Wanted: More Pinoy Entrepreneurs
May 28, 2008 by annamanila · 3 Comments
Thirty years ago – maybe more – we have been said to be on the verge of some industrial take off or other. We were up there in the Asian economic totem pole third only to Japan and Singapore.
The take off never happened. Did we run out of gas, suffered a flat tire, got derailed by infighting?
The signposts are alarming. Many of our women still dream of going abroad to be mail-order brides, to be singers and entertainers, or to take domestic and “care-giving” jobs most of the locals — Americans, Europeans, etc. — wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole.
Our men possibly fare better, but not too much better. Many train to become engineers, technicians and skilled artisans; but once they get some minimum experience locally, they take off for some job abroad, draining our country of the skilled human resources it needs so badly for its own oft-postponed “take-off.”
The social costs of Pinoys leaving home in pursuit of the American dollar are unquantifiable. We see them all around us — broken homes, split marriages, unsupervised children dropping out of school and turning to drugs and other vices or entering into relationships for which they are not ready.
Many concerned Filipinos have wearied of trying to study what’s wrong with the country or the national psyche.
They just want action — an action plan that is doable or, to use the technocrat’s term, SMART (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and timebound).
There may be very few action plans smarter than a national entrepreneurship campaign – a campaign for independent, job-creating, income-producing entrepreneurship — where all sectors can close rank for.
In communities where entrepreneurs abound, the population stay rather than migrate, roads and infrastructures are built, social and educational services are improved, commerce booms, and the quality of life rises. Enterprise begets more enterprise, progress begets more progress.
This is why President Arroyo is trying to implement the “A Million New Entrepreneurs Program” as the centerpiece of her economic agenda. Taking the cue, local governments have set up their own local enterprise promotion programs.
This is also why entrepreneurship subjects have been infused into the curriculum at both high school and collegiate levels.
… and why industry associations, civic clubs, and even religious groups have joined the “small business” bandwagon.
… and why this little corner makes a pitch for entrepreneurship.
And the pitch is addressed to you, kababayan/katoto/kapwa-Pilipino — whether you are a salaried employee, a housewife bored or hardpressed making ends meet, a graduate who can’t find a good job, a retiree, an OFW, or an expatriate Filipino.
The next pieces in this corner will discuss more about the advocacy for entrepreneurship, the entrepreneurial personality, starting a business, improving a business, and entrepreneurial role models.


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