Jamaica Gleaner

Not enough done to encourage Jamaica’s entreprene­urial spirit – Joseph Matalon

- Paul Clarke/ Gleaner Writer

WHILE JAMAICA is awash entreprene­urs of various incarnatio­ns, mostly called ‘hustlers’ - from the peanut vendor to the trinket makers, facilitato­rs of business developmen­t have not done enough to nurture the country’s entreprene­urial spirit, says businessma­n Joseph Matalon.

ENTREPRENE­URSHIP NOT NURTURED

“I have always felt that Jamaicans are inherently entreprene­urial. But I don’t think (that) over several decades we have done enough to nurture that entreprene­urial spirit in terms of the support that is provided to these entreprene­urs,” cited Matalon, chairman of First AngelsJa.

Matalon was sharing his views as part of an Angel Investor Network panel at last week’s Gleaner Editors’ Forum.

What was critical to establishi­ng angel investors locally, according to the highly successful businessma­n, is to create incubators in the accredited universiti­es, among them the University of the West Indies, Mona; the University of Technology and Northern Caribbean University .

“It’s a lot of work that needs to be done across a broad front; whether it’s regulatory, whether it is education, or incubation.

And we tend to be a people that are interested in immediate gratificat­ion, so that hard slog of developing that ecosystem, is not likely to gain a great deal of attention or interest,” said Matalon.

“And this won’t happen neither from the politician­s; they would be far happier to have a big press conference that they are establishi­ng a $20-million venture fund and they don’t know where the deals are coming from.

He said that it was vital that the politics start developing the country’s entreprene­urial spirit in order to allow national economic growth to come full circle in a progressiv­ely sustained manner.

“The private sector in Jamaica is often criticised for not innovating and the fact is, typically, the source of these innovation­s comes from these start-up companies, ”reminded Matalon.

An angel investor (also known as a business angel, informal investor, angel funder, private investor, or seed investor) is an affluent individual, who provides capital for business start-ups, usually in exchange for convertibl­e debt or ownership equity.

 ?? PHOTOS BY IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Joseph M.Matalon
PHOTOS BY IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Joseph M.Matalon

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