The Engine of Economic Growth is Sputtering

Here’s a surprise!

The engine of world economic growth is sputtering.  The most clearSputtering engine evidence of this is the lack of new business formation in developed nations across the globe.  Over the last year, the number of entrepreneurs starting new businesses in the wealthiest of nations dropped 10% from the 2006-07 level; in the U.S., that number fell by 24%.

The contaminants in the fuel line are oppressive government policies that increase the cost of doing business, increase unemployment, and raise the risks to the current labor force of quitting their jobs to try to start new businesses.

At a time when government should be encouraging venture capitalists and the formation of new business, it is instead putting on the brakes to this source of economic growth in the form of cap and trade, compensation regulations, fees on banks, and myriad other explicit and implicit new taxes.  In 2009, nearly half of U.S. employment was generated by small businesses; U.S. companies started through venture capital employed more than 12 million people, or 11 percent of private sector employment, and generated $2.9 trillion in revenues, or 21 percent of U.S. GDP.

Fully 100% of economic growth is created in private industry.  Government simply redistributes that wealth, destroying some portion of it in the process.  Never have we needed non-interventionist government policies more.

By Sherry Jarrell

6 thoughts on “The Engine of Economic Growth is Sputtering

  1. Although the list of contaminants listed by Sherry is factual, an explanation prefered by many is the fact banks prefer to invest in derivatives, rather than in the real world. Moreover, private industry delocalizes to less developed countries.

    “Cap and Trade” has no affected the European firms negatively, and is not the law in the USA. The very notion of economic growth is under suspicion. The fact is, there was no real growth per capita in the USA in the last ten years, and the list of taxes listed by Sherry went the other way.

    The only conclusion is that it is precisely the LACK of taxes and regulations which brought the problem. At least in the USA.

    Let’s look at it another way. In case you ask, French GDP productivity per capita is20% over that of the USA. Although no country has as many taxes and regulations as France. If I may allow myself some liberty: It helps not just to think out of the box, but also to see out of the box.

    As JFK used to say, the USA needs a MIXED ECONOMY.

    PA

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  2. Patrice, could you provide a reference for your statement regarding GDP per capita comparing France to the US? A quick web search revealed:

    IMF

    US $47,440, France $34,205

    World Bank
    US $46,716, France $34,045

    CIA Fact Book

    US $47,500, France $33,300

    Averaging them out, the figures become:

    US $47,219, France $33,850 which I calculate as being 28% ahead of France.

    P.

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    1. These numbers use PPP, which should stand for:
      Pathetic Propaganda Ploy.

      That may be the problem with quick web search: no reading the fine print. Basically what these people do is to convert the Euro at one dollar. In truth, it is worth 1.42 dollar.

      By the way I do not need a long lesson about the fact that PPP is supposed to stand for Price Purchase Parity. I know this, and I know the cheats inside the computation. Math PhDs can compute too, it’s not just all abstraction. The PPP computation, among other things, ignore the 19% AVT.

      Anybody living half and half, as I do, can certify that French parents of working age are living WAY better than their American equivalents.

      By the way I published related numbers a while ago on my site under http://patriceayme.wordpress.com/2010/01/12/europe-better-economically-than-the-usa/, where I explained the various propaganda ploys used to underestimate the French GDP, which is crucial to hypnotize Americans into believing that their system works better (it does not). It seems to work very well: mainstream US economist love to say that France’s global GDP is two-thirds of what it really is, and they believe it.

      Here are the number of GDP per capita in 2008, untouched, source World Bank (an organism US controlled; CIA and IMF have similar numbers):

      Country US$
      1 Luxembourg 111,240
      2 Norway 94,354
      3 Switzerland 64,015
      4 Ireland 63,185
      5 Denmark 62,333
      6 Iceland 52,557
      7 Netherlands 52,322
      8 Sweden 52,058
      9 Finland 51,062
      10 Austria 49,900
      11 Australia 47,498

      12 United States 46,716
      13 Belgium 46,487
      14 France 45,982

      15 Germany 44,471
      16 United Kingdom 43,089
      17 Canada 42,031

      18 Japan 38,443
      19 Italy 38,310
      20 Singapore 37,598
      21 Spain 35,204
      22 Greece 31,749
      — Hong Kong 30,864

      23 New Zealand 30,618
      24 Equatorial Guinea 28,103
      25 Israel 27,299
      26 Slovenia 26,780
      27 Portugal 22,842
      28 Czech Republic 20,761
      29 The Bahamas 20,699
      30 South Korea 19,115
      31 Saudi Arabia 18,973
      32 Trinidad and Tobago 17,865
      33 Slovakia 17,566
      34 Estonia 17,223
      35 Libya 15,921
      36 Croatia 15,636
      37 Hungary 15,409
      38 Latvia 14,909
      39 Antigua and Barbuda 14,318
      40 Lithuania 14,097
      41 Poland 13,823
      42 Russia 11,339
      43 Venezuela 11,230
      44 Saint Kitts and Nevis 10,981
      45 Turkey 10,746
      46 Mexico 10,212
      47 Chile 10,112
      48 Gabon 9,968
      49 Uruguay 9,654
      50 Seychelles 9,649
      51 Romania 9,301
      — World 9,054
      52 Palau 8,953
      53 Kazakhstan 8,436
      54 Brazil 8,400
      55 Argentina 8,236
      56 Montenegro 7,266
      57 Malaysia 7,222
      58 Lebanon 6,924
      59 Mauritius 6,819
      60 Serbia 6,811
      61 Botswana 6,809
      62 Panama 6,802
      63 Costa Rica 6,592
      64 Bulgaria 6,546
      65 Belarus 6,229
      66 Grenada 6,046
      67 Saint Lucia 5,950
      68 South Africa 5,685
      69 Jamaica 5,604
      70 Suriname 5,594
      71 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 5,442
      72 Colombia 5,441
      73 Iran 5,353
      74 Azerbaijan 5,331
      75 Algeria 5,061
      76 Dominica 4,979
      77 Bosnia and Herzegovina 4,891
      78 Macedonia 4,673
      79 Dominican Republic 4,655
      80 Angola 4,628
      81 Peru 4,420
      82 Belize 4,403
      83 Fiji 4,206
      84 Maldives 4,060
      85 Namibia 4,051
      86 Albania 3,912
      87 Ecuador 3,901
      88 Ukraine 3,899
      89 Tunisia 3,891
      90 Armenia 3,873
      91 Thailand 3,869
      92 Turkmenistan 3,634
      93 El Salvador 3,606
      94 Cape Verde 3,469
      95 Jordan 3,389
      96 China, People’s Republic of 3,264
      97 Republic of the Congo 2,960
      98 Georgia 2,932
      99 Samoa 2,884
      100 Guatemala 2,851
      101 Morocco 2,765
      102 Marshall Islands 2,655
      103 Syria 2,601
      104 Paraguay 2,566
      105 Tonga 2,548
      106 Vanuatu 2,482
      107 Indonesia 2,254
      108 Swaziland 2,242
      109 Micronesia 2,222
      110 Sri Lanka 2,020
      111 Mongolia 1,998
      112 Egypt 1,998
      113 Bhutan 1,979
      114 Honduras 1,944
      115 Philippines 1,848
      116 Bolivia 1,722
      117 Moldova 1,665
      118 Guyana 1,517
      119 Sudan 1,414
      120 Nigeria 1,402
      121 Kiribati 1,358
      122 Solomon Islands 1,276
      123 Papua New Guinea 1,267
      124 Cameroon 1,239
      125 Nicaragua 1,162
      126 Yemen 1,153
      127 Côte d’Ivoire 1,138
      128 Zambia 1,135
      129 São Tomé and Príncipe 1,085
      130 Senegal 1,082
      131 India 1,069
      132 Vietnam 1,053
      133 Djibouti 1,032
      134 Uzbekistan 1,023
      135 Pakistan 1,014
      136 Kenya 896
      137 Mauritania 894
      138 Kyrgyzstan 838
      139 Laos 838
      140 Comoros 824
      141 Lesotho 805
      142 Benin 772
      143 Chad 756
      144 Tajikistan 752
      145 Haiti 711
      146 Ghana 691
      147 Mali 688
      148 Cambodia 652
      149 Burkina Faso 523
      150 Bangladesh 521
      151 Tanzania 483
      152 The Gambia 471
      153 Madagascar 470
      154 Uganda 459
      155 Rwanda 459
      156 Timor-Leste 454
      157 Mozambique 447
      158 Central African Republic 446
      159 Nepal 442
      160 Togo 438
      161 Guinea 434
      162 Niger 366
      163 Sierra Leone 352
      164 Eritrea 332
      165 Ethiopia 329
      166 Malawi 299
      167 Guinea-Bissau 273
      168 Liberia 230
      169 Democratic Republic of the Congo 181
      170 Burundi 145

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    1. Sorry, Paul, I thought I was a bit nasty and carried overboard… But I was just in the last stages of firing a great broadside against my good friend , and fellow “thorn”, Oblahblah.

      http://patriceayme.wordpress.com/2010/01/23/way-out-for-obabush-bushama-and-oblahblah/

      So I was a bit excited…

      Anyway, it was good you pointed out this discrepancy: even Krugman WAS unaware of it, and ridiculized himself recently exactly about that, aggravating his case by pontificating about it [he was corrected by some of his commenters, although not by me, because I did not stoop…]

      BTW, I have become an expert comparing the French and USA systems. I am not all gaga about France, in all ways, contrarily to appearances. Example: I got a USA passport of my daughter immediately, after a quick oath, but the French told me to prove I rented [Athena was born in France, and I have owned forever and a day, a few miles from the public hospital where the happy event occured.]

      PA

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