Development,
Part 5b
Entrepreneurship
In the Umsebenzi Online of 30 June 2010, SACP GS Dr
Blade Nzimande wrote that we must “Fight
Tenderpreneurs to defend entrepreneurship!!”
The GS
wrote: “Entrepreneurs, found in
co-operatives, small and medium sized businesses, are all those who genuinely
and honestly go about doing business, including tendering for government work.”
The attached item today is a short article
of Professor Michael Morris’s, published in 1996 in the Business Day, which
debunked a number of misconceptions about so-called “entrepreneurship”.
Morris
wrote, among other things, that: “The
entrepreneurial individual recognises a trend, a possibility, an unmet demand.
He or she comes up with a concept for capitalising on the trend or demand and
does so while the window of opportunity is open.”
This is the
same point as Lenin is making. Lenin knew that the setting up of producer co-operatives
without attention to their markets would be a disastrous waste.
Morris also
says: “Entrepreneurial individuals are
opportunity-driven, not resource-driven.” This may be the truest of the
many true things that Morris noticed about entrepreneurs.
Business is
driven by the customer. It is not true, as Jean-Baptiste Say used to believe,
that supply creates its own demand. The entrepreneur’s job is to identify
demand, where demand means people wanting goods or services, and ready and
willing to pay for them promptly and at a price that will ensure a profit to
the entrepreneur.
Most co-ops
in South Africa are set up in what Lenin referred to as the “Asiatic manner”,
expecting to produce first and sell later. Whereas, as Lenin pointed out, to be
a good co-operator one must be what he called a “cultured trader”. Above all,
this means securing the demand before you make (or buy) and supply. The
entrepreneur is a trader, and a cultured trader.
A great
deal follows from that, and these are the considerations that define the world
around the co-operatives, small and medium sized businesses that Dr Blade
Nzimande referred to. Most of these considerations are obscured or downright
lied-about in capitalist literature. Morris’s short article is a rare example
of relative candour in the business press, which makes it very well worth
reading.
The market
is crucial, but contrary to what the bourgeois ideologues keep on saying, the
market is not free or open. It is we, the opponents of monopoly capitalism, who
are the true “free-marketeers”. Small businesses, including co-ops, to survive,
must have access to markets that are not dominated by predatory monopolistic
market manipulators; and if they are selling to the state, they must be paid on
time and in full. These conditions hardly exist in South Africa, which has
historically been monopolistic in the extreme, and whose government, on the
other hand, is a notoriously slow payer.
The Chinese
delegation that visited South Africa in 2009 told us that the Chinese
peasants are guaranteed a market by the state, at the same price that private
buyers are prepared to pay.
South
Africa will also have to pay attention to the question of the market for
peasant, petty-bourgeois, and co-operative production, as well as to the
subjective, exhortative, educational contribution, which is so clear in Lenin’s
approach and which he explicitly recommends.
Even if it
may not always be a matter of the state setting up co-ops, yet the mass social
development of peasants and petty-bourgeois is always going to be a matter of
educating, organising, and mobilising. Paradoxically, and for this reason, the
petty-bourgeoisie needs the communists.
Illustration: “Entrepreneur” means one who “holds together”,
as the ring in the picture holds together the chains. Most especially the
business entrepreneur holds together demand and supply.
- The above is to
introduce the original reading-texts: Dismissing
Myths and Misunderstandings of Entrepreneurship, Morris.
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