We seek to be a powerful catalyst in India’s development journey.
Our aim is to transform the lives of all Indians through rapid and sustained economic growth and inclusive development. We want to achieve this by co-creating and nurturing high-impact institutions.

The Growth Compass

We believe that rapid and sustained economic growth is the fulcrum to accelerate all-round development of a nation—the rising tide that lifts all boats. Economic growth is both necessary and sufficient to improve the fundamental aspects of human well-being. Metrics such as access to quality education and improved living standards are closely linked to GDP per capita, making economic growth a powerful driver of material progress. Achieving this, however, demands a multifaceted approach.

Economic Growth

Firstly, accelerating economic growth by fostering an attractive investment climate, boosting exports of goods and services, developing cities and regions as growth engines, and advancing science and technology.

Human Capital Development

Secondly, enhancing human capital, with an emphasis on improving education, skilling, labour mobility especially overseas employment, and women’s economic empowerment.

Accelerating Development

Thirdly, accelerating development by strengthening state capacity, building organisations that can catalyse population-scale improvements, and enhancing strategic philanthropy.

image

Open Areas of Work

We are looking to collaborate on overseas employment and tourism.

Philanthropy can play an important role in accelerating overseas employment. It can present evidence-based research and case studies to build salience for overseas migration, fund pilots for such things as language and skills training for potential migrants, and collaborate with the government and its ministries. We are scouting for partners, while looking at supporting or incubating an entity that will maintain a long-term commitment to increasing safe and legal skill-based overseas employment.

Another exciting area for philanthropy is building India’s tourism economy. Philanthropy can present evidence of the advantages of high-value tourism and drive consensus among key stakeholders, collaborate with the government and private sector to pilot innovative financing models, support new governance frameworks for advancing tourism, and design key policy reforms that simplify tourism regulations. We are looking at incubating a new action-oriented entity to support these functions.

Catalysing
Pivotal
Outcomes

The Convergence Foundation’s strategic worldview is perhaps best represented by Archimedes’ immortal assertion: “Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world”.
“Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world”.
We believe that with a focus on the right levers, we can help deliver outsize impact, unlocking the massive power of India’s state machinery and unleashing its formidable market forces.

Read. Learn. Participate.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

image

Lorem Ipsum Dolor Sit Amet Consectetur Adipiscing Elit

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

In the Media

We are looking to collaborate on overseas employment and tourism.

image

What can India learn from Vietnam to win 10% of global electronics production?

Data isn't just the new oil. You also need semiconductors to crunch the data. Daniel Yergin, who argued in his 1990 book, The Prize, that oil was the most important product of the 20th century, acknowledged in 2008 that 'as we look forward, it is clear that mastery will certainly come as much from a computer chip as from a barrel of oil.

image

India could not create mass prosperity. It’s not too late

The last 50 years offer an exciting puzzle to economic historians: Why did an autocracy like China deliver strong wage growth but weak public market shareholder returns (about minus 13 per cent in the last 20 years), while a democracy like India delivered strong public market shareholder returns (about 1,300 per cent in the last 20 years) but weak wage growth? India’s challenges arise from our stock of jobs since 1947 and the flow of jobs since 1991. Changing our future requires more manufacturing jobs and high-productivity firms.

image

India’s $500 billion opportunity — and how not to lose it

Last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a $500 billion (Rs 4.20 lakh crore) target for electronics manufacturing in India by 2030. We must applaud and support the ambition — growth in electronics manufacturing will help solve India’s jobs challenge. For example, the Apple ecosystem alone exports around $14 billion (Rs 1.17 lakh crore) and employs 1.6 lakh people.

image

Why India must push e-commerce exports, and how

India needs exponential export growth if it aspires to become a developed nation by 2047. The moot question is where that export growth is going to come from. E-commerce, which has enormous growth potential and is widely recognised to be the wave of the future, can be a large part of the answer

image

It’s high time for India to fix its exam system and upgrade its courses to impart employable skills

It follows from the work of 2018 Nobel laureate Paul Romer that the most valuable resources are people. And investment in human capital, knowledge and innovation is a significant contributor to economic growth. While India's population has long been seen as a hurdle, Narendra Modi's 2024 Independence Day speech made an important conceptual breakthrough by reckoning this as an asset, rather than a problem. He noted that if 400 mn people - India's population around 1947 - could achieve independenc

image

Time to focus on early childhood care and education

Nearly one in five children born globally last year were Indians, and India is currently home to approximately 14 crore children under the age of six. Simultaneously, the median age of the Indian population is around 29 years, which is expected to reach around 39 years by 2047. We have a decade of demographic advantage as a short window to enrich our human capital. If we have to realise the demographic dividend, it’s imperative that we invest in people and, more importantly, in young people who will make our dream of Viksit Bharat come true. And that resolute march towards a developed Bharat begins with the care and education of eight crore young children. It begins with the 14 lakh anganwadis and nearly four lakh pre-primary schools

image

Focus on foundational literacy and numeracy to improve educational outcomes

Anyone reading this article has those first five years of school education to thank. Think back to the first day of school—the nerves, the strange new environment, the tearful goodbye to parents, the anticipation of adventure.

image

Apple's Success in India Highlights Manufacturing as the Key to Solving India's Employment Challenge, Says Ashish Dhawan

Ashish Dhawan, Founder-CEO of The Convergence Foundation (TCT),emphasized India's success in electronics manufacturing as a clear sign of the country's potential to boost job creation

TUNE IN. LEVEL UP

Monthly Podcast

Tune-in to minds and voices that are shaping India’s economic growth, one problem at a time, one opportunity at a time.

The Alliance of Growth

Philanthropic Partnerships

The TCF network operates across 13+ states, focusing on key areas such as education, exports, ease of doing business, science and technology, tourism, textiles, and more.

Government Partnerships

7 philanthropic partnership working towards xyz sectors.

Impact Ecosystem

17 Organisations. One Aim.
To be a powerful catalyst in India’s development journey.

Aiplogo logo
apag logo
cegis logo
central logo
change logo
crisp logo
fast logo
fed logo
ilss logo
infravision logo
iseg logo
bhavan logo
pahle logo
prosperiti logo
rocket logo
ssa logo
udaiti logo
image

The Convergence Foundation seeks to be a powerful catalyst in India’s development journey, by creating momentum around pivotal ideas that have the highest potential for transformational change.

Home

FAQs
Financials & Reports
Contact Us
imageimage

©2024-25 The Convergence Foundation

T&C | Privacy Policy

Designed with 🤍 by Sane Difference