The anti-job creation syndrome: how job-seeker mindsets are collapsing free economies.
Economic development without entrepreneurialism is economic destruction. Hence, there is no political power without economic power, and there is no economic power without entrepreneurialism. A quick study of the last 100 earth-shattering entrepreneurial adventures transforming the world in the previous centuries will clarify all this.
Fact One: A Global Divide of Two Mindsets: Since the last millennium, trade and commerce have revealed two distinct mindsets globally. The job-seeker mindset is characterized by individuals who prioritize job stability and seek support from established enterprises. On the other hand, the job-creator mindset is embodied by entrepreneurial risk-takers who conceive original ideas and build enterprises from the ground up. When both mindsets are engaged in balance, they create magical results for more study Mindset Hypothesis
Fact Two: A Global Reality of Two Superior Skills: Globally, there are two kinds of prime knowledge: Explicit knowledge, like accounting, law, or chemistry, is codified and taught through books. For example, a CPA uses explicit knowledge to navigate tax codes. Tacit knowledge, like riding a bike or swimming, is something that cannot be fully documented. Steve Jobs’ intuitive risk-taking on design sense blended aesthetics and technology to shape.
The Written and Unwritten Knowledge: Academic economists prioritize explicit knowledge, enabling giant accounting and law firms to employ thousands of accountants and lawyers. Yet only visionaries like Bezos build enterprises like Amazon. Job-seeker mindsets in free economies cling to explicit safety, as intuitively, they are fearful of risks and job creation ventures, which fuels the anti-job creation syndrome and ultimately collapses their economies.
Anti-Job Creation Syndrome: The job-seeker mindset drives the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome. When billions of new jobs are needed across free economies, the market-based, democratic nations like the USA, Europe, and Canada now tremble, not from external shocks but from a silent and visible lack of new economic solutions. Job-seeker mindsets are risk-averse in free economies, fueling the anti-job creation syndrome.
There is No Chicken Farm: New job creation needs growth and the constant addition of new enterprises. Because enterprises are not hatched, just like in some chicken farms. Entrepreneurs and only entrepreneurs create and grow enterprises. Some remain small, and some transform into Godzilla-sized global giants, and this is how jobs are created. There is no other way.
The 99% Factor: The job-seeker mindset, which craves primarily job stability over risk, has stifled the entrepreneurial spirit, collapsing free economies into cycles of dependency and decline. Almost 99% of frontline economic development teams have a job-seeker mindset, as evident across more than 100 free economies, as reflected in LinkedIn profiles. This anti-job creation syndrome is the architect of an economic catastrophe in free economies, hollowing out their foundation.
Notice: It takes a single day to test, audit, and verify this anti-job creation syndrome across economic development departments within any nation.
Study the USA over a century ago, before economic books were popularized, to understand how it became the first and largest entrepreneurial nation. Now, examine China a few decades ago to comprehend how it became a superpower economy, definitely not through Western economic theories.
Additionally, analyze how India and Indonesia are becoming one, as well as a dozen other Asian economies that are following a similar path. The study might show what exactly they are reading and what precisely they are practicing.
Nevertheless, it is now time to discover why free economies have been stuck for decades and remain on a decline path. The job-seeker mindset, managing national economies, fosters compliance over creation, with no direct experience of ever creating small enterprises and growing them, leaving these nations mired in economic quicksand.
No nation will ever stand up economically unless it optimizes entrepreneurialism to create oceans of new small enterprises, as in such tidal oceans where Godzilla-size enterprises grow and change the face of the nation. The dominance of the job-seeker mindset in free economies’ policies starves nations of entrepreneurial fire, fueling the anti-job creation syndrome and economic collapse. However, the potential of entrepreneurialism is immense, offering a beacon of hope for economic revival.
A Brief History of Entrepreneurial Mysticism: A unique and only force that aims to create grassroots prosperity as an intuitive power. Both science and academia have failed to find a substitute for it. This concept reflects humanity’s journey from the moment square contraptions were forcibly replaced by the wheel, allowing humankind to move out of caves. Thomas Edison, despite failing 10,000 times, ultimately brought humanity out of the darkness with his invention of the light bulb. Similarly, Steve Jobs ushered humanity into the digital age, creating a global shift in economic and behavioral patterns.
A Gift to Humankind: Entrepreneurial mysticism, that unique, unexplainable drive that chases unexplainable solutions to unexplainable solutions, poised to change the world, is deeply embedded in humankind. Every tiny village has potentially such folks in the common populace.
Since the land before the times, entrepreneurial mysticism has always influenced a percentage of people to drive grassroots prosperity and expansion. However, in the modern era, the essence of this art and science has been diluted and corrupted; the artificial fabrications used to control humanity’s fiscal affairs through manipulative numerical theories, which push aside the natural laws that govern humankind, have now brought over 100 free economies to their knees. The job-seeker mindset fuels the anti-job creation, which can collapse free economies.
The Need for a Global Summit: Curated to address the anti-job rejection syndrome and how to balance the job-seeker mindset issue with the job creator mindset is more pressing than ever. The World Bank charts economies but misses the spark of entrepreneurial mysticism. The United Nations debates progress yet rarely amplifies the voices of job creators. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) unites 54 nations, but it must nurture risk-takers who forge enterprises in free economies. The Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) and African Development Bank (AfDB) fund infrastructure, yet the impact hinges on entrepreneurs. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) wield significant influence, yet they require entrepreneurial drive. The Commonwealth, spanning 56 nations, could champion job-creator training. Canada and the USA must rekindle their flame. The African Union (AU) and the European Union (EU) aspire to unity, but only job creators can spark real economic growth. Now, there is BRICS, a new global landscape where the rise of entrepreneurialism is of critical importance. A global summit is needed to bring these voices together and pave the way for a new economic era.
Entrepreneurial Nations: Creating via mandates of ‘national mobilization of entrepreneurialism’ to deploy national SMEs is the key to reversing the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome in free economies.
Splitting the Atom: The global disruption of economic intellectualism has now finally arrived to split the atom of the lingering economic foundation, highlighting a global solution to save falling free economies. Why must we restructure the decline of free economies that has persisted for decades, driven by the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome?
Condense the last four decades into four minutes: China is an unknown factor. Free economies eagerly exported large industrial plants. China gains attention. The debt and the struggling free economies were proclaimed as new successes, masking their decline.
In the next four minutes: China has emerged as a global superpower. Free economies stagnate in decline. Their bureaucracies undermine democratic processes through inefficiencies. A new world emerges, seeking better systems. At the same time, China continues to build relentlessly for its nation, families, and cultural communities, driven by job creators. Free economies are consumed with policies that foster an anti-job creation mentality.
Why is this narrative not framed to replace you but to retrain you and make you irreplaceable?
The Economic Chasms of Real and Fantasy: There are two types of economies: abstract economies driven by value manipulation and real economies grounded in value creation. In our new age, try to reflect on the last industrial age, built on grueling labor; now observe how innovative minds propel the digital age worldwide. Free economies urgently need to grasp the difference between the ‘physicality of work’ and the ‘mentality of performance’ to boost productivity in the digital era.
Anti-Job Creation Syndrome: It festers in abstract economies, where financial games—such as stock manipulations and debt bubbles—replace traditional enterprises. Job-seeker mindsets in free economies, comfortable in abstraction, shun real creation, avoid hardcore expansion of oceans of SMEs, and shaping the nations for a better tomorrow, as visible today.
Two Symptoms: Despite the Trump Administration’s achievements, numerous elections with new leadership in free economies have failed to launch transformative programs for grassroots prosperity. Meanwhile, China advances hourly. Yet top Western universities, self-proclaimed ‘China experts’ based on superficial cultural exposure, have failed to provide an in-depth analysis of China’s strategic rise, blinded by the anti-job creation syndrome. Such a series of failures fuels economic disruption in free economies, exposing the catastrophic impact of job-seeker mindsets on the economic agenda.
Historical Lessons Lost: Study the USA’s prime age, when entrepreneurs-built empires and created millions of jobs. Contrast this with how modern free economies, where job-seeker mindsets infiltrated policy, favor corporate monopolies and financialization over entrepreneurial risk. Finally, China’s rise is a government that empowers job creators, building infrastructure and enterprises at breakneck speed. India and Indonesia now follow, their SME sectors thriving where job-creator mindsets are nurtured. Yet, free economies, gripped by an anti-job creation syndrome, cling to outdated models and now visibly face economic decline.
The Price of Inaction: No airplane will last a day if aeronautical engineers instead of certified pilots manage its cockpit. No circus survives if gymnasts are replaced by flamethrowers and lion tamers by clowns. No enterprise thrives if it faces a mismatch of skills and a lack of experience in rigorous business and entrepreneurial endeavors that tackle its challenges. When knowledge identifies what to do, skill executes it, and wisdom determines when and why, the job-creator entrepreneurial mindset drives growth. Economic theories and academic posturing have eroded the influence of free economies.
The Alarm Bells: When 99% of economic teams across over 100 free economies comprise job-seeker mindsets lacking aptitude for job creation or SME growth, it signals profound damage. Anti-Job Creation Syndrome breeds unemployment, inequality, and economic collapse in free economies, while nations whose economic development is driven by both mindsets tend to prosper. How long will this decline persist, and how much hardship will it inflict?
A Global Summit: The Final Reckoning: The absence of bold economic strategies or robust debates to address the decline in productivity, performance, and profitability demands a summit to forge new bold ideas, strengthen plans, and advance as a final recourse.
Six Steps to Transform the Economic Future:
ONE: Promote Entrepreneurial Mindsets: Encourage frontline economic development teams to embrace entrepreneurial thinking and recognize its historic role in shaping the future of nations. In contrast, the reliance on theoretical approaches has often hindered progress.
TWO: Cultivate Job-Creator Mindsets: Work with national institutions and government departments to foster an understanding and appreciation of the Mindset Hypothesis and the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome. This involves teaching the art of risk-taking, creation, and innovation, moving beyond mere business procedures.
THREE: Incentivize SME Growth: Implement tax breaks and streamline regulations to create a supportive environment for small and medium enterprises (SMEs). This approach will help local economies thrive and counteract the limiting effects of a job-seeker mindset.
FOUR: Invest in Advanced Training Programs: Develop programs that equip the workforce for a competitive global age. These programs should blend explicit and tacit knowledge, particularly in innovation-driven industries, ensuring that skills in creation surpass mere compliance.
FIVE: Foster Public-Private Partnerships: Encourage collaborative efforts between the public and private sectors to support grassroots prosperity. These partnerships can break the cycle of economic dependency by creating engines of growth driven by shared goals.
SIX: Convene a Global Summit: Organize a summit to exchange strategies for building real economies focused on value creation. This summit should draw lessons from the successes of job-creating nations and the failures of free economies, which are primarily trapped in job-seeker mindsets. A global summit is urgently needed. These steps demand more than policy tweaks; they represent a revolutionary call to rebuild the economic foundation shattered by the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome among the world’s free economies.
Why is Expothon Worldwide gaining global attention? An international platform for entrepreneurial innovation and authority on National Mobilization of SME protocols, now so focused on 100 countries. Why is it challenging to use immediately deployable methodologies for all massive SME sectors within the GCC, OIC, European Union, African Union, Commonwealth, BRICS, and ASEAN for national mobilization of entrepreneurialism as pragmatic solutions? Over the last decade, these insights have been shared weekly and reached approximately 2,000 selected VIP recipients, including National Cabinet-level senior government officials, across 100 free economies. This track record of expertise and trust forms the foundation of its proposed strategies.
Training Programs: While blending tacit and explicit knowledge, prepare workforces for the digital age, where innovation drives prosperity. Public-private partnerships unite governments and entrepreneurs, breaking dependency cycles with shared visions. Entrepreneurial mysticism must ignite job-creator mindsets hidden across nations, fostering a culture where risk is celebrated, not feared. Tax breaks and lean regulations empower SMEs to flourish, countering the stranglehold of the job-seeker mindset.
The Summit: A global crucible, will forge strategies to prioritize value creation, learning from China’s ascent as a job creator and the decline of free economies as job seekers, serving as a beacon rather than a talk shop, uniting policymakers to balance with job creators from the grip of the job-seeker mindset in free economies. The summit must unite global leaders to prioritize job creators, fostering genuine economies where they are celebrated, not sidelined. This summit will chart a path to unleash entrepreneurial mysticism, rebuilding free economies on the raw drive to create, free from the chains of academic theories.
Entrepreneurial mysticism is the primal force to heal free economies, shattering the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome and igniting new prosperity. Every village harbors job creators and alpha dreamers, those five billion globally connected individuals who will change the world. Every nation needs its own fire. Each economic foundation in each country must be rebuilt with vision, not numbers, with action, but not theories. Free economies stand at a crossroads: cling to the job-seeker mindset and face decline or embrace the job-creator spirit and soar.
The rest is easy

