Subscribe to RSS Feed

Author Archive

I have started to work through in more detail what is required to have prosperity.  As you can imagine it is not that simple, but neither is it that difficult.

Like so many in our world, I am much too busy for sanity, so that I am stealing time even to write this.  What I am doing here is to outline the main ideas and then I plan to do a series of podcasts working through each idea and more.

As I have stated numerous times.  The knowledge and the means exist to create lasting prosperity.  If that is true, why is it not happening everywhere?  There are a number of reasons.

The knowledge is multidimensional and human beings don’t handle more than two dimensions very well.

There is lack of leadership, thinking and organizing.

Now to the main answers.

  1. The right kinds of commerce create prosperity.
  2. General prosperity happens when you have the right kinds of culture.
  3. Commerce is about demand and supply.
  4. There is more than enough demand in our world to create prosperity for the foreseeable future. The problem is how to distribute and plan the supply.
  5. Supply is about production, which needs to be valued appropriately as do innovation, expertise and organization.
  6. The role of money needs to be better understood and structured (surprise, surprise!); the velocity of money is key and that happens when more commerce is supported.
  7. Exploitation and “gaming the system” need to be minimized, which normally means that smaller is better.
  8. Government and corruption need to be minimized.
  9. Freedom and equality are the dominant human values and with overlap of both values more than 95% of humans fundamentally agree.  In other words there is no real policy problem regarding implementation of those values.
  10. The processes of getting to prosperity and maintaining it involves different systems.

All of the above can be thought through and implemented relatively quickly (15-20 years) to bring about prosperity.

The example of Singapore is the best one we have that demonstrates how policy can be implemented.  We have more knowledge and better technologies, so we can do significantly better than that example.

Jim Namaste
jmn AT uppnow.org

Continue Reading »
No Comments

Recent economic developments and Mr.  Obama’s address to Congress Wednesday have motivated me to do something with this web site which I abandoned for some time because I have been quite busy, to understate it, working on “real job creation.”

To get going I shall start with some general comments as per title of this post and then flesh these comments out ongoing in the coming days and weeks.

The Good:  Action is needed and it is needed quickly.  Some positive action is better than no action and Mr. Obama’s jobs plan pays for needed jobs.  It will have positive effects and, if executed well, will not be a significant waste of money.

The Bad:  The jobs plan extends the general ignorance of policy makers and politicians about the ways real job creation actually happens, as outlined on this web site.  The jobs plan does not directly address job creation in the fastest, most efficient way.

The Ugly:  Because the jobs plan does not go far enough in dealing directly and fundamentally with issues of commerce and prosperity, the dangers that exist underneath the U.S. and world’s economies will persist and likely explode sooner than anybody wants.

Something must be done about the Ugly and it must be done now, to repeat Mr. Obama’s repeated calls for action.

jmn

Real Job Creation

Winning the Economic Game: Defense or Offense, part 1.

Winning the Economic Policy Formation and Implementation Game: Defense or Offense, part 2.

Continue Reading »
No Comments


The Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade held a hearing on “Innovations in Job Creation and Economic Growth” at 10:00 am on Thursday, March 3, 2011 in 2322 Rayburn House Office Building. Witnesses: -Ms. Heather Boushey, Senior Economist, Center for American Progress -Mr. Chris Cummisky, Commissioner, Georgia Department of Economic Development -Hon. John Fernandez, Assistant Secretary of Commerce, Economic Development Administration -Mr. Drew Greenblatt, President, Marlin Steel Wire, National Association of Manufacturers -Mr. Douglas Holtz-Eakin, President, American Action Forum -Mr. Rhone Resch, President and CEO, Solar Energy Industries Association -Mr. Gregory P. Wilson, Special Advisor, Financial Services Roundtable -Ms. Deborah L. Wince-Smith, President & CEO, Council on Competitiveness

Continue Reading »
No Comments


Are you a business owner or job creator? We need your help: visit www.americanjobcreators.com and tell us how government holds you back. We can’t shape a more efficient, effective government that works for you without the knowledge of job creation experts just like you. 2-10-11 Oversight Productions 2-10-11: Oversight and Government Reform Full Committee Hearing

Continue Reading »
No Comments


Senate Democrats today addressed Republicans’ plan to introduce an amendment repealing health care reform to the FAA Reauthorization bill. “It’s beyond me why Republicans are obsessed with fighting past battles when Americans say they want Congress focused on creating jobs,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. “Instead they are focused on protecting big insurance companies — and the result of that dangerous plan would be an increased deficit, higher taxes for small businesses and increased prescription drug prices for millions of seniors.”

Continue Reading »
2 Comments


Jeff Immelt, Chair of the President’s Council On Jobs And Competiveness joins President Barack Obama at a council meeting Feb. 24th, 2011

Continue Reading »
No Comments


Please READ: Embarking into Nuclear energy could immediatley create 60 to 100 thousand jobs predominantly in our decimated construction sector. By 2014 there will be a new nuclear generation plant firing up every six days somewhere in the world! The spin offs would also be quite significant in job creation. We could reduce costs to consumers by 50%, provide free electricity to all government facilities, reduce the 6 Billion euros going out of the country for energy by 4 Billion keeping that money inside our needy economy. As it is carbon free, it would contribute to conserving our earth, and reduce or eliminate the costs of Carbon Credits.These pluses would strongly contribute to reducing our overall national debt, act as added incentive to outside companies, and make life quality far more liveable for the people of Ireland. There would be massive long term benefits for many generations and we could not be held hostage to power and heat, basic necessities.

Continue Reading »
No Comments No Comments No Comments No Comments

Stay in Tune

  • RT @GHANDl: Barack Obama was the biggest recipient of campaign contributions from the war mongering corporation Boeing.
  • Sent from heaven >>>>
  • RT @MadelynBurke: Eric Bledsoe is playing like he's packed for San Antonio tomorrow, 17 points, 8-10 from the field. Clippers up 90-85 with 5:25 to play
  • RT @SupaaShosh: I hate the idea that fear can hold us back from things, even though one day we die and have missed out because of our own irrationality
Twitter

Follow Me on Twitter!