I miss you Sam!!

I miss you Sam!!
I miss you Sam!!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Start-ups Not Bail-outs

As I was reading the papers this morning I found myself looking almost desperately for some hint of even some mediocre good news, but finally decided that I had to agree with Thomas Friedman, Op-Ed Columnist for the New York Times, who said in his column today, that reading the news that GM and Chrysler are now lining up for another $20 billion or so in government aid – on top of the billions they’ve already received or requested, left him with the sick feeling that we are subsidizing the losers and for only one reason: because they claim that their funerals would cost more than keeping them on life support. But, as he says, this is not the American way. Bailing out the losers is not how we got rich as a country in the first place and it is definitely not how we’ll get out of this crisis now.

We don’t need anymore any more wealth-destruction machines and it is time both GM and Chrysler were put into bankruptcy so they can truly start over under new management with new labor agreements and new visions. When it comes to helping companies, precious public money should focus on start-ups, not bailouts.

Try spending tax payer money creating jobs! Call up the top 20 venture capital firms in America, which are short of cash today because their partners, university endowments and pension funds are tapped out, and make them this offer: The U.S. Treasury will give you each up to $1 billion to fund the best venture capital ideas that have come your way. If they go bust, we all lose. If any of them turns out to be the next Microsoft or Intel, taxpayers will give you 20 percent of the investors’ upside and keep 80 percent for themselves.

We can’t be spending billions of taxpayer dollars on office-decorating bankers,over-leveraged home speculators and auto executives who year after year have spent more energy resisting changes and lobbying Washington than leading change and beating Toyota.

Our country is bursting with innovators looking for capital. Please, let’s not let all the whining losers clamoring for help drown out the potential winners who could lift us out of this mess. Some of this country’s best companies, such as Intel, were started in recessions, when necessity makes innovators even more inventive and risk-takers even more daring.

We’re down, but we’re not out. If we’re going to invest taxpayer money, then let’s do it with an eye to starting a new generation of biotech, info-tech, clean-tech companies with real innovators, real 21st century jobs and potentially real profits for taxpayers.

I couldn’t agree with Friedman more when he says that our motto now should be “Start-ups, not bailouts: nurture the next Google, don’t nurse the old G.M.’s.”

The stimulus package that the Obama team and the Democrats in Congress recently passed – with no real help from Republicans – goes some way toward doing just that. And my hat’s off to them for that, but we need to do more. We desperately need to look forward, not backward to the same old crap.

The wind and solar industries in America have a chance to go ahead now with thousands of jobs – finally, with this new legislation, we finally have gotten something right according to John Woolard, chief executive of Bright Source Energy.

And this is how taxpayer money should be used to stimulate: limited financing, for a limited time, targeted on an industry bristling with new technology start-ups that, with a little push from Uncle Sam, won’t just survive this crisis, but help us thrive when it is over. We need, according to Friedman, an America that is thriving not just surviving.

Amen to that!

3 comments:

Susan at Stony River said...

Oh the whole bail-out thing makes me so mad. Huge corporations like that had plenty of opportunity to use their huge resources wisely enough to stay afloat, and if they blew it, that's what democracy and business are all about: bail yourselves out, bow out.

It reminds me of kids who move out, run up their visa bills and waste their best opportunities, their end up back in their parents' basements living rent free because they acted so irresponsibly. The burden falls on the wrong people, in both cases.

Tell 'em, Sylvia. People DO care about these things.

Margie's Musings said...

Yes,they do. It's hard to sympathize with the auto manufacturers. For years they counted on planned obsolescence to sell an auto every other year to consumers instead of improving the product.

The last years I worked, after buying a new American made vehicle every three years and spending a fortune on repairs, I finally bought a Toyota. I owned it nine years before a hail storm destroyed it. Even then, it ran fine. I drove it another three years before finding a deal on a Honda Civic that I couldn't resist.

Neither of these two vehicles cost me anything but maintenance....a far cry from the two dozen or so American made cars I owned.

Linda Reeder said...

Thomas Freidman is one of our brilliant and wise thinkers. I hope he has the President's ear.

What Can I Say?

What Can I Say?
I'm interested in almost everything. Use to like to travel, but it's too expensive now. I take Tai Chi classes, swim, volunteer in a Jump-start program for pre-schoolers. I'm an avid reader and like nearly everyone these days I follow politics avidly. I'm a former teacher and Special Projects Coordinator for a Telecommunications company, Assistant to the President of a Japanese silicon wafer manufacturing company. Am now enjoying retirement -- most of the time. I have two daughters, one son-in-law and two sons scattered all over the country. No grandchildren.

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