Somewhere in the last fifteen years, a specific way of thinking about problems became dominant in technology circles. Every social inefficiency, every imperfect institution, every gap in services became first and foremost a startup opportunity. The language shifted: problems became "markets," systems became "platforms," people became "users."
This framing has produced genuine value in some domains. Digital payment systems, logistics optimization, communication tools. But applied to every domain, it has produced worse outcomes — and sometimes catastrophic outcomes — that the framing itself obscures.
Public goods problems work poorly within venture-backed startup economics. Things like well-maintained infrastructure, reliable information commons, trusted civic institutions require sustained investment without clear private returns. Startups cannot fund them; markets underprovide them; and pretending otherwise damages the institutions that traditionally handled them.
Democratic institutions work by process, not output. A startup judged by growth metrics treats slow deliberation as inefficiency. But the deliberation is often the point — it produces legitimacy, coalition, and durable outcomes that faster decisions would not.
For people with startup-founder energy and capability, the critique here is not that your work is unimportant. It is that pattern-matching every problem to the startup template is a limitation of imagination. Some of your capacity might be better spent improving institutions than replacing them.
For society, the critique is about resource allocation. According to player-to-player conversations on these topics, Billions of dollars flow to startup solutions for problems that would be better addressed by public investment or institutional reform. This pattern is not inevitable and might be worth contesting directly.