Please allow me to add that in hindsight there is a glaring difference between the examples of Germany and Japan to the Dominican Republic in terms of development, industrial or otherwise. Both (West) Germany and Japan were governed by outsiders after WWII and all decisions were approved by outsiders. These outsiders also rebuilt the manufacturing sector in these countries based on mid 20th century models (vs. the aged, turn of the century practices continued in the US and GB). The thought at home was "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" while abroad US widget gurus were unleashed upon Germany and Japan to put their process improvement theories into practice. Their success resulted in early repayment of war debt and regaining functional control of their governments and economies (albeit, under the watchful eyes of the "outsiders"). This would later be followed by a similar, yet less intrusive such effort in Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
The rest is history. Upon steady practice of process improvement theory these countries went on to compete and eventually attain manufacturing sector supremacy. Consumer electronics, automobiles, heavy construction equipment, photography equipment, steel, cargo ships and dry dock companies and on and on closed in the West as the East dominated the respective markets with their "wierd" ideas about improvement being a "bottom up" effort to work successfully.
That makes "Germany and Japan" a terrible comparison to the current atmosphere for economic development in the DR. It would make more sense to look toward the next point of technological innovation. Just as the US economy was in the death throes of losing its manufacturing edge, the government made available RF and IT infrastructure and bandwidth formerly reserved for official and military use as technological improvements reduced the need for this massive infrastructure (funded during the industrial years) and they made it available to public corporations (for a small fee) and up popped ISP's and search engines, etc. and the Age of Information Technology arrived, creating new American millionaires and billionaires on a regular basis and rewarding entrepreneurialism and innovation with unimaginable wealth.
In short, the nation used the old paradigm to fund a new one and the chemical factories and manufacturing processes and all the other dirty businesses which were being regulated out of profitability here anyway were outsourced and being replaced with less labor intensive, pollutant and reserve capital dependent Information Age businesses. This trend is continuing today as RF transmission bands have been digitized and deviation requirements shrunk as the result the "700 MHz Band" has been created for use by official communications and auctioned for use by "Mobile Video" providers who will produce the next wave of innovation.
The best model for success is already the best friend the DR has and opening themselves up to US technology businesses is the best hope for shoring up their service sector economy with a high tech component. I don't want to buy a car or washing machine manufactured in the DR but I would like to see a Dominican company capable of manufacturing satellite or Space Station components. You can only squeeze so much money out of "Fruit of the Looms".
Where is the individual human factor in all of this?
Great post btw