An entrepreneurial culture and the rule of law have nourished the nation’s
economic dynamism
By Guy Sorman
By Guy Sorman
Worry over
America’s recent economic stagnation, however justified, shouldn’t obscure the
fact that the American economy remains Number One in the world. The United
States holds 4.5 percent of the world’s population but produces a staggering 22
percent of the world’s output—a fraction that has remained fairly stable for
two decades, despite growing competition from emerging countries. Not only is
the American economy the biggest in absolute terms, with a GDP twice the size
of China’s; it’s also near the top in per-capita income, currently a bit over
$48,000 per year. Only a few small countries blessed with abundant natural
resources or a concentration of financial services, such as Norway and
Luxembourg, can claim higher averages.
America’s
predominance isn’t new; indeed, it has existed since the early nineteenth
century. But where did it come from? And is it in danger of disappearing?
By the 1830s, the
late British economist Angus Maddison showed, American per-capita income was
already the highest in the world. One might suppose that the nation could thank
its geographical size and abundance of natural resources for its remarkable
wealth. Yet other countries in the nineteenth century—Brazil is a good
example—had profuse resources and vast territories but failed to turn them to
comparable economic advantage.
A major reason
that they failed to compete was their lack of strong intellectual property
rights. The U.S. Constitution, by contrast, was the first in history to protect
intellectual property rights: it empowered Congress “to promote the Progress of
Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors
the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” As Thomas
Jefferson, who became the first commissioner of the patent office, observed,
the absence of accumulated wealth in the new nation meant that its most
important economic resource was innovation—and America’s laws encouraged that
innovation from the outset. Over two centuries later, the United States has
more patents in force—1.8 million—than any other nation (Japan, with 1.2
million, holds second place). America is also the leader in “triadic patents”
(that is, those filed in the United States, Europe, and Asia) registered every
year—with 13,715 in 2009, the most recent year for which statistics are
available, ahead of Japan’s 13,322 and Germany’s 5,764.