“Your problem is solved,” with those words Sir Adamjee Dawood, one of Pakistan’s greatest entrepreneurs, saved the country from financial collapse a mere 13 days after its independence. Though many entrepreneurs have played a pivotal role in the country’s creation, their sacrifices have been forgotten and their accomplishments erased from history.
On August 27, 1947, the newly-founded country faced a debilitating financial crisis due to the largest migration in human history. When the queue of waiting migrants became alarmingly long outside the State Bank building in Karachi, Pakistan’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah sent a message to Sir Adamjee Dawood.
The finance minister apprised Sir Adamjee about the financial crunch, who turned to his banker before responding to the call of the nation’s founder with those four words – your problem is solved. Without hesitation or demand for sureties, he financed the nation by a blank cheque offer secured against his personal assets.
This was not the first time that Sir Adamjee served the cause of Pakistan. Earlier, he bought The Daily Star of India, a money-losing newspaper, to spread the message of independence. And there were others like him – Mirza Ahmed Ispahani, MA Habib and Sir Abdullah Haroon who supported the movement through difficult times.
If a country does not celebrate and support its entrepreneurs, it ignores an important lesson from history – the success of countries relies on wealth creation and innovation and entrepreneurs are intrinsically linked to both.
A key role in South Korea’s economic development, from a GDP per capita of $329 in 1970 to $17,225 in 2009, is that of entrepreneurs like Chung Ju-yung, who started as an auto mechanic and went on to establish Hyundai Heavy Industries, the world’s largest shipbuilder. According to the Asian Institute of Policy Studies in Seoul, one million people went through the vocational skills training programme of Hyundai Industries between 1972 and 1982. The skills development programme was responsible for upward social mobility of 13% of South Korean households from poor rural to urbanised middle class.
Another example is the US, which owes its economic strength primarily to an environment that celebrates and nurtures entrepreneurship. A glance at the list of “Most Admired Americans of All Times” shows wise politicians, social activists as well as entrepreneurs such as Thomas Edison and Henry Ford.
It is no surprise that its engine of growth is fuelled by entrepreneurs. A recent research by Kaufman Foundation showed that 40 million or two-thirds of the jobs created in the US between 1980 and 2005 were from new ventures, or businesses that were less than five years old.
Contrary to widely held beliefs, Pakistan too has much to celebrate about its entrepreneurs – from the audacity of Sir Adamjee Dawood in staking his personal wealth to bail out an infant nation, to the new generation who are succeeding in spite of daunting economic and security challenges.
One example of this success is when Pakistan Fast Growth 100 entrepreneurs, a ranking of fast-growing private enterprises, competed with those from 14 countries for a position on the AllWorld Arabia 500+Turkey ranking. Pakistan had 70 entrepreneurs represented in the ranking of the fast-growing private enterprises, second only to Turkey, the highest number of women entrepreneurs from any single country including the fastest-growing company managed by a woman entrepreneur. These emerging entrepreneurs of Pakistan receive little support and yet they are the greatest hope for economic progress.
These individuals have tested out and refined the business models that are successful in the local context. Therefore, facilitating their growth will be more effective and sustainable because we are tapping into resources, knowledge and practices that are rooted in local economy rather than conventional development solutions implanted from the outside.
Entrepreneurs are the country’s economic heroes who can play a critical role in meeting the aspirations of the population and, as in the case of South Korea and the US, be the agents for the country’s economic revival.
The writer is the founding director of Pakistan 100 and works for the Abraaj Capital Group.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 14th, 2012.
COMMENTS (19)
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THANK YOU!!! thank you very much for making a simple point that somehow is missed by the masses in Pakistan. We always hate the entrepreneurs yet they are responsible, in every growth episode (except maybe china is some sense), of being the ones responsible for the economic progress. I hope our government recognizes this and gives them energy, equal tax base, etc to give a fighting chance to every entrepreneurs. once the field is leveled, the winners with highest ability will emerge, and i am very confident pakistan will become at least as rich as Indonesia, if not much more!
@ khalsa
Most of them? Your statement is so full of factual errors that I will suggest that you open your eyes to see around you!
@khan... well i didn't say big land, i said enough land to start something, currently i am earning more than what i can annually earn from this land, this will give you idea about how much land we have. i am prepared to take risk against my family's will by compromising my career on what i believe i should do. Giving a year or two more, till my family gets convinced or IK brings some change or both. Anyhow, don't call me an entrepreneur wanna be, rather call me someone who want to help his community with whatever resources he have.
@khalsa.... everybody works for money in this world. its only how can a whole community benefit from what you do, instead of just one family.
Entrepreneurs should come up with products that offer solution to energy crisis. . If you search youtube (Ted videos), in the US Poeple have made devices that are better than solar panels and organisations like Google are using them on experimental basis.
@peshawri: you sold your business for uninterrupted power supply?? no its because of lack of understanding the diff between subtle things like interrupted and uninterrupted
@khan: then why most of them end up getting jailed deported or laying bricks in dubai???
check out the work of Injaz pakistan, very cool stuff to foster young entrepreneurs
@ AKhan
Entrepreneurs are not people with big lands! They are people who are often without any money and take risk following their ideas. . While Richard Branson is an entrepreneur (because the started with nothing and took risks), many big businessmen are not entrepreneurs because they were either born rich or followed a particular style of business. . Take risks and start something... take out loans or help from a family. An entrepreneur doesn't wait for favourable conditions.
The whole world recognize that Pakistanis are the best entrepreneurs. . In Europe, if a chinese and a Pakistani start a store, after 10 years the Chinese will have same store while the Pakistani would have 5 more stores!
Agreed with you 100%
not to forget they work for money. if there is money here they will work befooling us like true patriots and if money is out somewhere they will shift just like western companies shifting to asia and making west jobless and now in deep trouble
if i am forced to sell my business because of uninterrupted power supply how can you expect a bigger investor to invest in Pakistan.... save Pakistan... give electricity to industries...
i am an IT professional happen to have enough family land. i have big plans for starting my own bussiness in agriculture. To be honest, currently i dont see favorable envirnament in pskistan for executing my plans. waiting for Imran khan to come into power, and hoping if he can give us some favorable envirment. only cheap and uniterrepted power supply will help alot. the day it happens i will fly back to Pakistan.
Despite the success narrated here; at the end of the day, sadly we are mostly a nation of 'job seekers' as compared to entrepreneurs!
Any success we have achieved whether entrepreneurship or any other it is has been more of an individual struggle 'against all odds' the environment(social, political or even family) has nearly no input into our entrepreneurial mould! And a positive environment will be required if we wish to see such success stories on a regular/consistent basis!
@Ch. Allah Daad.. yeah they surely do things.. ;) http://tribune.com.pk/story/378441/outstanding-debts-fia-dredges-up-loan-case-against-the-sharif-family/
It's interesting to see that this piece has not received any comments yet! We really have become a nation of drawingroom gossip - by manipulating the systems (read obtaining govt subsidies in plots/education/comforts etc without paying due taxes), and then whining about why we don't progress.
Getting ahead requires real work - not just crancking out endless reports for foreign donors...
If this nation somehow puts its bet on enterprneurship and true aspiring and growing businesses imagine the growth it will bring forth!
In addition to the big names this article rightly highlights, there are millions of small entrepreneurs who keep the national economy humming. A recent World Bank report titled "More and Better Jobs in South Asia" showed that 63% of Pakistan's workforce is self-employed entrepreneurs, including 13% high-end self-employed. Salaried and daily wage earners make up only 37% of the workforce.
These small entrepreneurs are managing to put food on their families' tables and put children through good schools. If recognized and supported, some of them have the potential to be like the founders of Kraft Foods and Carl's Junior, both of which had humble beginnings as street vendors of the United States.
http://www.riazhaq.com/2011/12/ibas-pakistan-entrepreneurship-report.html
Give Mian brothers a two third majority with un-intrrupted ten years of rule and watch the fastest economic growth in human history. They don't just talk, they do things.