Market Forces
Here is an article that explains why it is so hard to start a business in America that if it fails has no residual value. As opposed to starting a retail store or investing in real estate.
"The way business works here is simple," says David J. Farber. "In America, if you have a potential product, you do research, you try to figure out the size of the potential market. And if it's a totally new, totally innovative thing, where no one has any idea of the size of the market, and there's no guaranteed return on a large investment, well, forget it. No American company will touch it. In Japan, it's usually quite the opposite: manufacturers know that the home market loves new stuff; they'll take risks there, hoping that something will catch fire and take off. The only U.S. company that's doing that is Apple, and, honestly, I don't think that even Steve Jobs, in all of his infinite wisdom, thought that the iPod was going to take off the way it has."I guess I should have been Japanese. Well being a big guy I do like the larger American houses. I suppose if I was a Japanese I'd have been smaller.
Which means that for the foreseeable future, American technophiles will continue to experience a chronic case of gadget envy. Hey, is that a brand-new buggy whip I see under the Christmas tree?
Well any way it is my contention that America must work harder and spend more to close the innovation gap. Soon I hope.
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