ENTREPRENEURSHIP AIDS THE ECONOMY
Most
economists agree that entrepreneurship is essential to the vitality of any
economy, developed or developing.
Entrepreneurs
create new businesses, generating jobs for themselves and those they employ. In
many cases, entrepreneurial activity increases competition and, with
technological or operational changes, it can increase productivity as well.
In
the United States, for example, small businesses provide approximately 75
percent of the net new jobs added to the American economy each year and
represent over 99 percent of all U.S. employers. The small businesses in the
United States are often ones created by self-employed entrepreneurs.
“Entrepreneurs
give security to other people; they are the generators of social welfare,” Carl
J. Schramm, president and chief executive officer of Ewing Marion Kauffman
Foundation, said in February 2007. The foundation is dedicated to fostering
entrepreneurship, and Schramm is one of the world’s leading experts in this
field.
Others
agree that the benefits of small businesses go beyond income. Hector V.
Baretto, administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA),
explains, “Small businesses broaden the base of participation in society,
create jobs, decentralize economic power, and give people a stake in the
future.”
Entrepreneurs
innovate and innovation is a central ingredient in economic growth. As Peter
Drucker said, “The entrepreneur always searches for change, responds to it,
and exploits it as an opportunity.” Entrepreneurs are responsible for the
commercial introduction of many new products and services, and for opening new
markets. A look at recent history shows that entrepreneurs were essential to
many of the most significant innovations, ones that revolutionized how people
live and work. From the automobile to the airplane to personal computers –
individuals with dreams and determination developed these commercial advances.
Small
firms also are more likely than large companies to produce specialty goods and
services and custom-demand items. As Schramm has suggested, entrepreneurs
provide consumers with goods and services for needs they didn’t even know they
had.
Innovations
improve the quality of life by multiplying consumers’ choices. They enrich
people’s lives in numerous ways – making life easier, improving communications,
providing new forms of entertainment, and improving health care, to name a few.
Small
firms in the United States, for instance, innovate far more than large ones do.
According to the Small Business Administration, small technology companies
produce nearly 13 times more patents per employee than large firms. They
represent one-third of all companies in possession of 15 or more patents.
According
to the 2006 Summary Results of the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM)
project, “Regardless of the level of development and firm size, entrepreneurial
behavior remains a crucial engine of innovation and growth for the economy and
for individual companies since, by definition, it implies attention and
willingness to take advantage of unexploited opportunities.” The GEM project
is a multi-country study of entrepreneurship and economic growth. Founded and
sponsored by Babson College (USA) and the London Business School in 1999, the
study included 42 countries by 2006.
International
and regional institutions, such as the United Nations and the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development, agree that entrepreneurs can play a
crucial role in mobilizing resources and promoting economic growth and
socio-economic development. This is particularly true in the developing world,
where successful small businesses are primary engines of job creation and
poverty reduction.
For all of these reasons, governments may
wish to pursue policies that encourage entrepreneurship.
In summary these are the contributions of an
entrepreneur to the economy:
1. Employment
generation
2. National
income
3. Balanced
regional development
4. Dispersal
of economic power
5. Better
standards of living
6. Creating
innovation
“I
had to make my own living and my own opportunity! But I made it! Don’t sit down
and wait for the opportunities to come. Get up and make them!”
(Madam C. J. Walker)
No comments:
Post a Comment