> Can the spirit of enterprise be taught?<p>That's the wrong question to ask.<p>The correct question to ask would be: "Does the government of that country let entrepreneurs breathe?"<p>Having witnessed first-hand how taxation systems work in real-life in the U.S. and in a few poor countries, I can say this: when the IRS has suspicions about your accounting treatments, they begin sending you letters politely asking for photocopies of individual legal documents. There are a few rounds of this back-and-forth, after which the IRS figures out whether you committed fiscal fraud or not. This is pretty much a hands-off approach.<p>In poor countries, where governments are usually corrupt, things happen differently. Tax inspectors show up (unexpectedly and carrying guns) at the door of your small business. They are incentivized by the policies of the fiscal enforcement agency not to leave until they found even the tiniest mistake in your accounting treatments. And then they slap a hefty fine on you - legislations in poor countries do not provide for any sort of sense of proportion. Also, legislations are contradictory and skewed such that you can't really be an honest entrepreneur, even if you try really hard. There is always more than one accounting treatment for anything more complex than revenue=5, expenses=4 => profit=1. And the tax inspectors slap you with fines for not going with <i>the other</i> accounting treatment.<p>All of this has a chilling effect on entrepreneurship, unfortunately.