“The US was built by entrepreneurs. I know Africa can be built in
the same way.” I happened upon these statements while surfing the net one day
and they excited me. This was because they said in a simple way a conviction I
have: that a multiplicity of successful entrepreneurs across the African
continent is fundamentally necessary for lifting it out of its poverty.
The material prosperity or wealth of any society depends on its
economic growth. Economic growth may not take care of how the wealth is
distributed but it goes without saying that it must underlie the quest for
wealth creation or prosperity in any society.
One of the most outstanding works ever done into why and how
nations become wealthy is Adam Smith’s ‘An Enquiry into the Nature and Causes
of the Wealth of Nations’, a title usually shortened to ‘The Wealth of
Nations’. In it he argued ingeniously that the true wealth of a nation was to
be found in the produce of the labour of its people. The increase of this
produce is what is referred to as economic growth. Robert Reich in his
introduction to the book summed up Adam’s Smith’s view thus: “To him, the
‘wealth’ of a nation wasn’t determined by the size of its monarch’s treasure or
the amount of gold and silver in its vaults … A nation’s wealth was to be
judged by the total value of all the goods its people produced for all its
people to consume.”
Entrepreneurs are at the core of economic growth. This is because
they are the ones who organize production in a society. They put together the
society’s resources of land, capital and labour to produce goods and services.
The more entrepreneurs therefore, the more goods and services are produced. The
more goods and services are produced, the more a society becomes materially
prosperous. This is, however, just one aspect.
True entrepreneurs innovate. A special report on Entrepreneurship
in the Economist (March 14,2009) carried this definition of an
entrepreneur:someone “who offers an innovative solution to a (frequently)
unrecognised) problem. The defining characteristic of entrepreneurship, then,
is not the size of the company but the act of innovation.” Through the acts of
innovation more value is created and by implication more prosperity. Paul
Romer, a Stanford University economist put it beautifully: “Economic growth
occurs whenever people take resources and rearrange them in ways that are more
valuable… [It] springs from better recipes, not just more cooking.”
To alleviate poverty in Africa, we must create wealth. To create
wealth, we must put our people to work. To put our people to work, we need
entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurs are vital to Africa’s prosperity.
https://dennisobeng.wordpress.com/2010/04/03/entrepreneurship-is-vital-to-africas-prosperity/
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