Kalaari Capital’s CXXO initiative released a new report titled “The ₹4 Problem: Women Founders and the Market Gap Hiding in Plain Sight,” revealing a stark capital imbalance in India’s venture ecosystem. The report finds that for every ₹100 raised by founders coming from India’s most powerful startup networks, only ₹4 goes to women. Not ₹40. Not ₹14. Four rupees.
The findings directly challenge one of venture capital’s most persistent narratives, that the pipeline of women founders is weak. The data tells a different story. India has seen a 1.7x increase in girls enrolled in high school STEM between 2013 and 2024, a 2x increase in women registering for JEE between 2015 and 2025, and women today account for a significant share of STEM graduates. The pipeline is not empty. Yet capital does not follow.
Built using macro ecosystem data (AISHE, NIRF, Tracxn funding data) and insights from over 140 founders, operators, and investors, the report identifies structural bottlenecks across the startup lifecycle:
- Women are present in STEM education but are underrepresented in elite startup-producing institutions.
- India’s powerful alumni networks, often referred to as “startup mafias” act as accelerants for venture outcomes, but women are significantly less embedded in these circles.
- While women represent 38% of VC analysts across firms, they account for only 16% at the partner level, where capital allocation decisions are made.
- Gender-specific barriers, including disproportionate caregiving expectations, continue to shape founder journeys in ways that remain largely invisible in funding data.
Commenting on the report, Vani Kola, Managing Director and Founder, Kalaari Capital, said: “This isn’t a story about capability. It’s a story about opportunity. When capital concentrates around pattern-matched familiarity, the same schools, the same companies, the same networks, blind spots emerge. Blind spots create inefficiency. And inefficiency, for those willing to see it, creates opportunity. The funding gap isn’t just a question of equality. It’s a failure of price discovery. When an entire category of founders is systematically underestimated, it requires deliberate catalysts to bridge that gap. Until then, the market remains unequal.”
The report frames the capital gap not as a diversity issue, but as a structural market inefficiency with macroeconomic consequences. Global estimates suggest that advancing women’s economic participation could add hundreds of billions of dollars to India’s GDP. Women-led MSMEs face a credit gap exceeding $158 billion, underscoring the scale of unrealized economic value.
CXXO, Kalaari Capital’s platform focused on backing women founders at the earliest stages, positions its strategy as a conviction-led capital thesis, identifying and investing in segments the market has systematically undervalued.
The founders are there. The data is clear. The question is whether capital is paying attention.
About Kalaari Capital:
Kalaari is an early-stage, technology-focused venture capital firm based in Bengaluru, India. Since 2006, we’ve backed pioneering founders and category-defining companies like Dream11, Myntra, Cult.fit, Bluestone, Simplilearn, Snapdeal, ElasticRun, Digantara, and EloElo. We invest in ideas rooted in foundational technologies, with the potential to create step-change outcomes across large consumer and enterprise markets. We partner early with audacious founders on the journey to building iconic companies that will drive alpha in the coming decades.
About CXXO
CXXO is a Kalaari Capital initiative focused on expanding the funding pool for women-led startups in India. With a $10M carve-out from Kalaari’s fund, CXXO backs early-stage women founder-CEOs with fair access to capital, mentorship, and community support.
Launched in 2021, CXXO is committed to levelling the playing field and creating more female founder-CEOs who can build scalable ventures and shape India’s digital future.

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