Carl J. Schramm

Founding Contributor, Four Percent Growth Project
Co-author, Better Capitalism
Former President & CEO, The Kauffman Foundation

The man The Economist calls "The Evangelist of Entrepreneurship".

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Biography

Carl J. Schramm is one of the world's leading defenders of entrepreneurship as the driving force behind healthy economies. Carl is a founder of the 4% Growth Project, an initiative by the George W. Bush Institute to reaffirm confidence in the U.S. economy. During his ten years as president of the Kauffman Foundation, he made it the world's premier organization dedicated to developing high-growth firms. Now Carl is the co-author of a new book, Better Capitalism: Renewing the Entrepreneurial Strength of the American Economy.

Better Capitalism explores the many ways that it has become harder for entrepreneurs to find footing in the American economy. Carl and his co-author, Robert Litan, describe how changes in regulations, at universities, and in immigration policies have come together to make life easy for big, established companies, but challenging for the up-and-coming businesses that drive job creation. Carl offers creative solutions to these problems that will move the economy forward again without ballooning the deficit.

This is the latest in a long series of highly regarded books and articles Carl has written about entrepreneurship. Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism was named one of the "Top Ten Books That Drive The Debate" by the National Chamber Foundation. His article "Building Entrepreneurial Economies" is one of Foreign Affairs' most requested reprints. Carl is also the author of The Entrepreneurial Imperative. His work has appeared in publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Business Week, and USA Today. His work created a new field called expeditionary economics, which focuses on rebuilding the economies of post-conflict nations like Iraq and Afghanistan.

Today Mr. Schramm teaches classes in entrepreneurship at the Syracuse University School of Information Studies. Previously, he taught for fifteen years at Johns Hopkins University, where he founded the Hopkins Center for Hospital Finance and Management. His other work in healthcare finance includes his past role as Commissioner and Chairman of the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission and his current position as editor of the American Assembly's Health Care and its Costs.

Credentials

  • Director, Berkeley Research Group
  • Fellow, UC Berkeley Haas Business School's Institute of Business Innovation
  • Professor, Syracuse University
  • Visiting Scientist, MIT
  • Fellow, the Bush Institute
  • Founding Contributor, Four Percent Growth Project
  • Former President and CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
  • Member, Council on Foreign Relations
  • Co-founding Board Member, Startup America Partnership
  • Batten Fellow, in the Darden Graduate School of Business, University of Virginia
  • Chair, National Advisory commission on Measuring Innovation
  • Member, Research, Innovation and Enterprise Council, Singapore
  • Former Professor of health finance and policy, The Johns Hopkins University
  • Former Commissioner and Chairman, Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission
  • Member, Maryland Health and Higher Educational Facilities Authority
  • MA, PhD, economics, University of Wisconsin
  • LLD, Georgetown University Law Center
  • BA, LeMoyne College

Books

Better Capitalism

Renewing the Entrepreneurial Strength of the American Economy

Carl J. Schramm and Robert E. Litan

In the wake of the Great Recession and America's listless recovery from it, economists, policymakers, and media pundits have argued at length about what has gone wrong with the American capitalist system. Even so, few constructive remedies have emerged. This welcome book cuts through the chatter and offers a detailed, nonideological, and practical blueprint to restore the vigor of the American economy.

Better Capitalism extends and significantly expands on the insights of the authors' widely praised previous book, Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, co-written with William Baumol. In Better Capitalism, Robert E. Litan and Carl J. Schramm focus on the huge — but often unrecognized — importance of entrepreneurship to overall economic growth. They explain how changes in seemingly unrelated policy arenas — immigration, education, finance, and federal support of university research — can accelerate America's recovery from recession and spur the nation's rate of growth in output while raising living standards. The authors also outline an innovative energy strategy and discuss the potential benefits of government belt-tightening steps. Sounding an optimistic note when gloomy predictions are the norm, Litan and Schramm show that, with wise and informed policymaking, the American entrepreneurial engine can rally and the true potential of the U.S. economy can be unlocked.

Yale University Press (September 25, 2012)

Praise

“Entrepreneurship is a key virtue of the U.S. economy, which has the potential to lift us out of our current economic malaise. This book provides a thoughtful recipe for encouraging this critical activity.”
— Josh Lerner, Harvard Business School and author of Boulevard of Broken Dreams

“Enabling entrepreneurs to flourish can both grow the economy and make the world a better place. I hope Better Capitalism inspires a new generation to stretch the reach of market forces and create new businesses that drive economic growth while also helping solve the problems of the world’s poorest.”
— Bill Gates

Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism

and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity

William J. Baumol , Robert E. Litan and Carl J. Schramm

Imagine this: a mere century ago, the purchasing power of an average American was one-tenth of what it is today. But what will it take to sustain that growth through the next century? And what can be said about economic growth to aspiring nations seeking higher standards of living for their citizens?

In this important book, William J. Baumol, Robert E. Litan, and Carl J. Schramm contend that the answers to these questions lie within capitalist economies, though many observers make the mistake of believing that “capitalism” is of a single kind. Writing in an accessible style, the authors dispel that myth, documenting four different varieties of capitalism, some “Good” and some “Bad” for growth. The authors identify the conditions that characterize Good Capitalism — the right blend of entrepreneurial and established firms, which can vary among countries — as well as the features of Bad Capitalism. They examine how countries catching up to the United States can move faster toward the economic frontier, while laying out the need for the United States itself to stick to and reinforce the recipe for growth that has enabled it to be the leading economic force in the world. This pathbreaking book is a must read for anyone who cares about global growth and how to ensure America’s economic future.

Yale University Press (October 27, 2009)

Praise

"Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism helpfully moves the debate on from competing national models to the underlying structures that shape the relative effectiveness of different sorts of capitalism."
The Economist

"Well worth a read by both academics and policy-makers. It is an interesting and promising departure from the standard debates."
— Mark Zachary Taylor, Review of Policy Research

"The issues here are complex, and the book is chock-full of wise suggestions on how to reform the patent system, bankruptcy laws, and antitrust policies to protect ''good capitalism.''"
— Joel Mokyr, Technology and Culture

The Entrepreneurial Imperative

How America's Economic Miracle Will Reshape the World (and Change Your Life)

Carl J. Schramm

In 2004, Carl Schramm, president of the Kauffman Foundation, the world's leading foundation for entrepreneurship, published a groundbreaking essay with a radical premise: that Americans literally have no conception of the secret that truly underlies our economic success, and that for the United States to survive and continue to lead the world's economy, it is imperative we learn to understand and employ that secret.

The secret that has led the American economy to become the world's strongest? Our unparalleled skill as entrepreneurs. As Schramm compellingly shows in this sweeping manifesto, entrepreneurship alone — not anything else — can give America the necessary leverage to remain an economic superpower. Not technology, since everyone now has the same technology, or access to it. Not education — we are years behind other nations in this area. Not basic manufacturing, long since moved overseas from the United States. And not capital markets, now truly global entities.

Drawing on detailed research conducted by the Kauffman Foundation and on his decades of experience as an entrepreneur himself and as a leader and mentor to other entrepreneurs, Schramm persuasively demonstrates in detail what this entrepreneurial imperative means for the way we run universities and foundations, lead companies, make personal job decisions, and even conduct our foreign affairs. The Entrepreneurial Imperative will change not only the way our government, corporations, and nonprofits operate, but also our day-to-day lives as working Americans.

HarperBusiness (October 10, 2006)

Praise

“As Carl Schramm argues … in The Entrepreneurial Imperative, no country has mastered innovation and entrepreneurship as effectively as America.”
The Economist

“[The] one book that lays out…why entrepreneurship matters. The Economist didn’t call Schramm the “evangelist of entrepreneurship” for nothing.
— Paul Kedrosky, Infectious Greed

“Reading The Entrepreneurial Imperative it’s hard not to like Carl J. Schramm. [A]n optimistic cheerleader for American capitalism.”
— Stephen Wolter, Corporate Report Wisconsin

“[E]ssential reading to understand and prepare for our personal lives and the future.”
— Steve Forbes, CEO and Editor in Chief, Forbes

“Schramm unlocks the key to growth. . . and roots it in the American spirit inside us all.”
— Scott Cook, founder of Intuit

“[E]ssential reading to understand and prepare for our personal lives and the future.”
— Paul Orfalea, founder of Kinko's and author of Copy This!

Subjects

Carl tailors each presentation to the needs of his audience and is not limited to the topics we have listed below. These are subjects that have proven valuable to customers in the past and are meant only to suggest his range and interests. Please ask us about any subject that interests you; we are sure that we can accommodate you.

Entrepreneurship

Better Capitalism

Videos

Entrepreneurship and the Future of the Global Economy

Reviews

A major university commencment:
In all candor, his speech is still the topic of conversation among those present. Even our faculty — a very hard group to please — have commented on my good judgment!

He approached our audience with ease and confidence, drew them in with humor, and then offered a message of depth and conviction. Those who visited with him afterwards enjoyed his disarming personality and his willingness to respond graciously to their questions. It was a great day for the graduates and all those assembled and, overall, an important experience for our academic community.

I recommend him highly as a speaker, as a resource and as a stimulating guest.