In 2010 Dan Carr, President of The Collaborative,
is reprising his CEO of the State interviews with Governor Tim Pawlenty,
exploring the role of a governor from the standpoint of the CEO of
the largest employer in Minnesota with five million of us as customers.
An abbreviated version of this dialogue was scheduled to be published in the March 21, 2010 Pioneer Press.
CARR: We first did this interview in 2003 shortly
after you took over as CEO of Minnesota. You’d gotten off
to a strong start, resolving the budget crisis without increasing
taxes, despite a deficit of $4.5 billion. It’s been seven
years, and you’ve announced your 'retirement' from the CEO
role.
Issues and Innovation.
In the past we’ve discussed: Clusters, Thomas Friedman, Richard
Florida, Michael Porter’s work, and you’ve also cited Wayne
Gretzky and Peter Drucker.
Many suggest fueling the innovation economy at the regional level
is a product of the broader ‘quality of life’ —
amenities, education systems, transportation infrastructure and
the like (i.e., the Minnesota quality of life, above average, higher tax,
higher quality, etc.)
Where do you stand on that as CEO?
Video excerpt on "Innovation" (Running time 5:42)
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: Well Dan, as with everything
else it is a matter of balance, not just a quality of life, but an
innovative economy and entrepreneurial economy. Minnesota is not lagging
behind in most outcome measures — things like education, culture,
arts, amenities, outdoors or the like. Where we are lagging behind
is in terms of having a business climate and a job climate here
that says to entrepreneurs and established business leaders:
this is a place you want to grow. And on the “competitiveness
dashboard,” the yellow light that’s flashing is Minnesota’s
taxes are too high and its business and job climate is anticompetitive.
Again, there is more to it holistically, but that is one of the categories
that stands out where more improvements need to be made. The others
we do very well in compared on average to the rest of the nation.
CARR: Many of the Minnesota venture backed and entrepreneurial
companies The Collaborative serves aren’t necessarily as focused
on the marginal tax rate as they are on whether they can be successful
with their business model (i.e., attract the talent they need to
succeed). How do we balance that?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: Really important question.
I do think you have to follow the data. Capital and all sorts
of activity have been migrating to lower cost places. During 2007
and 2008, over half of all the jobs in the entire country were added
in Texas. One state. So, as you look at that data, Richard Florida
can talk all he wants about having nice museums and sports stadiums
– those are important add-ons – but if you don’t
have the kind of economy where private sector businesses want to
start, stay and grow, you won’t be buying too many tickets
to the museum or the Vikings game.
CARR: I think we have had a good balance of
both.
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: We need to focus
on the reality that 95% of us work for 5% of people who are
entrepreneurs or have companies. So there is a group —
call it the creative class, call it the entrepreneur class,
call it the great innovators of America, call it the entrepreneurial
spirit, call it whatever you want — but there is a cluster
of people in Minnesota and around the country and the world who are
the inventors, the innovators, the dreamers, the designers,
the risk takers that will provide the bulk of the economic
growth in the future because we know that’s where it
starts. So, it is a legitimate question. What things from
a tax policy standpoint, and otherwise, say to individuals that
Minnesota is a good place for you to be?
CARR: There are many states and regions
with efforts that focus on specific industries. Should we
be helping specific industries through tax policy or other
incentives?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: It is better to just
make the whole state [more] competitive, but if we can’t
do that, or can’t do that fast enough as a matter of
triage or strategic importance, I think it is okay to put
down some interim markers on areas that we know are strengths
in Minnesota in order to exploit, leverage and advance.
CARR: Can business be doing more in your
view? The head of the National Venture Capital Association
has told me more than once that you had a better grasp of
innovation and the venture creation side of the economy than
most anyone he has seen in public office. You also have had
a lot of experience with The Collaborative over the last seven years. Should
we be more active? Are we are doing are part?
Read the full article from the Governors first year
as CEO of the State here.
CEO
of the State:
An Interview with a Young Leader Off to a Strong Start
He's only 42, this CEO, and he's taken the reins of
the largest employer in Minnesota with gusto. He took
over in January with red ink miring the enterprise.
Here's a sampling of what Tim Pawlenty has accomplished
thus far as Governor of Minnesota:
• Resolved the budget crisis without increasing
taxes. The deficit ballooned from $1.9 billion when
he campaigned to $4.2 billion and he still managed to
solve the budget crisis without raising taxes (admittedly
with strong tailwind from the last election and a Republican
majority now in the house).
• Launched a biosciences initiative and regional tax
free zones to spur economic development and innovation.
Perhaps most notably, the Governor was the driving force
behind a new joint research effort by the University
of Minnesota and the Mayo Clinic - two of our states
shining assets.
• Saved Paul Bunyan and signed legislation allowing
us all to 'Pack Heat.'
Read the full article from the Governors first year as CEO of the State here.
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: Well I went to a group yesterday,
I won’t name which one, and it was purportedly about how to
help the State reposition its competitiveness. I said, "How many
of you in the room are not in government, regulated by the government,
funded by government or in the nonprofit sector?" And three hands
went up. We have a need for business people who actually do what
you and I are talking about to step forward. It’s hard because
they are busy and their time is very valuable. People who are trying
to start and run early stage companies don’t like to sit around
long meetings and listen to politicians flap their jaw. And we so
desperately need that business involvement and leadership.
CARR: One of the things The Collaborative tries
to do is to shine a light on the economic strengths or clusters
we have in this State, such as medical technology or clean technology.
I am going to jump to the job as CEO of the State. Management is
a real success factor in growth companies. There is a lot of focus
on the management team in measuring eventual business success. What
do you do in managing your ‘team’ if you will allow
this loose metaphor, given your team is partially elected through
the legislature?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: If you take the general
fund plus all the special funds of the State, it is about a $50 billion
operation with 50,000 employees. I have [only] about 28 or so direct
reports. So it is not a vertically integrated enterprise. We treat
our commissioners, for the most part, as CEOs in their own right.
For example, I don’t view them as the as VP for Agriculture
or the VP for the Department of Administration. This operation is
so large that each of these individuals has to operate basically
as a wholly owned subsidiary. So you pick good people, give them
some good guidance in terms of philosophical direction, and let
them do their thing. In the analogy with the private sector, I function
really more [like] the Chair of the Board than the CEO in all of
this, because it’s just so big.
CARR: Still on management, what have you learned
in seven years as the CEO of the State in running this huge enterprise?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: I think it is important
to have clear principles, clear values, clear philosophy and a clear
direction. Again because the enterprise is so large, if you don’t
set those down in strong and clear terms you can have mission creep
or confusion. I don’t think we have any mission creep or confusion
in our agencies about the direction or philosophy we have. I think
that has been a helpful thing. If you are in a private sector model,
the CEO and the board say we are going to do X, usually X gets done.
Here, if the executive branch says we are going to do X, the legislature
says maybe we will, maybe we won’t, maybe we’ll do Y
or maybe we will do Z. And so it is a much more, no pun intended
with your organization, collaborative exercise.
Video excerpt on "Financing and Technology" (Running time 4:31)
CARR: Financing. In business it's equity, debt
and cash flow. In your 'business', it’s the Budget; the mechanisms,
the revenues, expenses and capital plan (bonding). Cash flow. Deficits.
Clearly this is a political football issue given our timing, but
from a CEO and business perspective, what would you like to say
about the state of our finances as a State and how are we set for
the future?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: All levels of government
– federal, state and local – are locked into a General
Motors [type of] problem. Over the decades the costs, promises and
commitments have run up so high it just doesn’t work. You
have Federal Government, for example, that takes in $2.2 trillion
in revenues from all sources for all purposes and they have $65
trillion in unfunded liabilities. It doesn’t matter if you
are Republican, Democrat, Independent, Green or something else.
That math just doesn’t work. They are going to have the reality
come home sooner rather than later. You see that in California right
now and to varying degrees in every state in the country. In Minnesota’s
case, the last budget cycle we took in about $34 billion in revenues.
We have just experienced the worst economic collapse since WWII
and we now have $29 billion in revenues. So we have 2011 expectations
for spending on 2005-2006 levels of revenue. That’s why we
have a budget deficit and those two things have to be reconciled
CARR: In the Meet the Press interview you did
in February, you talked about how “fiscal prudence”
has been lacking for years within the Federal Government. This is
something business people have to deal with and is some of what
you were alluding to — if you have lower revenues you have
to do something with expenses or you have to bring in more capital.
This is an especially difficult capital-raising environment so many
businesses are forced to do more with less. Do you want to make
any comment on that?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: Well, if you look at the
nation's finances as far as the government it is pretty clear that
Presidents from both parties and Congresses of both parties have
contributed to the problem of the current deficit and debt. The
day is coming quite soon, Dan, where it is no longer going to be
an option. It is going to be a matter of math; you see this unfolding
in real time in California. We talk about the innovation economy
and what that means. California of course has been a leading innovative
state, but now you have people leaving the state and businesses leaving
the state in measurable and significant ways because of the challenges
that state faces, in part because of its finances and the extraordinary
burdens that they placed on their businesses.
CARR: What is your greatest strength as CEO
of the State?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: I have a pretty clear understanding
of what I believe in and why I believe it, and I have tried to make
sure to be consistent and clear in that direction and philosophy. I think that has been helpful and I am proud of that.
CARR: In your seven years at the helm as CEO,
of what accomplishments are you most proud?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: As far as a manifest in
terms of specific policies, setting priorities and focusing on those
priorities matter. Being as faithful as I can to the men and women
who serve in our U.S. Military and supporting them in any way possible,
and getting a lot of legislation passed to back that up. I am very
proud of that. In the area of government reform I think we have
done a lot of remarkable things. A lot of it is unglamorous and
doesn’t get into the newspaper, but when you see the agencies
we have merged, the technology systems that we have merged, the
bringing things into the e-government that used to be “wait
in line to file a form” have been tremendous. We have significantly
advanced the ball in market based health care reforms and we have
significantly advanced the ball in education reform. The first ever
in the state, and the first in the nation, statewide performance
pay per teacher model. I am very proud of that.
CARR: I heard your comments on a February talk
you gave in North Carolina where you addressed the future and highlighted
Minnesota growth company, Capella Learning as an example. Care to
share on that?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: In a nutshell, the future
looks a lot like an iPad or an iPhone — individuals are in
charge, have robust choices, transparency around price, offerings
in a marketplace offered in way [that is] convenient and in real
time, less and less emphasis on physical location, bricks and mortar
or one size fits all applications. We have a government that is
kind of a 1940’s industrial model in a world that’s
becoming an iPad. Those two things are going to be reconciled and
the marketplace will decide this. The only question for Minnesota
is do you want to lead it or do you want to get dragged there.
CARR: What thoughts would you like to leave
us with as we end your year's as CEO on your legacy
and your future?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: Well just this: I am very
grateful to the people of Minnesota to have had the opportunity and the
privilege to have served this great State. It’s a state that
has been liberal in its politics but it is filled with really good
people and I love them even if they disagree with me. I do think
I represent a game changer as a conservative coming in and saying
‘I think we should put some limits on government, I think we
are going to slow down the government spending and try to emphasis
private sector solutions’ is pretty dramatic for Minnesota
but I think it was needed.
But really I leave with a sense of gratitude.
CARR: What about the future of the State you
are leaving. Do you have any concerns or thoughts you would like
to share other than the reckoning we are going to have? Any other
thoughts for the next person, your successor, whoever that might
be?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: I have a very strong view
of that. I think the State, on so many measures, does great. We
are not out of competition in education and we are not out of competition
in arts and culture. We are not out of competition in health care.
We are not competitive enough when it comes to business climate
and tax climate. In this changing world -- this hyper competitive
world -- we have to be more competitive.
CARR: Any comment on what the CEO of seven
years in this office has in mind as far as things of interest to
you or your future as the rising star and now veteran CEO?
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: I don’t know. I really
enjoy public service. I enjoy public life. I think people do well
in what they are passionate about and I want to do something that
is meaningful. If there is a door open for me to continue in public
service I may well do that. But I might equally end up in a non-profit
charitable or private sector. I just don’t know. We will see,
I’ll decide that early next year.
CARR: Great. I appreciate your time.
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY: You’re welcome.
An abbreviated version of this dialogue was scheduled to be published in the March 21, 2010 Pioneer Press.