Townhall...
How to Create
a Job
By Renee Ellmers
October 7, 2011
Unemployment
is the most important
issue facing Americans today. Millions are out of work and those that
have jobs
are increasingly threatened with losing them. As with most things
affecting
whole segments of society, the first reaction is who’s in charge, who
deserves
the blame?
In
order to answer that question
effectively, we must first understand how jobs are created and the
policies
that can either lead to greater growth or longer bread lines.
The
first step involves creating
something of value. An entrepreneur or business surveys the market and
asks
herself three questions: what does the world need, what skills do I
offer, and
what activities do I enjoy taking part in? This step requires that all
three
questions lead to the same answer (which explains why there are so few
pet rock
manufacturers these days.) Another way to look at it is there must be
demand
for something, an expert to create and manage it, and a love of making
it
prosper.
What
makes America and its free
enterprise system second-to-none is its ability to allow this creative
flow of
innovation and success to thrive. The entrepreneur with a new idea is
given the
freedom to take risks and create an entire new industry that future
generations
will look back on and ask how we lived without it. But in order for
this dream
to be realized, the second step in job creation must take place:
investment.
Investors
are like voters - they
listen to a sales pitch and decide if this new idea is worth their
support and
financial risk. The more support an entrepreneur receives from
investors, the
more likely their creation will reach consumers. Just as in politics, a
good
idea only takes hold if people buy what you are selling, regardless of
how
great you think it is.
This
same entrepreneurial drive
applies to established businesses just as much as new upstarts. If a
business
is to grow and prosper, it must constantly come up with new products
and
services that are more efficient and create new value. The more
successful they
are, the more the company grows, and with this growth comes the need
for more
workers.
This
chain of the job creation process
has been fundamentally altered and abused over the last several years
and
explains the miserable employment numbers we see today. The government
has
changed its mission from being the protectors of job creators to their
worst
enemy - and every American is being attacked.
Why,
you would ask, is this happening?
The answer is control...
Read
the rest of the column at
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