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Interesting article on local development. The state will never
do anything along these lines, but still interesting. http://www.santafenewmexican.com/print.asp?ArticleID=38953 Owen Densmore 908 Camino Santander Santa Fe, NM 87505 [hidden email] Cell: 505-570-0168 Home: 505-988-3787 AIM:owendensmore http://complexityworkshop.com http://backspaces.net |
>>The state will never do anything along these lines...
OK, I'll bite. Why not? Carl -----Original Message----- From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]]On Behalf Of Owen Densmore Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2004 12:41 PM To: The Friday Morning Complexity Coffee Group Subject: [FRIAM] Santa Fe New Mexican | Think-Tank Director Has Ideas for'going Local' Interesting article on local development. The state will never do anything along these lines, but still interesting. http://www.santafenewmexican.com/print.asp?ArticleID=38953 Owen Densmore 908 Camino Santander Santa Fe, NM 87505 [hidden email] Cell: 505-570-0168 Home: 505-988-3787 AIM:owendensmore http://complexityworkshop.com http://backspaces.net ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9AM @ Jane's Cafe Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, etc.: http://www.friam.org |
In reply to this post by Owen Densmore
Owen...
> Interesting article on local development. The state will never > do anything along these lines, but still interesting. > http://www.santafenewmexican.com/print.asp?ArticleID=38953 Thanks for the post on this article. I have some contrarian views on the speaker's points and will demonstrate one of a number of reasonable state-based small business assistance programs that fulfill the issues raised in the article. While the notion mentioned in the article is a patriotic one to most local businesses (bookstores, tire stores, grocery stores, etc.) there are many holes in the substance of the rhetoric behind the "going local" ("going loco") methodologies. In fact, the capital and resource gap he purports exists is being met in a number of different ways to grow local businesses, mostly by banks and other lending orgs and incubators as appropriate, but also including via the angel or venture capital method he says is missing (VC is viable only in situations that warrant its applications and meet its expectations). At the core of his argument, he is trying to defy the market logic of capital and create his own "novel' methods, often making uninformed assumptions about the need for programs that already exist, or for small business challenges that have no solution because of the lack of a viable business plan/model relative to the assistance/impact sought. For examples of the "state's" actual role in such small business assistance (and to refute the claim that the state is not doing anything), see these recent announcements from the NM SBIC. ( I made the initial recommendation to the NM Small Business Investment Corp, per their request of me to help guide them, to team with Accion, reflected in the announcement links below, to achieve yet another program to help small businesses in NM find local debt capital at the best terms): http://albuquerque.bizjournals.com/albuquerque/stories/2003/12/15/daily15.ht ml http://www.accionnewmexico.org/inthenews.asp http://www.abqtrib.com/archives/business03/122203_business_accion.shtml I can point to a number of other programs, but for starters: http://www.nmsbdc.org/ http://www.edd.state.nm.us/PROGRAMS/incentives.html http://www.edd.state.nm.us/PROGRAMS/pr_train.html http://www.sba.gov/financing/index.html http://www.sba.gov/nm/micnm.html http://www.elcdc.com/ http://www.wesst.org/ http://nmprivateinvestors.org To follow the logic in the article, a community should not try to recruit new businesses into the community, just try to grow the local general retail, wholesale, and service sectors. The fallacy of this approach is that there is a static amount of money in a community at the local retail, wholesale and service levels and to not try to increase the flow of outside money (in part through recruiting new businesses) is an erroneous and damaging strategy . Economic stasis occurs over time in a region balancing the local monetary exchanges and accounting for and distributing the new money coming into the economy (government, wealthy retirees, (these first two methods are really wealth absorbing not wealth creating) and tourism dollars account for much of the new money coming into Santa Fe). True economic development occurs when new "new money," as measured by amounts beyond the stasis, enters the region to be circulated among the local businesses and workforce, often augmenting or, better yet, diversifying the existing economic clusters. New diversifying businesses which import money and export product and services (like the Info Mesa community by-and-large--selling services to businesses, governments, orgs around the world and bringing the dollars to accounts in Santa Fe.) I have spoken at length with the guru/author/presenter cited in this article and found most of his theories to be unfounded concoctions that he created on the fly to sell his books and tell locally-sexy stories. [He was asking me for support and leverage to advance his concepts per various community referrals to me but after talking with him, I was challenged to support his notions]. He has a notion of local "venture capital" that is without merit or precedent, beyond the friends and family investments that already take place (he is actually not proposing anything new). His arguments rely on a number of untested personal assumptions and denial of the way venture funding needs and orgs and processes/markets work. I found his misguided bravado and lack of study and process-knowledge rather stunning when compared with his bully-pulpit such as the NM Association of Grant-Makers and similar orgs around the country. For example, as his essential strategy to support these local businesses, he purports to convert the normal borrowing functions used by local businesses at banks (banks are bad in his argument) and replace that short term/long term debt function with local "venture capitalists" (angels) who would invest in these businesses instead, "saving" the businesses the interest monies charged by banks (but causing the business to give up the much more complicated equity ownership in the process). He makes the classic newbie assumption that investor's money is "free" money without obligation to provide competitive returns (or without complicated decisions) to those who are risking the investment capital. The downside of the model he presents is in answering the key question about how the investors get their money out of proposed investments in such local retail or service business (most investor pay-backs come from the sale of companies which have rapid growth on a scale unattainable from local retail establishments). Plus, he ignores the fact that such investors will "price" the investment risks by setting their ownership percentages of a business, just as banks "price" the debt risks: the higher the pay-back risk the more percentage and control the investor will want to own in a company (a deal killer for a local "life-style" business, i.e. a business that supports the life-styles of its owner(s), but does not support outsider dilution or significant growth on scale to provide substantial enough returns to the investors). Ergo, the need for commercial debt financing operations/markets at banks which eases the transaction and complexities of ownership expectations. The markets make themselves by measures of efficiencies, costs, expectations, ownership, risks, etc. What he proposes is actually being done via the lending community at rates and risks that are already locally understood (per above article links). The market is not a perfect one, but then neither is any particular business case. Using foundation monies and other philanthropic monies to augment the debt capital availabilities for small business is not "venture capital" nor should it be confused as such. My hunch and conversation with "Going Loco" is that he is seeking foundation monies to put his novel notions into play...money wasted to be sure. My opinions on the topic... Randy |
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