Economic outcomes are shaped by incentives, not intentions. Public policy establishes the rules that govern economic activity, and those rules define how capital is allocated, how businesses operate, and how work is organized. Over time, these structures determine not only what is produced, but who benefits, how stable employment is, and how opportunity is distributed across society.
In Our Next 250 Years: Incentives and Jobs, Charles Patton examines the full chain from policy to outcomes. Taxes, regulation, education, trade, and technological change all create the incentives that guide economic decisions. Those incentives influence where capital flows, what businesses prioritize, and how jobs are created, structured, and sustained. Employment is not an isolated result. It is the product of a system shaped by deliberate choices.
When incentives are aligned with long-term growth, investment supports innovation, productivity, and expanding opportunity. Businesses compete, workers gain access to more stable and rewarding employment, and the system adapts to changing conditions. When incentives are misaligned, capital shifts toward less productive uses, short-term outcomes are prioritized over long-term stability, and employment becomes more uncertain. These outcomes are not accidental. They follow directly from the structure of the system.
This book explores how incentive design affects not only economic performance, but also resilience, adaptability, and the distribution of risk and reward. It examines how policies can unintentionally weaken the very outcomes they aim to improve, and how different approaches to regulation, taxation, and investment shape the long-term trajectory of an economy. By tracing these relationships, the book provides a framework for understanding why some systems sustain growth and opportunity while others struggle to do so.
Drawing on economic history, institutional analysis, and practical examples, Incentives and Jobs explains how incentives operate across sectors and over time. It emphasizes the importance of clarity in policy design, the role of tradeoffs, and the need to evaluate outcomes based on how systems function in practice rather than how they are intended to work.
Incentives and Jobs is the third volume in the Our Next 250 Years series, which examines how policy, power, and incentives interact to shape economic outcomes and define the long-term direction of a nation.