Thanks Ed.   When you tear down the complex culture of a society, what you
are left with are the mineral and the widget folks.    Dumb luck at striking
it rich in oil or minerals and the creators of widgets and products for the
home.     If you know people like the oil folks then you know they are not
operating with all of the cylinders.    I only know one oil man who is and
he isn't able to capitalize very well yet.    Most of them are hardworking
ignorant folks who will destroy anything to get it out.   Like BP.      It's
basically trash and burn and take what's left and leave.   Like they did in
Picher and in Oklahoma and now in the gulf of Mexico.      

 

That's why you have the rise in the only culture they have left with a full
free artistic culture and moral structure that saves their children.    The
fundamentalist, non-ecclesiastical churches.     You don't pay to go to
church and you get free moral education, music and performing arts and even
architecture, painting and sculpture.  The Church is now the biggest
business in Oklahoma.     Their entrepreneurs are preachers and they don't
like you much.

 

REH

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 9:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] From today's Washington Post

 


The real jobs machine: Entrepreneurs

        

 


By  <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/staff/articles/robert+j.+samuelson/>
Robert J. Samuelson

Monday, October 4, 2010 

If you're interested in job creation -- and who isn't these days? -- you
should talk to someone like Morris Panner. In 1999, Panner and a few others
started a small Boston software company called  <http://www.openair.com/>
OpenAir. By 2008, they sold it for $31 million. The firm had then grown to
about 50 workers. It turns out that entrepreneurship (essentially, the
founding of new companies) is crucial to job creation. But as Panner's
experience suggests, success is often a slog. 

What's frustrating and perplexing about the present unemployment is that the
U.S. economy has long been a phenomenal jobs machine. Here's the record: 83
million jobs added from 1960 to 2007 with only six years of declines (1961,
1975, 1982, 1991, 2002 and 2003). Conventional analysis blames today's poor
performance (jobs are 7.6 million below their pre-recession peak) on weak
demand. Because people aren't buying, businesses aren't hiring. Though true,
this omits the vital role of entrepreneurship. 

In any given year, employment may reflect the ups and downs of the business
cycle. But over longer periods, almost all job growth comes from new
businesses. The reason: high failure rates among existing firms. Even
successful firms succumb to threats: new competition, products or
technologies; mature markets; family feuds and the deaths of founders;
shifting consumer tastes; poor management and unprofitability. A company
founded today has an 80 percent chance of disappearing over the next
quarter-century, report Dane Stangler and Paul Kedrosky of the Kauffman
Foundation. 

True, some blue-chip firms -- the Exxons and Procter & Gambles -- endure.
<http://www.kauffman.org/uploadedFiles/firm-formation-neutralism.pdf>
Fourth-fifths of the "Fortune 500" were founded before 1970, note Stangler
and Kedrosky. But they are exceptions, and many brand names have died: Pan
Am (once the premier international airline), Digital Equipment (once the
second-largest computer maker) and Circuit City (once a leading consumer
electronics chain). 

The debate over whether small or big firms create more jobs is misleading.
The real distinction is between new and old. 

 

American workers are roughly split between firms with fewer or more than 500
employees. In healthy times, older companies of all sizes do create lots of
jobs. But they also lose jobs, as some businesses shrink or vanish. On
balance, job creation and destruction cancel each other. All the net job
increases occur among start-ups, finds a
<http://www.nber.org/papers/w16300.pdf> study of the 1992-2005 period by
economists John Haltiwanger of the University of Maryland and Ron Jarmin and
Javier Miranda of the Census Bureau. Because most start-ups are necessarily
small, this gives a statistical edge to tinier firms in job creation. But,
the study says, the effect entirely reflects the impact of new businesses. 

To be sure, entrepreneurship has a downside: booms and busts. Remember the
dot-com "bubble." But more damaging, says Panner, are widespread popular
misconceptions about what entrepreneurship is and isn't. 

Start with the Blockbuster Myth: Success involves creating huge enterprises
a la Google that transform how we live. In reality, "most ventures don't
change the world," says Panner. They're unknown companies providing highly
specialized goods and services, plus restaurants, auto repair shops and many
everyday businesses. There are more than 500,000 start-ups annually, report
Haltiwanger, Jarmin and Miranda. The number must be large to make an impact
on the  <http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t01.htm> 155 million-person
labor force. 

Second is the Inspiration Myth: Most start-ups spring from some epiphany
suggesting a new product or technology. Wrong. Gee-whiz moments are few.
Companies continually change plans. OpenAir ditched its original idea, which
drew scant customers. "You can't do anything until you meet someone's
needs," says Panner. Discovering what works is exhausting, frustrating and
chancy. Failure rates are high; half of new firms die in five years. 

And, finally, the Incentive Myth: It's necessary to keep tax rates low, so
entrepreneurs can reap huge rewards for their time, sweat and money. Well,
this may be true, but it misses a parallel truth: government disincentives
to entrepreneurship. Panner, a registered Democrat, criticizes complex
accounting, employment, and health-care regulations imposed by federal and
state agencies that consume scarce investment funds and time. The fragmented
system of business oversight imposes a bureaucratic bias, perhaps
unintended, on start-ups. Any one rule or tax may seem justifiable, but the
collective effect can be crushing. 

It's all about risk-taking. The good news is that the entrepreneurial
instinct seems deeply ingrained in the nation's economic culture. Americans
like to create; they're ambitious; many want to be "their own bosses"; many
crave fame and fortune. (Panner is already involved with a new start-up,
<http://www.townflier.com/> TownFlier. It has five employees.) The bad news
is that venture capital for start-ups is scarce, and political leaders seem
largely oblivious to burdensome government policies. This needs to be
addressed. Entrepreneurship won't instantly cure America's jobs' deficit,
but without it, there will be no strong recovery. 




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