Victor Hwang: Individual entrepreneurs hold the key to making America great again
July 9, 2018 | Startland News Staff
Victor Hwang posed a riddle to a TEDx crowd gathered in Georgia.
What five-letter word was overlooked during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign and almost never mentioned by the candidates or at the party conventions?
The answer is rooted in overcoming inequality, said Hwang, vice president of entrepreneurship for the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
“I’m the son of immigrants who grew up in towns of all kinds across Middle America. From that upbringing, I became sensitive to unfairness,” he told TEDxAugusta attendees. “It seemed wrong certain people got wealthy while others didn’t; some cities thrive while others fell behind. Ever since I was a kid, I started asking why … Why can’t we do better as a society?”
The good news? Kauffman has discovered the answer, Hwang said.
“But here’s the thing: When it comes to big challenges like jobs growth, inequality, poverty, there’s a huge gap between what we know and what we actually do,” he said.
What has Kauffman learned? Hwang detailed four key observations:
- New businesses create new jobs;
- Declining productivity is tied to declining innovation;
- Opportunity combats inequality; and
- New business ventures fight poverty
“Entrepreneurs are the ones who dream of a better future and who actually set out to make it happen,” Hwang said.
So, the riddle has an answer — entrepreneurship or “ESHIP” — he continued, but what’s the bad news?
“Somewhere along the way, America lost its mojo,” Hwang said.
Learn more about the challenge slowing innovation in the U.S. — as well as what individual entrepreneurs can do about it — in the video below.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘Nerds’ need value: Midwest trio connects global fintech players through virtual summit
Fintech workers and industry innovators are starving for human connection amid a crazy 10 months of COVID and a pandemic’s-worth of dull virtual events, said Zach Anderson Pettet. “All of us nerds in our specific space — being financial services and financial technology — haven’t been able to congregate, so there’s been a lot of…
KC Tech Council’s apprenticeship program launches with job growth hopes from Davids, Cleaver
A freshly launched partnership between KC Tech Council and Apprenti — designed to cultivate tech skills and offer first-hand experience for apprentices — is a solid fit for Kansas City’s talent needs, two members of the metro’s U.S. congressional delegation agreed. “I truly believe that entrepreneurship is baked into the DNA of our region,” U.S.…
She put down her soda and started walking 10 years ago — 80 pounds later, Ginger McCune’s wellness center is running on impact
Life is best lived loud — not sitting on the sidelines, wishing you could experience it, explained Ginger McCune. “If you have a car and it takes premium gas — and you fill it full of regular gas, what’s it gonna do? It’s gonna go for a little bit and then it’s gonna spit and spurt and…
