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Entrepreneurship Can Triumph Over Globalization, Audretsch says
Embracing
innovation is the only way for Western businesses to succeed in the
global market, says Indiana University economics Professor David Audretsch,
whose new book, The Entrepreneurial Society, is due for release
in July (Oxford University Press). He argues that labor will continue
to be outsourced abroad as long as the tasks involved are routine and
replicable, but companies that reward new ideas, niche markets and community
collaboration can thrive on local employment.
The book outlines the progression in the U.S. and Europe from the managed
economy of the Cold War era through globalization, arriving at the current
state Audretsch terms "the entrepreneurial society." This
economic climate, he says, supports businesses that are highly adaptable
and targeted to specific consumer needs. Drawing on his research linking
the number of startups in a community to its economic health, Audretsch
concludes that industries must adopt an entrepreneurial mindset in order
to remain viable.
"If your company's competitive advantage is based on lowest cost,
you're out of here," he said. "If you want to stay and thrive
in the U.S., the focus needs to be on innovation. You need to think
of things we're not doing today."
Baby boomers have had a difficult time grasping the changes of a globalized
economy, he said. They inherited the economic success of the postwar
era, in which large corporations were the major employers. Their attempts
to follow an outdated formula have led to personal and corporate financial
failures, Audretsch said.
He hopes The Entrepreneurial Society will "help them rise
to the opportunities of globalization rather than be victimized by it,"
he said. Although Audretsch has written and edited more than 30 books
on economic development, this is his first for a general audience.
"I wrote this book to tell my generation what happened to the world
we knew and loved—and to tell our children why we're so strange,"
he said.
Moving beyond the conclusions of Thomas Friedman's 2005 bestseller The
World is Flat, Audretsch argues that business innovation actually
occurs in geographical "pockets" such as Silicon Valley software
development, fashion in Paris and Milan, and finance in New York. Talent—and
wealth—tend to collect in these areas known for cutting-edge development.
The solution to the off-shoring dilemma, Audretsch says, lies in identifying
community strengths and building these areas as hotbeds of innovation."It
turns out, ideas and creation of those ideas happen in a proximate way—people
gathered together make ideas grow, and to proactively respond you need
to be in the same place together. Business innovation functions much
like the world of music—the best work happens when you get together
and jam," he said.
The generation
that is now entering the work force understands these concepts instinctively,
Audretsch said.
"Young professionals now talk about starting firms the way their
parents used to talk about landing a corporate position— it's
how they expect their careers to develop. They seem to 'get' the idea
that by appealing to niche markets they can fulfill a unique need, whereas
their parents, for the most part, are still doing the same old, same
old," he said.
Mature managers need to take a lesson from their 20-something children
and rethink the way they do business, especially with respect to gathering
ideas from all levels of their organizations, he said.
"Corporate culture needs to reorient so that if you try a new venture
and fail, you're not going to be penalized. Trial and failure in the
entrepreneurial society are just part of the process. We need to create
structures and incentives that encourage managers to get out of the
way of new ideas. Create a path that rewards innovation and input from
all levels, and you won't be able to export that."
Audretsch is director of the Entrepreneurship, Growth and Public Policy
Division at the Max Planck Institute of Economics in Germany and Ameritech
Chair of Economic Development and director of the Institute for Development
Strategies at Indiana University. He teaches in the School of Public
and Environmental Affairs.
Click here for advance praise for the book: http://newsinfo.iu.edu/news/page/normal/5713.html.
More information is available from the publisher: http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Business/Entrepreneurship/?view=usa&ci=9780195183504.