Third
World crushes its entrepreneurs
Carlos Alberto Montaner
Why isn't a Bill Gates or a Steve
Jobs born in Honduras? I mean, why is it that creative people don't emerge
in the Third World, capable of developing innovative products and building
companies that market those products, create jobs, generate large profits
and influence decisively the fate of this planet?
What we know about human intelligence and character features is that they're
disseminated more or less equitably. The Finns who created Nokia and live in
an opulent paradise in northern Europe are no more intelligent than the
Dominicans or the Ecuadoreans who are crushed by poverty.
On the other hand, possibly, the number of people gifted by nature with an
entrepreneurial spirit is also uniform: about 20 percent of the national
census.
Alvaro Vargas Llosa attempted to answer that nagging question in a book
that's extraordinarily important for the great debate over development:
Lessons From the Poor, published by the Independent Institute.
The work -- which will appear in 2009 in Spanish, under the Espasa imprint
-- begins by rebutting the previous premise. In the Third World, you do find
those specimens once called ''captains of industry,'' entrepreneurial people
who are psychologically marked by the need to create, convince and conquer
in the market.
These are people with a keen eye to discover the needs of society and the
indispensable energy to try to satisfy those needs with the right goods and
services. People, in sum, who feel the urgency to triumph, to accumulate
wealth, to be respected and admired by the community in which they live.
The book, written by several important economists, compiled and given a
foreword by Alvaro, who heads the Center on Global Prosperity, compiles five
cases of remarkable entrepreneurial successes achieved by poor people under
very adverse conditions. Two of them occurred in Peru, another in Argentina
and the others in Nigeria and Kenya.
The five cases involve very peculiar, intelligent, disciplined, hard-working
and tenacious people who never carried out specialized studies but were
compelled by the psychological need to achieve success and obtain social
recognition; people who were guided by the only work method that really
works in the economic world -- trial and error.
That's how businesses are born, grow and prosper -- on the run,
experimenting, improvising, discovering, day in and day out, which roads are
right and which will lead us to failure.
I shall never forget the example of Domingo Moreira, an entrepreneur of that
type, basically intuitive, the creator in Cuba (probably before anyone else
in the world) of fried-chicken restaurant chains, whom I visited shortly
before his death at the age of almost 90. I showed up deeply moved for what
I knew would be a farewell, but he devoted that final contact to explaining
a plan he had for a new food industry utilizing the palmiche, the fruit of
the palm tree.
Something similar happened to me earlier with Venezuelan entrepreneur
Armando de Armas, the grand magnate of communications, who began his career
distributing newspapers. He was 80-plus when death surprised him, even as he
worked and dreamed about new projects. To those people who feel the fire of
enterprise, the pleasure lay in creating, struggling and, of course, winning.
Now I reformulate the question with which I began this article. Why are
there so few entrepreneurial people in the Third World? The answer is
obvious.
Because the State is organized to foil the people who are fueled by this
creative fire. It offers only hindrances, corruption, parasitic bureaucrats
who demand bribes to not paralyze people's projects; it is manned by
individuals well connected with the political power, who protect their
businesses from free competition, thus harming the consumers.
When Bill Gates started Microsoft, or when Steve Jobs launched the Apple
personal computer, they didn't have to bribe a public employee to register
the trademarks or suborn the police to avoid a shakedown. And when they
discussed with four friends in a garage how they were going to develop their
plans, they took it for granted that they would never lack electricity,
water or protection for their property rights.
Neither man, and none of the millions of other entrepreneurs in the First
World, has to deal every day with the deficient moral and physical
infrastructure that turns doing business into such an uphill struggle in
almost all of Latin America and Africa.
The Third World is an implacable machine intent on exterminating
entrepreneurs. It is not that they are not born; they are smothered in the
crib. That's the problem.
Septiembre 02, 2008
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