Puntites we need to win economically. Our consumption economy is around 3 billion a year, our production however is half that. We consume more then we produce, when it should be the other way around, u produce and earn 'wealth' then consume. The only way out of this situation is thru wise economic policies.
1. We need to find out all the local consumption locally and regionally and devise a plan on how to produce that here in PL and export.
2. We need to go into african markets and assess their 'imports' and supply chains and see where PL can play a role and create jobs
3. We must look at the global economy and the sectors predicted with 'growth' and fill that supply point in PL by speaking to those countries.
4. Our education is fine from primary/secondary, but we must seek human capital investment in our higher learning so that it can respond to local/regional/global sectors growing.
The sectors we identify with growth and good 'final' product value and we work out how that product value will be shared across the value-pie and supply chains, we will be so rich and so quick in PL, we will focus our ppl time on industries that have a good final product price plus good prediction growth rate.
GDP is linked to final product value vs time/effort against each year. If we invest our ppl time into low earning industries, our GDP cannot grow, we must stay away from those industries even if they look good to you based on what Somali says about 'beero', do not listen to them, i've investigated the final product price of those agriculture, you can't build a nation on top of pennie worth bananas.
1. We need to find out all the local consumption locally and regionally and devise a plan on how to produce that here in PL and export.
2. We need to go into african markets and assess their 'imports' and supply chains and see where PL can play a role and create jobs
3. We must look at the global economy and the sectors predicted with 'growth' and fill that supply point in PL by speaking to those countries.
4. Our education is fine from primary/secondary, but we must seek human capital investment in our higher learning so that it can respond to local/regional/global sectors growing.
The sectors we identify with growth and good 'final' product value and we work out how that product value will be shared across the value-pie and supply chains, we will be so rich and so quick in PL, we will focus our ppl time on industries that have a good final product price plus good prediction growth rate.
GDP is linked to final product value vs time/effort against each year. If we invest our ppl time into low earning industries, our GDP cannot grow, we must stay away from those industries even if they look good to you based on what Somali says about 'beero', do not listen to them, i've investigated the final product price of those agriculture, you can't build a nation on top of pennie worth bananas.