Porter wrote that the U.S. economy has historically benefited from several great assets: an unparalleled environment for entrepreneurialism, a tremendous infrastructure for scientific research, the world’s best universities, a strong commitment to competition and free markets, decentralized regional economies, and efficient capital markets.But sometimes it is hard to follow just ivory tower hype. How can we determine and see the future outcome as we are festering systems today, even if something is looking good but it difficult to predict what is the result looks like down the track 20 years after. Yes certain things concrete things; education health care system…etc, spend money today tomorrow is grow and less unhealthy. But midnight cowboy is not always grantee for his successful bank rubbery for sure!
But, Porter continued, these advantages are starting to erode. The U.S. has an inadequate rate of reinvestment in science and technology. America’s confidence in free markets is waning. Lack of regulatory oversight has undermined capital markets. Universities have not sufficiently increased graduation rates. American workers do not have a credible safety net. Regulations and litigation have inflated the cost of business. Most important, there is no long-term economic strategy to organize responses to these problems.
I asked Porter how this short-term crisis might serve as an opportunity to address those long-term problems. First, he said, the Obama team will have to avoid a few temptations: Don’t just try to throw out money as fast as possible to stimulate demand. Don’t spread the spending around too thinly. Don’t try to save jobs that are going to disappear anyway.
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Porter’s basic message was that President-elect Barack Obama should do nothing in the short term that doesn’t serve a long-term goal.
To which I would add just one idea: Create a network of social entrepreneurship investment banks. These regionally operated semi-public funds would invest in the best local community organizations, so they could bring their ideas to scale.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Greg Mankiw's Blog: Stimulus for Skeptics
Greg Mankiw's Blog: Stimulus for Skeptics