Secretary of State Remarks at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo remarks at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit, in The Hague, the Netherlands.

Transcript

Your excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, a warm welcome to The Hague, the city where the world is at home. Certainly, over the next few days, with so many entrepreneurs from all over the world gathered here. I would like to extend a special warm welcome to the United States Secretary of State, Mister Mike Pompeo. The Hague is honored to welcome you here today, mister Secretary. The same applies to our own Prime Minister, Mister Mark Rutte. A very warm welcome to you, your excellency.

[Rutte] Good to be here. It fills me with pride that the Global Entrepreneurship Summit is taking place here in this city. True entrepreneurship can only flourish in a free and open society, a society built on the principles of the rule of law. As the international city of peace and justice, this is something that The Hague holds dear. There is yet another reason why I am so pleased to welcome you here. A better future is a matter for us all, and you are people who are dedicated to do that, who work for it day in and day out. Passionate entrepreneurs who use their creativity and business talents to create a better world. I meet them wherever I go. Both here in our city and on the other side of the world. By growth, growing food sustainable at sea, or converting sea water into drinking water, for example. These and many other innovations have made The Hague an impact city. Wherever I come across them, I’m always so impressed by examples like these because I know of my own experience what entrepreneurship involves. Just as I also know how wonderful it is to be able to make a difference with a business, to contribute to progress in society, to work towards a safe, sustainable and prosperous world close to home or worldwide. I’m also delighted to see that there are more and more women entrepreneurs. This afternoon I had the pleasure of meeting some of them, but there still could be more. Sustainable development goal number five states: “Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.” Entrepreneurs, both man and woman are crucial to that. Ladies and gentlemen, our world is faced with major challenges in many different areas, but when I look around me here, I am sure that we can meet those challenges because we can count on the strength of entrepreneurs, because we can count on you, because it is entrepreneurs who drive the social progress. People with a passion for what they do and for the world. Men and women like you, who every day show that it is possible doing business and doing good, and it is in that spirit, that I wish you a very successful summit. (crowd applause)

Good afternoon everyone, welcome. The Prime Minister and I were just remarking on what a great crowd, what a great group we have here. Thank you Madame Mayor for joining us as well, and hosting us. I want to thank Prime Minister as well. Frankly, the Dutch people for welcoming us to your country. We’re honored to co-host this 9th annual Global Entrepreneur Summit with our Dutch friends. Before I entered political life, I ran two small businesses. I know the risk you take every day, the capital you deploy, and I know that we can’t accomplish our national security missions, as the Secretary of State, our diplomatic mission without strong economy, so thank you all for joining us today. You know, our two countries share an abiding belief in this very power of entrepreneurship. It is the Dutch after all that brought the spirit of entrepreneurship to the Americas. You established fur and spice trading posts along our eastern coast, including a little settlement named New Amsterdam. (crowd laughter) Look, it’s, New York City has now become the home to countless entrepreneurs, including our current President. The American story has been written in no small part by entrepreneurs, risk-takers, the likes of Edison and Forbes and Ford and Jobs. The history isn’t unique to us in the United States. The Netherlands has also generated visionary entrepreneurs, like Gerard Philips, or more recently, Jaap Haartsen, who helped develop the Bluetooth technology that we all rely on today. And all throughout, all throughout the free world, the progress of nations is driven by those who are willing to take a big risk to put their own capital out there, to fail sometimes and then fail again, until one day a success follows you. So I want to spend just a few minutes today talking about the principles that foster entrepreneurship in any society. How it is that government can get out of the way so that you all can do what it is that you do that makes families here in the Netherlands and families in the United States thrive and grow. Look, let’s acknowledge that it takes amazing people, people like you all here. We’ve got more than a thousand most promising entrepreneurs from 140 different countries who have joined us at this summit. You are indeed living proof, living proof of markets, of how innovation is driven by competition and not by government dictates. You’re developing new medicines that can re-generate damaged heart tissue. You’re inventing solar powered backpacks that allow African children to use electronics in their schools. You’re building software, you’re building software that allows small farmers in Columbia to access the same agriculture supplies that bigger farms are able to do in Western countries. More than 300 investors are here too to back up those ideas. I hope you’ll get a chance to meet each other and create some important strategic, and investor relationships, and then there’s one last group, one last group represented at this summit: government leaders

OK, don’t all cheer at once! (crowd laughs) Yeah, government leaders can bridge value, excuse me, bring value to entrepreneurs if, and only if, we are capable of creating the necessary environment for which, in which you can thrive, and I want to talk about what those conditions are. We know them in the United States, we know them here in the Netherlands. First, entrepreneurs need the right to private property, both physical property and intellectual property. Without this fundamental right, one that we take for granted too often I think, without this fundamental right, there’s no incentive to innovate, because there’s no reward for that innovation. You don’t have to take my word for it, Steve Jobs but it this way, he said, quote: “If protection of intellectual property “begins to disappear, then creative companies “will disappear or frankly just never get started.” Property right are the bedrock of any successful economy. It’s why America insists on these protections in our society and in the trade deals that we enter into as we move forward. Second thing entrepreneurs need is the rule of law. It’s pretty basic, a legal system that’s predictable, consistent, creates enforceable rights creates understandings among suppliers and customers and employees, all of those things that permit organizations to thrive and to prosper. Before I entered government, I talked to you about my time as an entrepreneur. I founded a small manufacturing company. It was critical to know, that government wasn’t going to change the rules on a bureaucratic whim. We were depending on that consistent, fair set of rules. You know, in parts of this world, authoritarian states can steal ideas, and they can prop up their own business and their own business enterprises, but you should know that they will never, in the end, match the entrepreneurship and innovation found in free and open societies, because their incentives are just all messed up. The same goes for democratic developed countries that wield regulation for political ends. It can’t work. Third, and you all know this too. Third, government has to stop strangling business. Under President Trump, we’ve slashed unnecessary regulations in the United States, we’ve reduced corporate taxes. This has encouraged companies from the Netherlands to invest in the United States. It’s created incentives for American companies to invest all across the world and in our home country. These actions have had undeniable results. We for a long time in America thought that the new normal was two percent economic growth. That’s not the case here, that’s not the case in any society that obeys these simple free market principles. Our jobless rate today is the lowest in the United States of America in 50 years, five decades. Job creation among the smallest business America recently broke a 45 year record. We’re proud of these accomplishments because they were, there was a central thesis behind it, the very principles I described, the formula of lower taxes and a light touch on regulation. It works not only in the United States. We believe it works everywhere. So, here’s an idea, let’s everywhere in the world make entrepreneurship great again. (crowd applause) There’s a lot more that I could say, but you all know most of this, and I promised that I would be very brief today, and I wish that I could stay for all of the Summit, I wish I could get a chance to shake everyone’s hand here, for their willingness to engage in this competitive marketplace and take risks for themselves and those around you. You will ultimately drive the success, not only for your family, those around you and your business, but for our nations as well. I’ve got to join the President tonight in London. He and the First Lady are there for an official visit and then they’ll go on to another remarkable historic moment. It’ll be the 75th anniversary of D-Day, when American and Allied forces rolled back tyranny, and laid the foundation for a new era of democracy and freedom, one that we all benefit from today. As entrepreneurs, you carry on that effort: the ongoing story of prosperity, of progress of human flourishing, the recognition of the fundamental nature of dignity of every human being. So, I hope you’ll take what you learned from this Summit, I hope that you’ll take it back home, and that I hope you’ll bring your money to the United States and invest there. (crowd laughter) But more importantly, I hope what you’ll do, is you’ll take the very best. You’ll begin to solve problems, you’ll innovate, you’ll create value for yourselves and for your fellow man. Go out there and crush it! Thank you. (crowd applause)

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