In the licence-permit-quota era of yore, entrepreneurship in India involved lobbying hard-to-get exclusive licences to manufacture items that have a ready demand: whether in businesses involving natural resources like mining, land etc. or consumer products like cars, scooters, motor cycles, white goods, watches, telephone instruments etc. Most of the traditional entrepreneurial families managed to corner such licences and prevented competition by lobbying against giving out more licenses. Others turned lobbying into a fine art by getting government rules changed to suit them. Since capital was scarce, gold-plating projects and getting them financed with long-term debt to generate the required funds for the promoter to put in his capital contribution and more, was the order of the day. This is anything but novel as being suggested through messages in WhatsApp university currently. If truth be told, there are hardly any entrepreneurs of yester years who have not indulged in this sport because that was the accepted socio-political milieu during those days where a warped version of a socialist utopia was being thrust on unsuspecting citizens.
As Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, once said “It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, brewer or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest”. Though all entrepreneurs start their ventures to further their own interest in earning profits, by doing so, the successful ones not only satisfy the demand for goods and services but also create employment and develop the areas around their factories, besides contributing to the exchequer through taxes. It is important to highlight that most of these entrepreneurs have enough wealth to lead a happy life like the arm-chair critics that we have in plenty. Instead of choosing this easy path, the entrepreneurs put their wealth at risk and meet the needs of the nation by implementing projects that produce goods and services for us citizens.
The Adani episode has to be seen in this light because here is a first generation entrepreneur who has created wealth by taking up the difficult-to-implement and long-gestation core sector projects in the economy while all the well-endowed business families were busy capturing the easier opportunities that were available in a growing India. It is nobody’s argument that wrongdoing should be overlooked and in fact, should invariably lead to consequences as per the due process of law, but painting everyone in the same broad brush of dishonesty and skulduggery is malicious and this has become a national pastime for the ill-informed arm-chair philosophers who have, most often, not contributed anything worthwhile to society in their whole lives. Despite some haughty fund managers inappropriately claiming to create wealth, entrepreneurs are the real wealth creators in an economy because they are the ones who create employment, pay taxes and develop the areas around which they operate, while allowing investors like us to partake in this process of wealth creation. We need to learn to nurture and indeed celebrate entrepreneurship for the risks that entrepreneurs take and because the benefits of successful entrepreneurship spread themselves over the whole community and indeed the nation. Decrying them as cheats, tax-evaders, blood-suckers and exploiters as the left is wont to do is a shame and it demotivates budding entrepreneurs.