A lot of the problems in the country are just lack of access to infrastructure. If you look at Eyl for example, when Netfish, a new company came and built a cold storage facility to buy and store the fish that would otherwise just go to waste, the fishermen starting making more money. One of them says he can even make up to $150-200 a day. Imagine, this is a small-time fisherman making more in a day than a doctor in Ethiopia makes in a month.It also makes sense how local fishermen can earn $1,500–$3,000 a month. Their catch moves through a value chain: first sold to local processors, then to manufacturers/packagers, then to distributors, then to retailers, and finally to consumers. The same thing happens with banana farmers, who can earn around $18,000 a year (as that study showed). The key is that the longer and stronger the value chain, the bigger the income opportunities it creates. And since much of that chain is controlled by Somali businesses, the profits largely stay within Somali hands and cycle back into the economy.

Fishermen in Puntland get back to the ocean as new company in Eyl brings work
(ERGO) - Ali Ahmed Muse has been able to send four of his children back to school after two years
