PM Oli calls for establishment of many industries with small capital

NL Today

  • Read Time 2 min.

Kathmandu: Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli spoke of the need to establish and expand many industries with minimal capital amount to enhance domestic production.

Addressing the Start-Up Nation 2030 conference here today, PM Oli viewed that youth and women, with innovative and creative thinking, could get employment opportunities at home instead of seeking greener pastures.

Oli encouraged expansion of entrepreneurship among youths to displace imports, reduce poverty, bolster national confidence and to achieve Sustainable Development Goals.

He argued that the banks and financial institutions should provide loans to such enterprises on the basis of the project rather than keeping enterprises as the mortgage.

Stating that some ‘fraudulent elements’ were trying to defame cooperatives, he assured that the government will advance cooperatives in a healthy manner.

Furthermore, the Head of the Government insisted that that we should enhance entrepreneurship based on technology, skills and capital so that desired results are achieved in domestic production.

“Any startup invested by government should not fail. It should be taken forward as a campaign,” the PM observed, pledging utmost facilitation to private sector on the part of government.

“We have not come to power and formed the government for the sake of it. Not for nothing I have assumed the role of Prime Minister at this age. I am entrusted with this responsibility to deliver something substantial,” said the 73-year-old PM.

The two-day event is a collaborative effort of the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies and Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI) among other organizations.

Present in today’s conference were Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Bishnu Prasad Paudel, Minister for Industry, Commerce and Supplies Damodar Bhandari, Minister for Labour, Employment and Social Security Sharat Singh Bhandari and FNCCI’s President Chandra Prasad Dhakal among others.

The Conference is a part of the campaign to make Nepal a startup-friendly nation in South-Asia by 2030, paving a way for the establishment of 10,000 startups and 100,000 jobs by the end of this period. (RSS)