What everyone in the world wants is a good job. "This is one of the most
important discoveries Gallup has ever made," says the company's
Chairman, Jim Clifton.
In The Coming Jobs War, Clifton makes the bold assertion that job
creation and successful entrepreneurship are the world's most pressing
issues right now, outpacing runaway government spending, environmental
degradation and even the threat of global terrorism.
The book is grounded in findings from Gallup's World Poll, which reveals
the implications of the jobs war on everything from economics to foreign
policy to nothing less than America's moral authority in the world. And
it offers a prescription for attacking the jobs issue head-on. Clifton
argues that the solution to creating good jobs must be found in cities,
not in the federal government. Promoting entrepreneurship and job
creation must be the sole mission and purpose of cities' business
leaders, government officials and philanthropists.
Clifton says that the next big breakthrough will come from the
combination of the forces within big cities, great universities and
powerful local leaders. Their combined effect is the most reliable,
controllable and predictable solution to America's biggest problem.
Strong leadership teams and a natural order are already in place within
cities -- in governments and local business and philanthropic entities,
with caring leaders working on initiatives to fuel local economic growth
and to create good jobs. The feat these leaders have to pull off is
doubling their entrepreneurial energy by aligning their local forces:
local tribal leaders, super mentors and universities.
Winning the jobs war will require all hands on deck, and failure is not
an option, especially for the United States, which has been the global
leader in promoting freedom and entrepreneurship. America's place in the
world is at stake, and there are other countries poised to surpass a
sputtering U.S. economy that is currently growing at only 2% annually.
The biggest threat? China, with a GDP that is increasing at nearly 10%
annually -- a pace that will make it the world's leading and most
influential economy within the next 30 years.
While the statistics are dire, Clifton remains optimistic about
America's ability to win the jobs war because America has been here
before. "The Greatest Generation saved America by beating the Japanese
and Germans at [World War II]. The Baby Boomers saved America a second
time by beating the same foes, Japan and Germany, in an economic war
that determined the leadership of the free world, again," he says.
The Coming Jobs War offers a clear, brutally honest look at America's
biggest problem and a cogent prescription for solving it.