Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The key is ongoing growth in productivity—turning the same resources into ever-greater
amounts of goods and services over time. All productivity growth takes place at the level of
the firm—a term that includes producers in all sectors and of all sizes
Producers’ decisions are strongly influenced by the incentives and disincentives created by
government policies, regulations, and other aspects of economic governance. Key examples
include the impact of macroeconomic policy on overall economic stability, along with the
effects of microeconomic policies including taxes, regulations, and the enforcement of
property rights and contracts.
other factors “enable” growth to move forward. The availability of finance, of infrastructure,
and of an educated and healthy workforce, for example, can influence the rate and direction
of growth.
Economic growth occurs as societies accumulate and equip workers with more and better
physical capital (e.g., factories and infrastructure) and human capital (skills and
knowledge), and use these assets ever more productively to produce goods and services
of increasing value.- Productivity grows as producers—entrepreneurs operating at all
scales—find ways to squeeze more output from a given set of inputs. They do so by
adopting more efficient production methods, applying technical knowledge to create
better products, changing their product mix, etc.
all economic growth takes place at the level of the productive enterprise” 12 —a term
encompassing producers in all sectors and of all sizes, from microenterprises and family farms to
multinational corporations. A country’s income increases as its producers find ways to increase
sales and reduce their costs of production—by using new and better machinery, hiring more and
better-skilled workers, or more generally finding lower-cost ways to organize production and
distribution, and improve the quality of their goods and services in order to serve or create new
markets.
Those efforts, in turn, are guided by the incentives that producers face— incentives
strongly affected by public policies and regulations, macroeconomic stability, the
enforcement of contracts and property rights, the prevalence or absence of corruption,
and other aspects of economic governance.
Competition provides the most powerful incentive for producers to raise productivity. Where
markets are open to entry by new firms, existing producers must continue to behave as
entrepreneurs, working relentlessly to improve their products and reduce costs in order to stay in
business and earn profits.
Strategy:
We will seek systemic and catalytic impact in light of political opportunities and
constraints