This paper focuses on analysing how women have developed digital entrepreneurship in Telangana by both looking at the policies in place and innovation ecosystems. It claims that Telangana has created one of the most calculated state-based frameworks in India(Niti Ayog, 2022) to enable women enterprise development through the connection of incubation, digital governance, startup policy, skills, broadband infrastructure and self-help-group finance. However, the article also demonstrates that the institutional density does not necessarily provide equitable entrepreneurial change. The model of Telangana has opened up access to the world of entrepreneurship, particularly in the forms of WE-Hub, T-Hub, SHG-related credit systems, and platform-based skilling. Nevertheless, women enterprises still encounter issues of digital accessibility, credit facility, socio-cultural overheads and skewed market scaling. The article thus does not consider Telangana as an accomplished success story but as a developing policy laboratory. The key point that it makes is that the strength of the state is in its ability to develop an integrated ecosystem, and its main weakness is the disproportional transformation of broad participation into high-growth and intersectionally inclusive digital enterprises. The policy should now shift towards institutional creation to depth, district spread, gender disaggregated measurement, and better bridges between livelihood entrepreneurship and innovation-based scale (ICRIER, 2024).
Burra Shireesha (Mon,) studied this question.
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