President Trump spoke on January 20th, 2025, surrounded by over 100 mega-billionaires primarily assembled as top minds of the new world. They have extraordinary global reputations, unique skills, global-age crafts, and superb proven track records. Here is a straightforward interpretation of how such new thinking applies to the lingering global economic order and why making each nation great is a right thinking. Only meritocracy will save the world from economic incompetency.
The old-world order is no order at all. Make your country economically great.
Build new change, create new highly skilled national citizenry.
Economic development without entrepreneurialism is only economic destruction.
Political power without economic power is no power.
Increasing the debt ceiling is a grand economic failure.
Become a trade, export, and manufacturing nation.
Abandoning citizenry on global age competitiveness is a political failure.
The inability to categorize high-potential SMEs is an economic failure.
Why is this a wake-up call to over 100 free economies? Recently, any virtual circumnavigation will visibly expose why the entangled economic intellectualism mandated in the public sectors across over 100 free economies appears so lost and confused. In search of clarification on why flat economic thinking results cannot stand up to national entrepreneurial mobilization skills levels, why?
What can the world learn from Trump’s speech? During the last decade, most national political leadership had no additional extraordinary skills to tackle, test, or audit such flat progress. If they had the answers, they would have been implemented decades ago. China was not a sudden miracle; it was an open book on how it uplifted the national citizenry to end up becoming the most skilled and motivated workforce larger than all Western economies combined.
Today, besides charts and the lingering games of theories or panic protecting national economies from suddenly ending up in a global financial crisis, this occupies primarily the nation’s economic development.
Are global political leaders truly prepared to make their nations great? National political leadership often lacks a clear understanding of global competitiveness and national productivity. The emergence of AI has transformed the landscape, shifting the focus from physical labor to more complex mental challenges aimed at demonstrating superior cognitive performance. This shift necessitates a more sophisticated approach to human resource management, reflecting a significant change in global economics.
Meanwhile, a restless workforce comprising billions of citizens is slowly becoming restless but eager for a change and transformation for the future. But how can we transform the workforce and orient it for a national mobilization of entrepreneurialism, and how fast? Furthermore, endless debt is a national crisis.
Example: USA Debt:
1950: $257 billion
2000: $5.6 trillion
2024: $36 trillion
2030: $50 trillion?
Trump will attempt to change such inefficiencies within four years. If his teams are only 10% successful, a shockwave will reverberate across 100 free economies, challenging their current levels of competencies. America is not alone; there is a global default on a prevailing lack of economic wisdom, which appears more like academic book wisdom and has now lost the art of a 24x7x365 war of skills and highly competent global age reality. Without reskilling and uplifting economic intellectualism, the economic sectors of over 100 free economies remain strangled for another decade.
What can free economies learn from Trump’s chainsaw teams?
The Medal-less Economies: Medal-less economies exhibit a significant lack of mental preparedness and execution skills necessary for global competition. There is also a limited understanding of entrepreneurship, with an overwhelming focus on numerical analysis instead of practical strategies. Yearly progress measured through abstract charts often rewards the status quo, leading to economic stagnation. This environment lacks open dialogue and collaborative events and promotes a prevailing silence.
The Bronze Medal Economies: Awareness of the greater economic challenges and creation of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) is mostly missing. Although entrepreneurship is recognized as a key to creating potential global giants, progress remains extremely slow and limited. While digitalization and international platforms are acknowledged, a significant skills gap hinders the ability to attract funding, resulting in stagnation despite this awareness.
In a state of confusion, the so-called economic development progress crawls along, frustrating restless citizens while leaving over 100 free economies stagnant. The economy remains primarily in the hands of 99% of job seekers, who, lacking entrepreneurial experience, are unable to create businesses or foster job creation. This situation affects political leadership, which often has little to no experience growing a nation in today’s competitive global landscape, resulting in an open global quandary.
The Silver Medal Economies: These economies demonstrate dynamic activity and progress in multiple areas but often struggle with mastery, funding, and global marketing exposure to tackle their immense challenges.
The lack of awareness in today’s competitive global landscape and a failure to recognize the importance of entrepreneurial innovation hinders progress. There is also a significant skills gap in applying economic theories to real-world situations. A reluctance to engage in meaningful discussions about our struggling economy stifles the development of new ideas and solutions. The approach to national economic development has remained stagnant for decades, necessitating urgent attention to revitalize it.
Why does gold medal economics provide precise winning strategies? Gold Medal Economics is a term used to describe a high-performing, competitive economy that consistently achieves significant economic growth and prosperity. It provides a precise winning strategy focusing on entrepreneurialism, digitalization, and global competitiveness.
The Gold Medal Economies: These economies exhibit a strong understanding of mobilizing national entrepreneurial efforts and the implications of digitization. They typically enjoy reasonable access to skills. However, they face challenges in creating national mandates and long-term narratives and uplifting the citizenry while reskilling frontline teams is a gradual process.
What will it take to effectively address these challenges, especially considering it can take a day to measure and audit all the national economic development teams? A concentrated 100-day program could help align them upon completion. With dedicated teams assigned to implement new ideas and innovative entrepreneurial strategies, measurable and noticeable changes can be achieved within a year.
Expothon Worldwide is planning a comprehensive national program to select and identify 100 to 1,000 top frontline economic development team members in the upcoming month. These teams will participate in an intensive program lasting between 10 and 100 days and acquire skills in deploying and mobilizing national job creation and SME uplift operations. This program is to expand to 100 free economies. The goal is to provide participants with fast-track orientation and entrepreneurial training, enabling them to adopt a job creator’s mindset and introduce new dynamics into the national mobilization of entrepreneurialism. Additionally, the program aims to enhance their understanding of deployment and engagement strategies and equally have the national scale to uplift national citizenry to shine on the global stage and help make their country great. More ideas.
A brief study of 100-plus free economies and their continued entrapment speaks volumes about their economic philosophies. The World Bank has prepared good and timely reports on this global topic of interest. More on Google
The rest is easy