Inclusive Entrepreneurship Support
  • 2021-04-11
  • Entrepreneurship Research Center on G20 Economies
  • Edit
  • The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security of China stated that it supports university students’ entrepreneurship and innovation, takes entrepreneurship and innovation as an important path for expanding employment, provides more policy service resources for university students, provides targeted entrepreneurship training, and grants entrepreneurial guarantee loans, entrepreneurship subsidies, and site support. In 2021, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security will insist on taking the employment of graduates as the top priority of its employment work by implementing the employment and entrepreneurship promotion plan, which specifically includes: supporting graduates to be employed in enterprises, supporting grassroots employment, supporting entrepreneurship and innovation and strengthening recruitment services. The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security will enhance the employability of graduates by carrying out targeted vocational guidance, exploring new form of vocational training, collecting more high-quality employment internships. For graduates from low-income families and zero-employment families, “one-to-one” assistance and subsidies for job-seeking and entrepreneurship will be implemented.

    Argentina’s Administración Nacional de la Seguridad Social (ANSES) presented the Empower Youth Inclusion program, which will assign $ 8,500 scholarships for productive, labor and community projects in which young people between 18 and 29 years old can participate. As detailed by ANSES, it is a program for "creating and strengthening projects for promotion and social inclusion aimed at young people between 18 and 29 years old in a situation of social vulnerability." The program has provided cash encouragement, besides training, seminars and other activities to promote youth entrepreneurship and employment. Government agencies, non-governmental organizations, and non-profit organizations can submit their projects. If approved, each project can receive $8,500 as financial support per month for up to 12 months.

    The Australian BFF (Boosting Female Founders) Initiative commenced in 2020 to support women entrepreneurs to help grow and scale their startups into domestic and global markets by providing access to early-stage capital. The program provides grants of between $25,000 and $400,000 on a co-contribution basis to successful applicants and is open to startups that are majority owned and led by women. Additional support is available to underrepresented groups such as women founders who are from regional or remote locations, identify as an Indigenous Australian, migrated to Australia as a refugee or humanitarian entrant and are a person with a disability.

    In honor of International Women's Day, the International Trade Administration's U.S. Commercial Service hosted an event to honor women exporters. This event was held on March 8 and is part of their Women's Global Trade Empowerment Program, a premier resource for women entrepreneurs who wish to boldly grow their business into new markets.  The Commerce Department's U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) hosted the annual Women’s Entrepreneurship Symposium (WES) on March 3, 2021. This symposium offers attendees a chance to learn about innovation and business from public and private sector experts.







  • Partners

  • Global Health Innovation Center (GHIC)
  • World Intelligent Incubation Network (WIIN)
  • National University of Singapore
  • Canada-China Institute For Business & Development
  • TusPark Research Institute for Innovation
  • Cross-strait Tsinghua Research Institute
  • Tsinghua X-Lab

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