KRI is dedicated to assessing and improving legal
and regulatory policymaking as it relates to small businesses and
entrepreneurship in a wide range of settings, including corporate governance,
employment law, consumer law, securities regulation and business ethics. The
Institute was founded in 2004 (as the Kaufman-RAND Center for Regulation and
Small Business) with funding from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
Institute research seeks to: examine the effects of a wide range of public
policies and other forces on small businesses and entrepreneurs; measure the
effect of public policies on small businesses, job growth and economic
activity; and identify approaches that achieve policy goals while limiting
unintended negative consequences for entrepreneurship.
Kipperman is an attorney licensed to practice law in Texas and Arizona. He was
recently named as one of the top legal consultants in the United States by
Lawdragon and was awarded as one of the nation’s top three public service
counsels by the Association of Media and Entertainment Counsel. He graduated
from the University of Arizona with degrees in Business Administration and
Entrepreneurship as well as Law.
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Panelists
| • Overview of research: |
| Krishna Kumar, Senior Economist, RAND and Professor at Pardee
RAND Graduate School of Public Policy |
[ShowBio] |
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Krishna Kumar is a Senior Economist at RAND and a Professor at the Pardee RAND
Graduate School of Public Policy, where he leads the Rosenfeld Programme on
Asian Development. He received his PhD in Economics from the University of
Chicago. Kumar’s research spans the areas of Economic Growth & Development,
International Economics, and Macroeconomics. He has researched the role of
economic openness on education and growth, higher education policies in the US,
the effect of tax reform on US economic growth, international capital flows,
reasons for US-Europe productivity differences, the effect of the Green
Revolution on recipient and donor countries, cross-country determinants of firm
size, poverty traps in sub-Saharan Africa, policies to revive the stagnant
sub-Saharan African economies, and the role of social capital in economic
development. His completed and ongoing research at RAND is focussed on
comparing the Indian and Chinese education systems, comparing Indian and US
Affirmative Action policies, analysing the labour markets for anesthesiology,
and studying public policies that promote entrepreneurship in India. His
research has been published in journals such as, Journal of Monetary Economics,
Journal of Economic Growth, Journal of Development Economics, and B E Journals
in Macroeconomics (Advances), Review of Economic Dynamics, and Macroeconomic
Dynamics.
Kumar has prior experience in the American and Indian software industries. He
has taught Global Economics and Macroeconomics at the USC Marshall School of
Business, and teaches at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business (where he
was chosen for a best teaching award by the Class of 2006 executive MBA
students) and at the Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, India (where he was
chosen by students as the Professor of the Year by the Classes of 2005 and
2006). He teaches a graduate level course in Macroeconomic Development at the
Pardee RAND Graduate School (where he was chosen as the Professor of the Year
in 2008).
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| • Overview of the Indian MSME landscape: |
| Shamika Ravi, Assistant Professor, Economics and Finance, ISB |
[ShowBio] |
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Shamika Ravi is Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics and Finance
at the Indian School of Business. She has worked extensively on issues
surrounding microfinance, risk and insurance, and welfare and poverty. She is a
Fellow of the Microfinance Management Institute in Washington, DC and has also
worked as a Consultant for the World Bank's Development and Research Group.
Ravi has written extensively on various aspects of microfinance, including the
role of financial literacy, access to credit and responses to risk, and the
cost of micro-credit. She has participated in a number of high-level
conferences and seminars and was recently featured in an online business school
session on microfinance organised by the Financial Times. She has a PhD in
Economics from New York University, and Master's and Bachelor's degrees in
Economics from the University of Delhi.
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| • State-level initiatives for entrepreneurship: |
| Liz Brown, Doctoral Fellow at the Pardee RAND Graduate School |
[ShowBio] |
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Liz Brown is a Doctoral Fellow at the Pardee RAND Graduate School. Her
dissertation research focusses on low-income entrepreneurship in both developed
and developing country-contexts. Brown is developing three papers on this
topic. At RAND, she is an author on several papers related to corporate
governance in China and executive office reform in the US. Prior to beginning
her doctoral work at RAND, Brown focussed on economic development in Silicon
Valley where she led the research and production teams on the annual Index of
Silicon Valley report from 2000 - 2005. Brown earned an MA from Stanford
University in International and Comparative Education and has extensive
experience in US regional economic development.
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| • Q & A / Discussion |
| • Outline of panels for the following day |
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| 1940 – 1945 hrs |
Vote of Thanks |
| 1945 hrs onwards |
Networking Dinner |
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June 6, 2009 - Saturday
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| 0815 – 0900 hrs |
Registration |
| 0900 – 0905 hrs |
Welcome Address
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| 0905 – 0930 hrs |
Keynote
Address
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| Evan Feigenbaum, Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations,
U.S |
[ShowBio] |
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Evan Feigenbaum is senior fellow for East, Central, and South Asia at the
Council on Foreign Relations. Initially an academic with a PhD in Chinese
politics, his work in both government and the private sector has since spanned
all three major regions of Asia.
From 2001 to 2009, he served at the State Department as Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, and Maldives, as well
as South Asian regional economic and security affairs (2007-09), deputy
assistant secretary of state for the former Soviet republics of Central Asia
(2006-07), member of the policy planning staff with principal responsibility
for China, Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia (2001-06), and as an adviser on
China to Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick, with whom he worked closely
in the development of the US-China senior dialogue. During the intensive final
phase of the initiative from July to October 2008, he co-chaired the
coordinating team charged with moving the US-India civil nuclear agreement
through the International Atomic Energy Agency Board of Governors, the Nuclear
Suppliers Group, and to Congress, where it became the US-India Nuclear
Cooperation Approval and Nonproliferation Enhancement Act. He received the
Department’s superior honour award five times.
Prior to government service, Feigenbaum worked at Harvard University
(1997-2001), where he was a lecturer on government in the Faculty of Arts and
Sciences and Executive Director of the Asia-Pacific security initiative and
programme chair of the Chinese security studies programme in the John F Kennedy
School of Government. He also taught at the US Naval Postgraduate School
(1994-95) as lecturer of national security affairs and was a consultant on
China to the RAND Corporation (1993-94).
His publications include two books: China's Techno-Warriors: National Security
and Strategic Competition from the Nuclear to the Information Age (Stanford
University Press, 2003; Chinese edition published as Zhonggong Keji Xianqu,
Taipei, 2006) and Change in Taiwan and Potential Adversity in the Strait (RAND,
1995). His articles have appeared in journals, edited volumes, and the opinion
pages, including The New York Times, International Herald-Tribune,
International Security, Survival, Washington Quarterly, China Quarterly, Russia
in Global Affairs, Far Eastern Economic Review, and elsewhere.
A native of New York City, he received his PhD and AM in political science from
Stanford University and his AB in history from the University of Michigan. He
has received awards, prizes, and competitive fellowships, including Olin and
Belfer fellowships at Harvard University (1997-99), and spent three years as a
fellow of Stanford University’s Centre for International Security and
Cooperation (1994-97).
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| 0930 – 1040 hrs |
Session
1: Focus on Research Findings
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ISB-RAND key findings on how policies influence entrepreneurship
Chair
| Reuben Abraham - Executive Director, Center for Emerging
Markets Solutions at the Indian School of Business and Director, Soros Economic
Development Fund |
[ShowBio] |
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Reuben Abraham is a Professor and Executive Director of the Centre for Emerging
Markets Solutions at the Indian School of Business (ISB) in Hyderabad. He
serves on the global Board of Directors of the Soros Economic Development Fund
(SEDF), which aims to catalyse growth in emerging markets. Under the aegis of
SEDF, he has helped set up a unique India-focussed SME early stage fund with
Google and Omidyar Network as co-investors, which he is a senior adviser to. He
serves as an adviser to several companies, including a financial services
company; a large real estate company; and three start-up companies. A TED
Global Fellow in 2007, he now serves on the TED Fellows selection committee,
and is a member of the Clinton Global Initiative. Before ISB, Abraham did his
MA, MPhil and PhD from Columbia University in New York. During his time at
Columbia, he was an Associate Fellow in Global Economics at the Council on
Foreign Relations, and also a Fellow at the Public Policy Consortium. He was a
Sloan Foundation/CITI Telecommunications Fellow in 2000.
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Panellists
| • The Single-Window Clearance Policy: |
| Neeraj Sood, Economist, RAND and Professor at Pardee RAND
Graduate School |
[ShowBio] |
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Neeraj Sood, PhD, is an economist at RAND, Professor at the Pardee RAND Graduate
School and faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research
(NBER). His prior work at RAND has focussed on the economics of innovation,
HIV/AIDS policy and healthcare financing. His recent research includes
estimating the impact of regulations in OECD countries on the pace and level of
pharmaceutical innovation, analysing an alternate mechanism for promoting
R&D, empirically evaluating the effect of new HIV treatments on risky
sexual behavior and prevalence of HIV, and examining the role of increased
health infrastructure availability on achieving universal childhood
immunisation in India. Sood’s research has been published in several
peer-reviewed journals and books and also covered by various popular media
outlets. He is also the Managing Editor of the online journal forums for Health
Economics and Policy.
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| • The SME Innovation Survey: |
| Arnab Mukherji, Pardee RAND Graduate School |
[ShowBio] |
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Arnab Mukherji has a PhD in Policy Analysis from the Pardee RAND Graduate
School. The unifying theme for much of Mukherji's research has been an
investigation of how individuals make decisions in a wide range of settings and
how public policy may be used constructively to make systemic and behavioral
changes that alter individual and societal outcomes. Mukherji teaches core and
elective courses in public policy, statistical methods and microeconomics.
Recently, he has been working on obesity trends, instructional time in primary
schools in India, socio-economic changes in selected states of India spanning
three decades and on entrepreneurship in SME firms in India.
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| • What effects do state-level initiatives have?
Public-private partnership in infrastructure: |
| Krishna Kumar, Senior Economist, RAND and Professor at Pardee
RAND Graduate School of Public Policy |
[ShowBio] |
 |
Krishna Kumar is a Senior Economist at RAND and a Professor at the Pardee RAND
Graduate School of Public Policy, where he leads the Rosenfeld Programme on
Asian Development. He received his PhD in Economics from the University of
Chicago. Kumar’s research spans the areas of Economic Growth & Development,
International Economics, and Macroeconomics. He has researched the role of
economic openness on education and growth, higher education policies in the US,
the effect of tax reform on US economic growth, international capital flows,
reasons for US-Europe productivity differences, the effect of the Green
Revolution on recipient and donor countries, cross-country determinants of firm
size, poverty traps in sub-Saharan Africa, policies to revive the stagnant
sub-Saharan African economies, and the role of social capital in economic
development. His completed and ongoing research at RAND is focussed on
comparing the Indian and Chinese education systems, comparing Indian and US
Affirmative Action policies, analysing the labour markets for anesthesiology,
and studying public policies that promote entrepreneurship in India. His
research has been published in journals such as, Journal of Monetary Economics,
Journal of Economic Growth, Journal of Development Economics, and B E Journals
in Macroeconomics (Advances), Review of Economic Dynamics, and Macroeconomic
Dynamics.
Kumar has prior experience in the American and Indian software industries. He
has taught Global Economics and Macroeconomics at the USC Marshall School of
Business, and teaches at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business (where he
was chosen for a best teaching award by the Class of 2006 executive MBA
students) and at the Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, India (where he was
chosen by students as the Professor of the Year by the Classes of 2005 and
2006). He teaches a graduate level course in Macroeconomic Development at the
Pardee RAND Graduate School (where he was chosen as the Professor of the Year
in 2008).
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| • Q & A / Discussion: 45 minutes |
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| 1040 – 1100 hrs |
Break |
| 1100 – 1300 hrs |
Session
2: Entrepreneurship India’s Educational Sector – Policy Framework
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Chair
| Manish Sabharwal, Chairman and Co-founder, Serves on Prime Ministers Council; Member of Skills Commission and Member of Steering Committee for Labour and Employment |
[ShowBio] |
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Manish Sabharwal is currently the Chairman and Co-founder of Teamlease Services,
India’s largest temporary staffing firm. The four year old firm now has over
80,000 employees in 870 cities locations across India. Earlier he Co-founded
India Life, an HR outsourcing company in 1996 that was acquired by Hewitt
associates in 2002. Consequently he was Managing Director of Hewitt Outsourcing
(Asia) in Singapore.
Sabharwal serves on the Prime Ministers Council for Skill Development and was a
member of the Planning Commission steering committee on labour and employment
for the Eleventh five year plan. He is an MBA from The Wharton School, US.
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Panellists
| V Raghunathan, CEO of GMR Varalakshmi Foundation |
[ShowBio] |
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V Raghunathan is the Chief Executive Oficer of GMR Varalakshmi Foundation, the corporate social responsibility arm of the infrastructure major, the GMR Group. He was the Managing Director of GMR Industries Ltd from Jan 2007 to June 2008; Professor of Finance & Accounting at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad from 1982 to 2001, an Adjunct Professor at the University of Bocconi, Milan in Italy since 1990.
Raghunathan is or has been on the board of various banks, merchant banks, stock exchanges, corporates, and educational institutions and has been a member of several national level committees of the Ministry of Finance, SEBI, BSE, NSE and other professional bodies. He was also the Chairman of the MBA Programme and the Chairman of Finance and Accounting Area at IIM, Ahmedabad for several years in the past.
He has written nearly 400 papers and articles, 6 books and several monographs and published cases in the field of capital markets and corporate finance. His latest book, Games Indians Play (Penguin, Dec 2006), is a best seller. He has been a consultant for several Indian and multinational companies and banks and has given lectures extensively in India and abroad. He writes a regular guest column for The Economic Times and MINT. Raghunathan has also held regular columns with The Times of India, Hindustan Times, Financial Express, Business Today, Dalal Street, and a few other magazines.
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| Parth Shah, President of the Centre for Civil Society, Economist and Former Professor, University of Michigan |
[ShowBio] |
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Parth Shah is President of the Centre for Civil Society, a think tank for public policy solutions within the framework of rule of law, subsidiarity, and competitive markets. Shah's research and advocacy work centres on the themes of economic freedom (law, liberty and livelihood campaign), choice and competition in education (fund students, not schools), property right approach for the environment (terracotta vision of stewardship), and good governance (new public management and the duty to publish).
Shah has received BPharm and PhD in Economics and has taught Economics at the University of Michigan at Dearborn before returning to India to start the Centre for Civil Society. He has published academic articles in the areas of development economics, welfare economics, business cycle theory, free or laissez-faire banking, and currency board systems. He is the youngest Indian member of the Mont Pelerin Society.
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| Anand Sudarshan, MD and CEO, Manipal Education |
[ShowBio] |
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Anand Sudarshan heads education business initiatives of Manipal Education and
Medical Group, a leading player in education and healthcare in India. He is
based in Bangalore.
Prior to his current position, Sudarshan was President, Adea International (a
wholly owned subsidiary of Adea Solutions, Inc, Dallas TX), responsible for all
global (non-US) business of the IT Services and Solutions company. He had taken
on this position after successfully leading Netkraft Private Limited as CEO to
a merger with Adea Solutions, Inc in July 2004. In 1989 Sudarshan co-founded
The Microland Group and for about 14 years was part of the team that built it
into one of the leading privately held Indian technology companies. At various
times, he was responsible for defining the strategy and technology roadmap of
the group, establishing the infrastructure services business, and managing its
software company as CEO. From 1985 to 1989, Sudarshan served in several
capacities at Computer Point India Limited, a pioneering computer retail and
training chain. He started his career at Nelco, a Tata Group company, in June
1984.
Sudarshan is a Charter Member of TiE, IFPUG member, a life-member of the
Computer Society of India, Jury Member of Polestar Foundation and CIO Awards,
and is an active member of CII. He has a Bachelors of Engineering degree in
Electronics and Communications Engineering from the National Institute of
Technology, Trichy, University of Madras (earlier known as the Regional
Engineering College, Trichy), and a MBA from the Indian Institute of
Management, Calcutta.
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| Shantanu Prakash, Chairman and Managing Director of Educomp Solutions Limited |
[ShowBio] |
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Shantanu Prakash is the Chairman and Managing Director of Educomp Solutions Limited. Prakash founded Educomp Solutions Limited in 1994, a few years after acquiring an MBA degree from the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad.
Prakash’s vision has been to transform the teaching-learning process through the use of technology and best practices. He is also the Founder and Managing Trustee of the Learning Leadership Foundation (LLF), an organisation dedicated to bringing best practices in education to under resourced schools. He is also the Co-founder and Chairman of Lakshya Digital Pvt Ltd - a pioneering game development studio, based out of New Delhi, India.
Prakash is a charter member of TiE (The Indus Entrepreneurs), an organisation that connects entrepreneurs. He is a frequent speaker in education and business conferences worldwide.
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| 1300 – 1400 hrs |
Break |
| 1400 – 1600 hrs |
Session
3: Entrepreneurship in effective Infrastructure Utilisation – Policy Framework
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Chair
| Sushil Handa, Chairman, Claris Lifesciences |
[ShowBio] |
 |
Sushil Handa is Founder and CEO of the Ahmedabad-based Claris LifeSciences, a
manufacturer of sterile parenteral preparations, life-saving medicines and
hospital products, focussing on delivery systems for treatment of critical
diseases. An international company set up in the year 2000 on an 85-acre plot
and market leader in the critical care segment in India, Claris operates in
more than 60 countries through its subsidiaries, offices, and marketing and
distribution network.
A first-generation entrepreneur and management graduate with a finance
background, Handa launched Core Healthcare, the biggest manufacturer of
intravenous fluid in the country in the late 80s and 90s. At its peak, Core had
a market capitalisation of Rs 1,500 crore.
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Panellists
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Nikhil Gandhi, Group Chairman, SKIL Infrastructure Limited
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[ShowBio] |
 |
Nikhil Gandhi is a first generation entrepreneur, hailing from a respectable Gujarati family. He has gained 20 years of experience in maritime equipment supply and in port and allied infrastructure development activities. Gandhi started the first joint venture Railway project with the Government of India- Pipavav Railway which is over 283 km and now serves as a lifeline to the Saurashtra region and pioneered the concept of Special Economic Zones in the country and was the first promoter of the largest SEZ project in India near Mumbai. From supplying equipment and accessories to the Mumbai Port, Indian Navy etc, Gandhi grew to indigenisation of hi-tech equipments required for the armed forces and other public sector enterprises, and then to developing infrastructure projects. For his commendable initiatives towards and excellence in infrastructure development and entrepreneurship, he has received several awards including first IDFC award for excellence in infrastructure and nominations to chair seminars and sessions on related topics. He has also represented the infrastructure sector on several high-level committees of industry and trade organisations in the country.
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| Jonathan Zasloff, UCLA Law School and the Ziman Center for
Real Estate, US |
[ShowBio] |
 |
Professor Jonathan Zasloff teaches Torts, Land Use, Environmental Law,
Comparative Urban Planning Law, Legal History, and Public Policy Clinic - Land
Use, the Environment and Local Government.
Zasloff has a keen interest in world politics; he holds a PhD in the history of
American foreign policy from Harvard and an MPhil in International Relations
from Cambridge University. Much of his recent work concerns the influence of
lawyers and legalism in US external relations, and has published articles on
these subjects in the New York University Law Review and the Yale Law Journal.
More generally, his recent interests focus on the response of public
institutions to social problems, and the role of ideology in framing policy
responses.
Zasloff has long been active in state and local politics and policy. He recently
co-authored an article discussing the relationship of Proposition 13
(California's landmark tax limitation initiative) and school finance reform,
and served for several years as a senior policy advisor to the Speaker of
California Assembly. His practice background reflects these interests. For two
years, he represented welfare recipients attempting to obtain child care
benefits and micro-businesses in low income areas. He then practiced for two
more years at one of Los Angeles' leading public interest environmental and
land use firms, challenging poorly planned development and working to expand
the network of the city's urban park system.
Zasloff currently serves as a member of the boards of the Santa Monica
Mountains Conservancy (a state agency charged with purchasing and protecting
open space), the Los Angeles Centre for Law and Justice (the leading legal
service firm for low-income clients in East Los Angeles), and Friends of
Israel's Environment.
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B P Acharya, Secretary, Industry and Commerce Department, Government of Andhra
Pradesh and Director, Andhra Pradesh Industrial Infrastructure Corporation
(APIIC) |
[ShowBio] |
 |
To be updated soon
|
| Venkat Ramaswamy, Executive Director, Head of Investment
Banking and Co-founder of Edelweiss |
[ShowBio] |
 |
Venkat Ramaswamy has previously worked with the Spartek Emerging Opportunities
Fund and ICICI, where he worked on project-based lending to large corporates,
analysing and evaluating investment decisions. He subsequently managed the
Spartek Fund that focussed on making equity investments in small and emerging
companies. He brings with him significant experience and expertise on client
relationships to Edelweiss. Ramaswamy holds an MBA from the University of
Pittsburgh and is an Electronics Engineer.
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|
| 1600 – 1615 hrs |
Break |
| 1615 – 1820 hrs |
Session
4: The Journey to Action
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The Journey to Action
To address the key policies that affect the above themes in general
- Policy reform to encourage entrepreneurship in the above industries
- Availability of Financing/ Venture Capital funding
- Human Resource availability
- The road to implementation
Chair
| William Inboden, Senior Vice-President, Legatum Institute |
[ShowBio] |
 |
William Inboden is Senior Vice-President of the Legatum Institute. Most recently
he served as Senior Director for Strategic Planning on the National Security
Council at the White House, where he worked on a range of foreign policy issues
including the National Security Strategy, democracy and governance, contingency
planning, counter-radicalisation, and multilateral institutions and
initiatives. Prior to that, Inboden worked at the Department of State as a
Member of the Policy Planning Staff and a Special Advisor in the Office of
International Religious Freedom.
Inboden is a regular contributor to Foreign Policy magazine’s Shadow Government.
He was also a Civitas Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and has
worked as a staff member in both the United States Senate and the House of
Representatives. He has lectured widely in academic and policy settings, and
received numerous research and professional development fellowships. He is the
author of book, ‘Religion and American Foreign Policy, 1945-1960: The Soul of
Containment’, published by Cambridge University Press. Inboden received his
PhD, MPhil, and MA degrees in history from Yale University, and his AB from
Stanford University.
|
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Som Mittal is President of NASSCOM, the premier trade body and the “Chamber of Commerce” for the IT – BPO industry in India. In this role, he is responsible for representing the Indian IT – BPO software and services industry to multiple stakeholders. His key responsibility areas include enhancing India's leadership position in the global offshore IT-BPO and work towards further growing the market by enabling industry to tap into emerging opportunity areas and to strengthen the domestic market in India.
Over the years, NASSCOM has earned the reputation of being a strategic advisor to the various stakeholders of the industry. NASSCOM’s varied strengths include creating and influencing government and public policy, international trade development, research and market intelligence services, and access to an international network through 17 MoU’s and linkages with 40 industry associations.
Initiatives on education, strengthening cybersecurity, fostering innovation and entrepreneurship are also focus areas. NASSCOM also endeavours to narrow the digital divide in India through NASSCOM Foundation (NF).
Mittal assumed office of the President, NASSCOM in January 2008. He has a rich and wide ranging work experience of over 30 years in corporate India, he has been a part of the Indian IT industry for the past 18 years. Before joining NASSCOM, he was heading the Services business for Hewlett Packard in Asia Pacific and Japan.
In addition to chairing NASSCOM in 2003-04, and being part of the NASSCOM Executive Council for several years, Mittal has been closely associated with other industry bodies like MAIT and CII. He has played an active role in the formulation and implementation of Karnataka’s IT policy. He has been on the CII National Council for several years and part of the Chief Ministers IT Task Force in Karnataka. He is also the Founding member of the IIIT, Bangalore and the Board if IT Education Standards.
Mittal holds a BTech from IIT, Kanpur and an MBA from Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Ahmedabad. Additionally, he has attended executive programmes at Harvard and IMD.
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| M R Rao, Professor and Dean Emeritus, Indian School of
Business |
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An illustrious academic, renowned worldwide for his research and teaching
capabilities, M R Rao has earlier taught at New York University, the University
of Rochester, and the University of Tennessee. He has held various positions at
IIM-Bangalore, including those of Dean and Director. His current teaching and
research interests are in the areas of Optimisation, Corporate Finance and
Financial Derivatives. Rao has a PhD in Industrial Administration from
Carnegie-Mellon University. He has completed two Masters degrees – Master of
Science in Industrial Administration, from Carnegie-Mellon University and
Master of Engineering (Industrial), from Cornell University.
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| Sushil Handa, Chairman, Claris Lifesciences |
[ShowBio] |
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Sushil Handa is Founder and CEO of the Ahmedabad-based Claris LifeSciences, a
manufacturer of sterile parenteral preparations, life-saving medicines and
hospital products, focussing on delivery systems for treatment of critical
diseases. An international company set up in the year 2000 on an 85-acre plot
and market leader in the critical care segment in India, Claris operates in
more than 60 countries through its subsidiaries, offices, and marketing and
distribution network. A first-generation entrepreneur and management graduate
with a finance background, Handa launched Core Healthcare, the biggest
manufacturer of intravenous fluid in the country in the late 80s and 90s. At
its peak, Core had a market capitalisation of Rs 1,500 crore.
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| Manish Sabharwal, Chairman and Co-founder, Serves on Prime Ministers Council; Member of Skills Commission and Member of Steering Committee for Labour and Employment |
[ShowBio] |
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Manish Sabharwal is currently the Chairman and Co-founder of Teamlease Services,
India’s largest temporary staffing firm. The four year old firm now has over
80,000 employees in 870 cities locations across India. Earlier he Co-founded
India Life, an HR outsourcing company in 1996 that was acquired by Hewitt
associates in 2002. Consequently he was Managing Director of Hewitt Outsourcing
(Asia) in Singapore.
Sabharwal serves on the Prime Ministers Council for Skill Development and was a
member of the Planning Commission steering committee on labour and employment
for the Eleventh five year plan. He is an MBA from The Wharton School, US.
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| 1820 – 1830 hrs |
Vote of Thanks |
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