If we took entrepreneurship as seriously as we did football,
unemployment could now be at 6.4% instead of 8.1%.
The essence of
Republicans’ economic policy, characterized by Paul Ryan’s plan to lower capital
gains tax to 0, is that jobs aren’t being created because we don’t have enough
capital, enough investors willing to risk their money.
The essence of the Democrats’ economic policy, characterized
by the call to spend more on education, is that jobs aren’t being created
because we don’t have enough knowledge workers ready to compete in the global
economy.
It could be that more capital would make the difference. If
the problem is as simple as insufficient capital, though, it makes it tough to
explain why Bernanke’s creation of billions hasn’t created more jobs. Or why
companies are sitting atop of trillions. Or why private investors seem more
adept at creating bubbles than jobs, bidding up the price of existing assets as
varied as gold and real estate but less often creating sustainable new businesses.
It could be that education, the creation of more knowledge workers,
would make the difference. It doesn’t explain why the underemployment rate of recent college graduates has been close to20% in recent years and unemployment rates for college graduates remains among
the highest it has ever been.
It seems to me that the real job creators are not the
professors turning out new college graduates or portfolio managers with
handfuls of cash. More graduates and more capital seem ineffectual at creating
jobs. (Not that both wouldn’t be handy once we were.)
Entrepreneurs create jobs and any community intent on
creating jobs faster than productivity gains, globalization, and market shifts destroy
them would do well to adopt policies that encourage entrepreneurship.
There are a hundred things we could do to encourage
entrepreneurship. I’d like to just focus on one thing, one thing that could have
a huge ripple effect. It would mean taking entrepreneurship in our high schools
as seriously as we do football.
Every year, about 350,000 high school kids start playing
football. Meanwhile, every year about 350 men join NFL teams, becoming professional
players. So, about one-tenth of one percent – 0.1% - of high school players eventually
turn pro.
Think about all the hours of practice, coaching, and play
that go into the creation of these 350 new pros. There are, of course, far more
reasons for high school football than to simply create a few hundred new stars.
These games give kids a chance to be engaged in ways that classes might not, enhance
our sense of community, and teach kids broader skills about cooperating to
compete and competing to cooperate, discipline, effort, tapping inner reserve,
humiliation, exaltation, being cheered and being booed, fitness, and focus.
Entrepreneurial contests could do all that too – and create jobs. Maybe millions of jobs.
Given high school level entrepreneurial contests could
include young women, we might get 700,000 high school kids each year to compete
in this world, about double the number who each year choose to play football.
Entrepreneurial contests could include the same kind of
training and coaching as football, but have a different focus. Kids might
compete on business plans or product design, or cost reduction ideas or on
marketing or advertising campaigns. They might even start actual businesses.
Let’s say that that the same percentage of the kids competing
at the high school level went on to become “pros” at the same rate as football
players. That is, this sort of practice and awareness and the combination of
luck and opportunity for hidden talents to emerge resulted in similar 1 in
1,000 of high school kids who went on to become successful entrepreneurs.
Assuming double the participation rate of football, this would mean the
programs would eventually produce about 700 new, successful entrepreneurs per
year.
Further, let’s assume that success put entrepreneurs in the
top one-tenth of one percent of firms, firms that created an average of 400
jobs. The result would be about 280,000 new jobs per year.
Now, stay with me here, if each of those ventures were
viable for about a decade, the net effect after that first decade would be
about 2.7 million extra jobs.
Peak unemployment in the last decade was 15.4 million, the unemployment
rate hitting 10% that month (October of 2009). At its best, the number of
unemployed was only 6.7 million, unemployment hitting 4.4% that month (October
of 2006). A program that created an additional 2.7 million jobs would have
lowered the unemployment rates in those months to 8.3% and 2.6%. Assuming an
additional 2.7 million jobs, last month the unemployment rate would have been
just 6.4%. Among other things, it’s easy
to imagine that incomes would have gone up rather than down in the last decade
in such a scenario.
Obviously these numbers assume a sort of domino effect that’s
fairly optimistic, which means that reality could be even more impressive. James Fowler of UC San Diego has studiedsocial contagion and concluded that your friends’ friends’ friends influence
your happiness, the likelihood that you’ll suffer from obesity, smoke, drink, or
even be altruistic. So if communities begin to focus as much on the
entrepreneurial skills of their young as they do their football ability -
covering this in newspapers, having pep rallies, coming out in the hundreds to
watch competitions - think what that
might do to behavior in the community. Might not a 40 year old father get
inspired by someone’s business plan, changing how he runs his business? Couldn’t
a 30 year old woman decide to start a business after hearing the 23rd
17 year old explain how to profit from changing demographics?
I think that corporations could do the most to make more
employees more entrepreneurial, transforming the rate at which equity and jobs
are created. But it’s not just corporations that could change. To repeat, there
are at least a hundred things communities could do to encourage
entrepreneurship.
And once communities become more entrepreneurial, we’ll need
more capital. We’ll need more knowledge workers. But it’s entrepreneurs who
will create the jobs; at this point in our economic development, the capital and
knowledge workers just follow the parade, they no longer lead it. Maybe one way
to get this parade moving faster would be to take entrepreneurship as seriously
as we take high school football. It seems less risky and expensive than cutting
tax rates in the midst of chronic deficits, or expecting kids to take on ever
larger student loan debt. And it has incredible promise.
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