Once again, California's Silicon Valley is confirming its status as a mecca of high-tech entrepreneurship and wealth creation. But it is not a model for job creation and inclusive growth that policymakers and entrepreneurs elsewhere can emulate - at least not without making some fundamental adjustments. The University of Virginia's Miller Centre recently created a commission to identify strategies to support the creation of middle-class jobs through entrepreneurship. The ideas proposed in the commission's report include providing training and mentors for prospective entrepreneurs a...