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Start-Up Nation
Book

Start-Up Nation

The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle

Twelve, 2009 Mehr


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Eye Opening
  • Concrete Examples

Recommendation

Innovation and venture capital are the main engines for creating individual and national wealth. Take Israel, for example, say authors Dan Senor and Saul Singer, who portray the nation as a blueprint for how to launch innovative ventures. They profile the cultural, military and economic characteristics that make it the world’s most entrepreneurial nation. This uplifting, inspiring business story explains how Israeli entrepreneurs overcame significant challenges and analyzes how a country’s culture influences its business climate. getAbstract finds that this well-informed text offers solid lessons about maintaining national competitiveness in the 21st century.

Summary

Radically New Ideas

Israel deliberately focuses its national assets on innovation and entrepreneurship. It has one of the highest levels of research and development of any nation and a higher concentration of engineers and scientists than any other country. A land of early adopters, Israel is the world’s top internet user and has the highest density of business start-ups: 3,850, or “one for every 1,844 Israelis.” It leads the way in technological innovation, and it excels at launching start-up businesses and building them up to Nasdaq-level. Israel has more Nasdaq-listed corporate headquarters than Europe, and it draws many international investors. Israel attracted $2 billion in venture capital in 2008, which, on a per capita basis, was akin to the investment that went to the United Kingdom, or to Germany and France combined. In 2008, venture capitalists invested 2.5 times more per capita in Israel than in the U.S.

Israel, with its 7.1 million population, is a bastion of entrepreneurship, but that was not always the case. After the United Nations vote that established the state in 1948, Israel’s neighbors attacked it and inflicted immense wartime losses. When it achieved...

About the Authors

Dan Senor, a Council on Foreign Relations fellow, analyzes foreign affairs for Fox News and writes columns for The Wall Street Journal. He co-founded Rosemont Capital and worked for the Carlyle Group. Saul Singer, the Jerusalem Post editorial page director, wrote Confronting Jihad.