Requiem for an Entrepreneur
by
Doug French
by Doug French
The
public’s image of entrepreneurs and businessmen as mean, conniving,
miserly, greedy crooks has been shaped from the time of Charles
Dickens’s Ebenezer Scrooge to the modern day Michael Douglas character,
Gordon Gekko, in the movie Wall
Street.
This
image essentially puts a face to the Marxist class struggle theory.
According to the theory, "the primary form of exploitation
is economic," explains professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe in Requiem
for Marx, "The ruling class expropriates part of the
productive output of the exploited or, as Marxists say, ‘it appropriates
a social surplus product’ and uses it for its own consumptive purposes."
Of
course, the negative stereotype of businessmen is as false as Marxist
theory itself. While millions have, and continue to, suffer under
Marxist or socialist economic regimes, entrepreneurs at work in
the capitalist world invest capital, organize resources, develop
new products, create jobs and make the world a better place for
the millions that are affected by their energy and vision.
"The
vehicle of economic progress," wrote Ludwig von Mises in Human
Action, "is the accumulation of additional capital
goods by means of saving and improvement in technological methods
of production the execution of which is almost always conditioned
by the availability of new capital. The agents of progress are the
promoting entrepreneurs intent upon profiting by means of adjusting
the conduct of affairs to the best possible satisfaction of the
consumers. In the performance of their projects for the realization
of progress they are bound to share the benefits derived from progress
with the workers and also with a part of the capitalists and landowners
and to increase the portion allotted to these people step by step
until their own share melts away entirely."
Ronald
Yanke, an entrepreneur who touched the lives of thousands, died
February 3rd in Boise, Idaho at the age of 68. Yanke
grew up working in his father’s machine shop and took over the family
business in 1973 upon his father’s passing. Yanke Machine Shop is
now in its 62nd year in business, serving contractors,
mining companies and the forestry industry. Speaking at Yanke’s
funeral service, Tom Nicholson, Yanke’s friend of 55 years, mentioned
a number of machine shop employees who had worked for the business
for over 50 years. Nicholson told the hundreds in attendance that
Yanke would "do anything for any employee," and that in
turn, "the employees would walk through fire for him."
The
machine shop business was just the beginning for Yanke. He owned
two sawmills in Montana, a charter air service company, and a company
that manufacturers firefighting equipment. He was also a rancher
and owned vast amounts of timberland in the western United States
as well as owning and developing a number of other real estate projects.
Yanke also held significant ownership interests in a mechanical
contracting firm, a manufactured housing firm and two banks.
But,
Yanke is best known for being one of the three original investors
in Micron Technology, the second-largest memory chip manufacturer
in the world and the largest private-sector employer in Idaho. Yanke,
along with Nicholson and another friend Allen Noble funded brothers
Ward and Joe Parkinson who started Micron in 1978 in the basement
of a dentist’s office. As Ward Parkinson told Idaho Statesman
reporter Julie Howard, "There wouldn’t be a Micron if it wasn’t
for Ron."
From
those humble beginnings, Micron stock is now traded on the New York
Stock Exchange and the company has $7.5 billion in assets, $5.4
billion in shareholder equity and 17,000 employees worldwide.
Ronald
Yanke was a big man, with a larger than life personality. It’s been
said that he never had a bad day, and you should believe it. The
only other person this writer has been around who was as constantly
cheerful as Yanke was Murray Rothbard.
Reverend
James Wilson told those at the Yanke funeral that there was "not
a mean bone in Ron Yanke’s body," and described him as a "gentleman"
in the true sense of the word "a gentle man." Friend Jim
Nelson told those assembled that Yanke was the "hardest worker
anyone had ever seen," and "the hardest player anyone
had ever seen."
Nickolson amplified that point, telling the crowd that Yanke had
one speed for both work and play peddle to the metal.
Despite
being a man with considerable wealth, Yanke’s tastes were not expensive.
A story Jim Nelson told the Idaho Statesman illustrates
the point. "We flew to Australia with our wives in 1985, and
I said it’s a 12-hour flight, we could upgrade to business class
for $1,200 and be a lot more comfortable. Ron said if we flew coach,
we could make $100 an hour. So we flew coach and he sang ‘We’re
making $100 an hour.’ He wasn’t stingy, but he was certainly cognizant
about money."
Yanke
was a big supporter of the Boise State University football program,
and would allow the coaches to use his airplane for recruiting trips.
However, to attend bank board meetings once a month in Las Vegas,
Yanke, Son-in-law Bryan Norby and Tom Nicholson would fly Southwest
Airlines, with lunch after board meetings being at the soup-and-salad
bar in a small local casino.
The
Boise media has not mentioned Ron Yanke’s investment in a community
bank located in southern Nevada. In relation to Micron and some
of his other businesses, the bank is probably too small to merit
mention. But, just as in the case of Micron, there wouldn’t be a
Silver State Bank if it wasn’t for Ron. Yanke and Nicholson invested
$5 million to start the bank eight years ago. Today the bank has
$520 million in assets and employs over 120 people.
As
one of those employees, I thank my lucky stars for Ron Yanke and
his friend Tom Nicholson for the opportunities they have created
for me. If it were not for people like Ron Yanke, the world would
not only be a poorer place but an emptier place. There will never
be another Ron Yanke and very few like him. As Jim Nelson said at
Ron’s funeral, "God doesn’t make too many like Ron Yanke. They
are too complicated."
The
words of Jimmy Buffett and Mac McAnally from "Oysters And Pearls"
say it best:
How
does it happen,
How
do we know,
Who
sits and watches
Who
does the show?
Some
people love to lead
And
some refuse to dance.
Some
play it safely
Others take a chance.
Still
it’s all a mystery
This
place we call the world
Where
most live as oysters
While
some become pearls.
Ronald
Yanke was the most precious of pearls.
February
16, 2004
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and a policy fellow
of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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