Published by Jack Everest on 22 Dec 2008 at 11:31 am
Washington Is Killing Silicon Valley (WSJ)
It will be interesting to see if the new administration comes to understand how the “goose that lays golden eggs” must be nurtured. Here are a couple of excerpts from an interesting article by Michael Malone in today’s Wall Street Journal that illustrates what can happen when regulators and legislators become too enthusiastic in their desire to protect investors.
The Good Old Days…
For more than 30 years the entrepreneurship-venture capital-IPO cycle centered in Silicon Valley has generated new wealth, commercialized innovation, and created new companies and industries. It’s also spun off millions of new jobs. The great companies created by this process — Intel, Apple, Google, eBay, Microsoft, Cisco, to name just a few — have propelled most of the growth in the U.S. economy in the last two decades. And what began as a process almost exclusively available to scientists and engineering Ph.D.s became open to just about anyone with a good business plan and a healthy dose of entrepreneurial drive.
The Present (emphasis added)…
From the beginning of this decade, the process of new company creation has been under assault by legislators and regulators. They treat it as if it is a natural phenomenon that can be manipulated and exploited, rather than the fragile creation of several generations of hard work, risk-taking and inventiveness. In the name of “fairness,” preventing future Enrons, and increased oversight, Congress, the SEC and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) have piled burdens onto the economy that put entrepreneurship at risk.
The new laws and regulations have neither prevented frauds nor instituted fairness. But they have managed to kill the creation of new public companies in the U.S., cripple the venture capital business, and damage entrepreneurship. According to the National Venture Capital Association, in all of 2008 there have been just six companies that have gone public. Compare that with 269 IPOs in 1999, 272 in 1996, and 365 in 1986.
Tags: Michael Malone, Silicon Valley, WSJ
Posts about Investors in Startups as of December 22, 2008 | The Lessnau Lounge on 22 Dec 2008 at 9:16 pm #
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