Career
In 1944, Shroff served as a non-official (since India was not yet independent) delegate at the United Nations "Bretton Woods Conference" on post-war monetary and financial systems In the same year, and with seven other leading industrialists, Shroff co-authored the Bombay Plan, which was a set of proposals for the development of the post-independence Indian economy. He complained against the indifference with which the state treated entrepreneurs, and asserted that if the Government of India were to shed some of their "impractical ideologies" and extend their active support to the private sector, very rapid industrialisation could be brought about within the next 10 years.
Shroff also served as company director of the Tata Group and of several other leading private industries.
A biography of Shroff, commissioned by the Forum of Free Enterprise, was published in 2000 by Sucheta Dalal.