Glad to hear about your hands-on experience with the economy...

Ti Malice says...

Glad to hear about your hands-on experience with the economy.

We are not familar with any of the plans you have mentionned so far. We never heard of them! Can you share with us one of these plans you talked about in your last post?

Would you please elaborate on your concept of spending tax dollars by the government to boost the economy and come up with some practical example...

How this Keynesian principle of fiscal policy would work in a country like ours?

What the government, the private sector, and the people can do to make this theory bear lasting results?

I like the fact that you used Henry Christophe as an example of a leader who accomplished so much from scratch.

I do not have to tell you about the man's administration skills, but would you, please, come up with some strategies he used so our leaders and us can apply them to the present economic condition.

The topic is: HAITI'S ECONOMY/ HOW TO IMPROVE IT!
This is a reply to Msg 4380
Posted by Ti Malice on October 22 2007 at 2:39 AM

Messages in this topic

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Please elaborate Rubin what is GSPARE? > >
Flo, 20-Oct-07 5:04 am
The concept of an economic MODEL itself is problematic. Maybe a model is not what we should be looking for. These nations that have what we now call models did not have so called models when they started their economic rise. What are now called mode > >
Linda, 20-Oct-07 3:16 pm
Hi, Linda Some of your thoughts are highly theoretical and mostly conceptual. Since the inception of the UN many experts have published methods, models and plans to turn Haiti's economy around. But what the Haitians quickly realized is that UN & Int > >
Rubens Titus, 21-Oct-07 12:46 am
Rubens you said to me "Some of your thoughts are highly theoretical and mostly conceptual." I'm usually accused of the opposite, as I probably should have been in this case. I think that most people would argue that it is the idea of an "economic mo > >
Linda, 21-Oct-07 7:17 am
Linda perhaps Haiti needs to learn and copy some of those adaptable strategies and policies, and incorporate those social innovations as well, since Haiti have not been able to create anything so far on their own. My advice is this: Create a welfare > >
Xyz, 21-Oct-07 5:25 pm
Dear Preval: You alcoholic uncle tom, you need to stop selling the future of Haiti piece by piece to foreigners through your contracts. Did you have to have a contract with American airline to prevent Haitian citizens from setting up their own HaitiA > >
Xyz, 21-Oct-07 6:01 pm
Hi XYZ; I think most of us already know that this sight does not belong to the Haitian government. As I said in a much older post, we continue to blog on the issues as a form of intellectual masturbation because we can't do anything real. Flo and Ma > >
Linda, 21-Oct-07 7:54 pm
By the way XYZ, I did agree with your point that we could borrow and adapt to our system some of the strategies that work for other nations. I think the key to what you said is "adaptable." > >
Linda, 21-Oct-07 7:58 pm
Hi, Linda you seem to be a very passionate person about Haiti's plight and I love that much. 1. I am not an expert in Haitian culture and I am somewhat clueless on its would-be impact on an economic development model such as the one I put forward. > >
Rubens Titus, 22-Oct-07 12:22 am
Glad to hear about your hands-on experience with the economy. We are not familar with any of the plans you have mentionned so far. We never heard of them! Can you share with us one of these plans you talked about in your last post? Would you please e > >
Ti Malice, 22-Oct-07 2:39 am
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