When Entrepreneurship is Bad for the Economy

Paul O'Brien
5 min readNov 5, 2024

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Entrepreneurship has long been celebrated as the ultimate engine of economic growth, innovation, and job creation. But what if the fervor surrounding “being an entrepreneur” has gone too far? The glorification of entrepreneurship as an end in itself may actually be hurting our economy. As with most cultural phenomena, the truth is more nuanced than the mantra that entrepreneurship is universally great. It’s a word that has taken on a life of its own, often conflating the skills and desires of business ownership with the restless drive to create and improve — traits that may not align well with long-term economic stability.

At its core, entrepreneurship should not be synonymous with business ownership. Instead, it’s a quality that speaks to risk tolerance, the drive to improve, and the willingness to push boundaries, often at a personal cost. But popular culture’s transformation of “entrepreneur” into a status symbol has inspired waves of would-be founders who may lack the resources, experience, and intrinsic drive to succeed. Let’s explore how this trend could actually harm the economy and what we misunderstand about entrepreneurship.

The Misconception: Entrepreneurship != Business Ownership

The word “entrepreneurship” today evokes images of tech founders, media personalities, and billionaire business owners. But historically, entrepreneurship referred not to the act of owning a business but to a specific set of personality traits: resilience, a high tolerance for risk, and a fixation on improvement without necessarily seeking permission or resources. Entrepreneurs push boundaries, and their work, whether successful or not, drives incremental improvements, inventions, and innovations. But these are pursuits often fraught with failure.

Most true entrepreneurs are not business owners, and conversely, many business owners lack the personality traits that define an entrepreneur. But with the rise of startup culture and platforms that glamorize the entrepreneurial journey, more people than ever are convinced that they must be entrepreneurs to make a mark. Kevin Roose, an economics journalist at The New York Times, once wrote that “the startup world has conflated the idea of an entrepreneur with a founder or a CEO, which misrepresents the essence of entrepreneurship.”

What we have now is a wave of people, encouraged by pop culture and social media, aiming to become entrepreneurs without fully appreciating what that entails. The reality is harsh: about 60% of new businesses fail within five years, more, among startups — expect that 90% of all attempts fail. This failure rate increases for entrepreneurs, who, driven by their nature, often tackle ambitious, risky ideas without a roadmap for stability.

See also What Most Don’t Understand Becoming an Entrepreneur

The Economic Toll of Entrepreneurial Glorification

When society glamorizes the entrepreneur, it unwittingly inspires people who may lack the intrinsic qualities of an entrepreneur to pursue a path they aren’t well-suited for. Many people desire the prestige of being a successful founder, not the grueling journey it often entails. They don’t necessarily want to create something new or disrupt industries; they want the image, the recognition, and the validation.

In the process, the economy suffers. The high failure rate associated with entrepreneurial ventures can be a significant economic drain when inexperienced or ill-suited individuals pour resources into doomed ventures. As Inc. columnist Tom Eisenmann points out, “a misguided perception of entrepreneurship as a way to easy fame and fortune leads many into starting ventures that ultimately damage their financial and mental well-being and place strain on the broader economy.”

Universities have added fuel to this fire by offering degrees in entrepreneurship, promising young students the keys to a future of independence and influence. But can you really “teach” someone to be an entrepreneur? Certainly, one can learn business, marketing, and finance. But the qualities that make someone an entrepreneur — those inherent traits of risk tolerance and creative disruption — cannot be taught. As economic advisor Scott Shane has noted, “Entrepreneurial traits are more likely to be personality-driven rather than skill-driven, and the mistaken idea that anyone can learn to be an entrepreneur is dangerous for the economy” (The Entrepreneurial Instinct, 2011).

The issue extends further when we look at mental health: entrepreneurs are more prone to financial strain and mental health difficulties, in part because their nature compels them to take risks and because society often marginalizes those who think differently. Their high tolerance for risk and failure can result in repeated financial and personal setbacks, even as they continue to push for new ideas. This reality contradicts the “entrepreneurship as freedom” narrative, pointing instead to a life of instability for many.

See also The 5 Reasons Investors Pass on Startups

So, Is Entrepreneurship Bad for the Economy?

Not exactly. What’s harmful to the economy isn’t entrepreneurship itself but the glorification of the “entrepreneur” identity without a clear understanding of its challenges and implications. Paul Graham, founder of Y Combinator, has famously stated, “It’s not the idea of entrepreneurship that’s hurting the economy, but rather the romanticized misconception of it.”

True entrepreneurs do add immense value to the economy. Their innovations, while fraught with risks, drive job creation, efficiency, and even whole new industries. But their contributions often come at their own expense. These individuals, who are intrinsically motivated to improve systems and processes, don’t do it for fame or recognition. They do it because they can’t imagine doing anything else.

But when we confuse being an entrepreneur with being a business owner or a startup founder, we lose sight of the real purpose and value of entrepreneurship. The term “entrepreneur” is tossed around so freely that it risks becoming a catch-all for anyone who starts a business. Yet the economy needs both entrepreneurs and stable business owners, each bringing their unique strengths without trying to become something they’re not.

Entrepreneurship, in its essence, is not bad for the economy. But its hyped image — the “celebrity entrepreneur” culture — can have damaging effects, leading many astray and resulting in a significant economic cost. This year, Jason M. Lemkin and SaaStr pointed out that the number of active VCs is down, significantly; if we want to harness the true power of entrepreneurship, we must develop our ecosystems distinguishing those driven by the entrepreneurial spirit from those who simply seek the accolades.

The economy depends on both but thrives only when each contributes from a place of authenticity and genuine purpose.

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Paul O'Brien
Paul O'Brien

Written by Paul O'Brien

CEO of MediaTech Ventures, CMO to #VC, #Startup Advisor. I get you funded. Father, marketer, author, #Austin. @seobrien & @AccelerateTexas. https://seobrien.com

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