Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
In 2004, Carl Schramm, President of the Kauffman Foundation, the
world's leading foundation for entrepreneurship, published a
groundbreaking essay with a radical premise: that Americans
literally have no conception of the secret that truly underlies our
economic success, and that for the United States to survive and
continue to lead the world's economy, it is imperative we learn to
understand and employ that secret. The secret that has led the
American economy to become the world's strongest? Our unparalleled
skill as entrepreneurs. As Schramm argues, entrepreneurship alone -
not anything else - can give America the necessary leverage to
remain an economic superpower. Not technology, since everyone now
has the same technology, or access to it. Not education - we are
years behind other nations in this area. Not basic manufacturing,
long since moved overseas from the United States. And not capital
markets, now truly global entities.
Drawing on detailed research conducted by the Kauffman
Foundation and on his decades of experience as an entrepreneur
himself and as a leader and mentor to other entrepreneurs, Schramm
persuasively demonstrates in detail what this entrepreneurial
imperative means for the way we run universities and foundations,
lead companies, make personal job decisions, and even conduct our
foreign affairs. The Entrepreneurial Imperative can change
not only the way our government, corporations, and nonprofits
operate, but also our day-to-day lives as working Americans.
Carl J. Schramm was named President and CEO of the Kauffman
Foundation in 2002. Trained as an economist and lawyer, he has
founded companies in the health care, finance, and information
technology arenas. He is a Batten Fellow at Virginia's Darden
School of Business and a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations.
More About the Speakers
Carl J. Schramm
President and CEO,
The Kauffman Foundation
Hosted By
Edwin Feulner, Ph.D.
President
Read More