- Money Morning Australia

The Entrepreneur’s Miracle Ingredient for Success in a Free Market


Written on 22 August 2012 by Kris Sayce

The Entrepreneur’s Miracle Ingredient for Success in a Free Market

‘Fail to succeed’ and ‘fail fast’ are phrases familiar to entrepreneurs.

It simply means, if you’ve got a good idea, get on with it and try to make it work.

If it works, you may find yourself joining the ranks of Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and Mark Zuckerberg. If it doesn’t work, don’t worry; you’ve failed, but so have millions of other entrepreneurs.

And besides, Gates, Jobs, and Zuckerberg didn’t get it right first time either. The point is, they didn’t stop at their first failure. They accepted it, adapted, and moved on.

But experiencing failure isn’t the only key to success. There’s one more ingredient. And unless you’ve got it, entrepreneurs will never achieve success…

What is this miracle ingredient?

Simple, it’s individualism.

Individualism – the Entrepreneur’s Key to Success

Or you could call it self-interest or selfishness. But it doesn’t matter what you call it, without it an economy can’t progress.

Now, we know what you’ll say, ‘What about China, it’s successful, yet it’s centrally planned?’

Well, we’ll agree that those who achieve success in China also act in self-interest. The bureaucrats fattening their pockets, and businessmen currying favour with the government to win contracts.

But that’s the dark side of individualism. They’re not real entrepreneurs. Those people are who Thomas DiLorenzo calls ‘political entrepreneurs’.

In How Capitalism Saved America: The Untold History of Our Country, from the Pilgrims to the Present, DiLorenzo explains the difference between ‘market entrepreneurs’ and ‘political entrepreneurs’:

‘A pure market entrepreneur, or capitalist, succeeds financially by selling a newer, better, or less expensive product on the free market without any government subsidies, direct or indirect. The key to his success as a capitalist is his ability to please the consumer, for in a capitalist society the consumer ultimately calls the economic shots. By contrast, a political entrepreneur succeeds primarily by influencing government to subsidize his business or industry, or to enact legislation or regulation that harms his competitors.’

Or in China’s case, jailing, beating up, or even killing their competition.

Therefore, when we talk about individualism, we’re talking about the good guys…market entrepreneurs. We’re not talking about the corrupt political entrepreneurs who profit from government favours.

But still, some people just don’t get it. Or they don’t want to get it.

When the Government Tackles Climate Change -
Instead of Entrepreneurs and the Free Market

Yesterday, we read the latest report from the Australian Climate Commission. It’s titled, The Critical Decade: International Action on Climate Change.

The most amusing section was the timeline printed on page 25 of the 75 page report:

Source: Australian Climate Commission

The first climate conference was in 1979. The new agreement is due to start in 2020. That means it will take national governments 41 years to come to a deal on what to do about climate change.

Even by pen-pushing bureaucracy standards, 41 years is a long time. Clearly ‘failing fast’ isn’t in their dictionary.

And as you’d expect, there’s still no guarantee the agreement will achieve anything.

As we say, the document is 75 pages long. And yet, in all the talk about solutions to climate change, it doesn’t once suggest allowing individuals and the free market to find a solution. Instead, you get this kind of central planning claptrap:

‘One way to reduce emissions is to set an explicit price on emissions, for example, through emissions trading schemes or a carbon tax. There are other ways to promote emission reductions without putting a direct price on emissions. These include regulation, subsidies and direct government expenditure.’

That paragraph brought to mind a quote from former US president, Ronald Reagan. Rupert, an Australian Small-Cap Investigator subscriber sent it to us:

‘Government’s view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.’

Reagan made the comment at the White House Conference on Small Business on 15 August, 1986.

That’s how governments think about everything. And that includes climate change.

And that’s why it will take 41 years (if ever) to implement a climate change policy. Imagine if governments had gotten involved at the early stages of car industry. What would have happened?

Well, we don’t need to imagine, we can show you…

When the the Government Builds Cars -
Instead of Entrepreneurs and the Free Market

In the free market United States, between 1896 and 1930 there were over 1,800 car makers. Not all of them survived of course. But that’s what happens in a free market. Ideas come and go…and the ideas that best serve the consumer tend to win.

Innovation, capitalism, and competition spur new ideas and technological change. In the end, the consumer gets a better product.

Compare that to the Soviet Union, where there was no auto industry to speak of. Why? Because central planners decided what was good for the comrades. But because a central planner can’t know what consumers want, their ideas are doomed to fail.

In a free market, failure happens fast and success outweighs failure. But in a centrally planned economy, failure leads to more failure.

That’s because the bureaucrats decide the idea wasn’t bad, but rather that the government didn’t spend enough money on it. Sound familiar?

Market Entrepreneurs Over Political Entrepreneurs

That’s why governments must stay out of the market. And why they shouldn’t subsidise political entrepreneurs. This will give market entrepreneurs the space to test and refine their ideas to meet real consumer demand.

The same principle applies to solving climate change (if climate change exists). Let the free market and individuals fix it.

Of course, some suggest the government has to spend, regulate, and subsidise the green industry, or else nothing will happen. But that’s not true. In Australia about three-quarters of people believe in climate change.

And in Canada, 86% of people polled believe climate change is either man-made or a mix of man-made and natural causes.

It’s proof that people would like to do something about it. But due to high taxes, government intervention, and the government insisting on a centrally planned solution, most people end up doing nothing.

In short, it’s proven that free markets and individualism work better than central planning. Not just for consumer products and services, but for everything…including the environment.

Unfortunately, the vested interests want to spend your tax dollars (and keep their government-funded jobs). And politicians want to lay down their own legacy.

That means the chances of them allowing the market to provide a fix are very slim indeed.

Cheers,
Kris

Related Articles

Market Pullback Exposes Five Stocks to Buy

The Solution for the Global Economy: Less Government

How Government Extortion is Happening Right Before Our Eyes

Powered By DT Author Box

Written by Kris Sayce

Kris Sayce

Kris Sayce is Editor in Chief of Australia’s biggest circulation daily financial email — Money Morning. (You can subscribe to Money Morning for free here).

Kris is also editor of Australian Small-Cap Investigator, his small-cap stock research service, where he provides detailed analysis on some the brightest, smallest listed companies on the ASX.

If you’re already a subscriber to these publications, or want to follow his financial world view more closely, then we recommend you join Kris on Google+. It’s where he shares investment insight, commentary and ideas that he can’t always fit into his regular Money Morning essays.

More about this author

Be Sociable, Share!

Leave a Comment

Letters will be edited for clarity, punctuation, spelling and length. Abusive or off-topic comments will not be posted. We will not post all comments.

If you would prefer to email the editor, you can do so by sending an email to moneymorning@moneymorning.com.au


Comments are closed.

FREE INVESTOR BRIEFING: 3 Powerful Reasons To Buy Gold in 2013


Enter your email in the box below and find out why you need to add gold to your investment portfolio this year. Plus you’ll get MoneyMorning every weekday… absolutely free.

Enter your email address below and hit the ‘Claim My Free Report’ button now.



Authors






  • ^NDX3028.957+29.614 - +0.99%
  • ^FTSE6711.78+23.98 - +0.36%
  • ^AORD5185.400+25.600 - +0.50%
  • ^AXJO5209.000+28.200 - +0.54%
  • AUDUSD=X0.9769
  • USDJPY=X102.488
  • WP Stock Ticker

Diggers and Drillers

JUST PUBLISHED: Dr. Alex Cowie’s 8-step Checklist to Picking Better Stocks

According to him, ‘Find a firm that ticks all these boxes and it’s like the stock is ‘programmed for profit’…’

If you’d like to learn how to add some ‘programmed-for-profit’ stocks to your portfolio, click here.

Sound Money. Sound Investments.

Introducing Greg Canavan’s

Canary Dossier

Which Aussie icons will fall first as we enter year-upon-year of brutal deficits?

Better find out now: you almost certainly own some of these stocks.

Slipstream Trader

What if you could TRIPLE your stock returns while HALVING your risk?


You’d have the money to do anything you like…

Take a jet to a five star resort in Bali on a whim…buy a new luxury car every year…purchase a holiday home on the Gold Coast seafront just because you can.

You probably don’t believe this could happen.

According to one man it can.

All you have to do is follow his system.

Graphic Ad 1


Australian Small Cap Investigator

'For a small-cap growth investor opportunities haven't
looked as good as this
in five years.'

The last time Kris Sayce made a claim like this, he locked in gains of:

389% from Bauxite Resources
338% McPherson's
220% from MEO Australia
122% from Linc Energy
152% from Mitchell Communications
243% from LNG Ltd
And 459% from Bow Energy

Now he’s making it again. To find out why, and which three stocks he’s tipping, read this.

Money For Life

'To any Australian Who Wants to Retire Rich, Happy and Free from Money Worries…'

Watch this and learn three clever ways to generate more than enough cash to see you all the way through retirement…

GRAPHIC: ASI Biggest Stock Market

More Recommended Reading Below...

The Pursuit of Happiness & The Daily Reckoning

  • The Pursuit of Happiness
  • The Daily Reckoning Australia

Rather than ‘Working Towards the Leader’, you should look to go the other way. That is to ‘Work Towa [Read More...]

Recently, calling yourself a libertarian has become 'cool'. However there are reasonable n [Read More...]

Many people confuse entrepreneurs with inventors. While someone may be both an entrepreneur and an i [Read More...]

The Borsodi’s canned tomatoes story touches on something timeless. It destroys the notion that bigne [Read More...]

To my mind the PM's financial advice is the most bizarre piece of advice that I have ever seen. [Read More...]

Another beating for the precious metals. After gold and silver fell in New York trading on Friday, A [Read More...]

It's where you end up after the Great Experiment fails...and you realize that Dr. Bernankenstei [Read More...]

Regulators are going to be causing problems for the Bitcoin exchange in years to come, creating what [Read More...]

The government hates progress. It prefers a world fixed and immobile, so they can regulate it and de [Read More...]

It’s a story of tax evasion, disappointing Spanish investments and successful German austerity. Yes, [Read More...]

TESTIMONIALS

"I think you're fantastic! I love to read what you write...you're so interesting and amusing and I've learned so much" -
Money Morning reader, Chris Gadd

"You guys are brilliant. I feel more relaxed about the future than ever simply because I know what is going on rather than floundering around with smoke screens and mirrors from the government and mainstream" -
Money Morning reader, Helen Carter

"Wow what can I say? I was an economically confused moron until I read your newsletter and even though I've been a subscriber for a short period I can now see how easy it is to understand, if you use common sense and can have the spin translated into everyday language. Thanks for an entertaining read." -
Money Morning reader, John

"Keep up the good independent and well thought out articles offering a view that often debunks mainstream myths." -
Money Morning reader, Craig

"I do admire your straight talking and simple analysis of the situation, I think of you as the Jeremy Clarkson of finance." -
Money Morning reader, Jeffery