
As the G7 Summit convenes in Kananaskis, Canada, from June 15 to 17, 2025, the United States, under President Donald Trump, faces a silent affliction threatening its economic might: Anti-Job Creation Syndrome, driven by the job-seeker mindset. Job seekers, career-driven individuals who prioritize stability and support enterprises with their labor, contrast with job creators, entrepreneurial risk-takers who conceive and build enterprises.
Not just enterprises create jobs because enterprises are needed. Because enterprises are not hatched like in some chicken farms. Entrepreneurs and only entrepreneurs create and grow enterprises. Some remain small, and some transform into Godzilla-sized global giants, and this is how jobs are created. There is no other way. The job-seeker mindset, which craves stability over risk, has stifled the entrepreneurial spirit, collapsing free economies into cycles of dependency and decline.
Entrepreneurial Mysticism is a unique force that aims to create grassroots prosperity as an intuitive power. Both science and academia have failed to find a substitute for it. This concept reflects humanity’s journey from the moment square contraptions were forcibly replaced by the wheel, allowing humankind to move out of caves.
Thomas Edison, despite failing 10,000 times, ultimately brought humanity out of the darkness with his invention of the light bulb. Similarly, Steve Jobs ushered humanity into the digital age, creating a global shift in economic and behavioral patterns. Trump’s America must harness this mysticism to counter the Anti-Job Creation Syndrome, revitalizing its entrepreneurial legacy.
Fact: Economic development without entrepreneurialism is economic stagnation. Fact: Globally, since the last millennium, trade and commerce have revealed two mindsets: job seekers and job creators. Definitions: Job-seeker mindsets are career-driven individuals who seek stability and support enterprises. Job-creator mindsets are entrepreneurial risk-takers who conceive original ideas and build these enterprises, in the first place.
Anti-Job Creation Syndrome thrives when job seekers dominate 99% of economic teams across over 100 free economies, lacking the spark to grow small and medium-sized enterprises or birth new enterprises, driving their economic collapse. In the United States, job-seeker education systems produce resume builders, not enterprise founders, hence stifling small businesses that are critical to 50% of the GDP.
READ: Awakened Canada: A New Global Force (April 29, 2025)
Fact: There are two types of economies: abstract economies driven by value manipulation and real economies grounded in value creation. The new age: Reflect on the industrial age, built on grueling labor; now observe how innovative minds propel the digital age worldwide.
Free economies urgently need to grasp the difference between the physicality of work and the mentality of performance to boost productivity in the digital era. Anti-Job Creation Syndrome festers in abstract economies, where financial games—stock manipulations, debt bubbles—replace enterprises. Trump’s tariffs, while bold, risk entrenching abstract economies unless paired with job-creator policies to rebuild real enterprises.
Why is Expothon Worldwide gaining global attention? An international platform for entrepreneurial innovation and authority on National Mobilization of SME protocols, now so focused on 100 countries. Why is it challenging to use immediately deployable methodologies for all massive SME sectors within the GCC, OIC, European Union, African Union, Commonwealth, BRICS, and ASEAN for national mobilization of entrepreneurialism as pragmatic solutions? Over the last decade, these insights have been shared weekly and reached approximately 2000 selected VIP recipients at the National Cabinet-Level senior government officials across 100 free economies. This track record of expertise and trust forms the foundation of its proposed strategies.
Study the USA’s Gilded Age, when entrepreneurs like Rockefeller and Carnegie built empires of steel and oil, creating millions of jobs. Contrast this with the post-1970s free economies, where job-seeker mindsets infiltrated policy, favoring corporate monopolies and financialization over entrepreneurial risk.
China’s rise, post-1980s, mirrors the USA’s earlier path: a government that empowered job-creators, building infrastructure and enterprises at breakneck speed. Yet free economies, gripped by Anti-Job Creation Syndrome, cling to outdated models, their economic decline stark. Trump’s G7 presence must revive this Gilded Age spirit, not just through trade wars but by fostering job creators.
Read more columns by Naseem Javed
The absence of bold economic strategies or robust debates to address the decline in productivity, performance, and profitability demands a summit to forge ideas, strengthen plans, and advance as a final recourse. Economic theories and academic posturing have eroded free economies’ influence. The biggest challenge is to fix the current lingering the anti-job creation syndromes visible on LinkedIn, when 99% of economic teams across over 100 free economies comprise job-seeker mindsets lacking aptitude for job creation or small and medium-sized enterprise growth, it signals profound damage.
How long will this decline persist, and how much hardship will it inflict? Trump can lead the United States at the G7 to convene a global summit, uniting nations to share strategies for real economies based on value creation, ensuring job creators triumph over job seekers to forge America’s prosperity. Canada’s economic revival: A manifesto for entrepreneurial mysticism.
The rest is easy!


