Header News Beyond Right & Wrong: Youth-Led Social Entrepreneurship Can Transforming India
Beyond Right & Wrong: Youth-Led Social Entrepreneurship Can Transforming India
Neuroscience reveals that the younger generation possesses a remarkable capacity for divergent thinking, creativity and risk-taking—qualities that enable them to innovate and reimagine solutions (https://www.un.org/development/desa/youth/wp-content/uploads/sites/21/2020/07/2020-World-Youth-Report-FULL-FINAL.pdf)
for societal challenges. These qualities make the youth ideal candidates for entrepreneurship, particularly in tackling societal challenges through innovative solutions
Yet, despite these strengths, only 17% of social enterprises globally survive beyond three years, as noted by the Failure Institute in 2018. This glaring statistic underscores a deeper systemic issue: while youth are often regarded as the torchbearers of nation-building, the “wicked challenges” they strive to solve—from climate change to social equity—are inherently complex, intersectional and require deep, transformative approaches at a population scale.
This paradox is evident in India, a nation with the world’s largest youth population, where the demographic dividend remains largely untapped. Structural barriers—ranging from inadequate support systems to the lack of nurturing spaces & role models for young leaders—impede their ability to thrive as social entrepreneurs. In India, these challenges are further compounded by hierarchical and patriarchal mindsets that undermine youth agency.
This is where entities like the vartaLeap coalition and ComMutiny-The Youth Collective step in, with a mission to make youth-centric development mainstream by creating ecosystems that empower young changemakers. This is done by promoting intergenerational collaboration and creating judgment-free spaces where young leaders can experiment, fail and learn—turning setbacks into “nuggets of wisdom.”