i pay my taxes. so there, my share of work for the poor has been done.
thanks god you are not the average on that.
otherwise this poor planet would be much down on it's knees.
Mike
i pay my taxes. so there, my share of work for the poor has been done.
Each trade would be taxed at 0.1 to 0.25 percent of volume (about 10 to 25 cents per hundred dollars)
This would discourage short-term currency trades,about 90 percent speculative, but leave long-term productive investments intact
Don't forget that its quite common for the best employees to receive much investment from their company in the hopes of improving their productivity, only for the company to see such employee apply for a visa to X, Y or Z country and then leave with the company not seeing a return on its investment.
....... And the better educated a Dominican is, the more appealing he/she becomes and the greater the probability they will get a visa to a foreign country.
That is definitely a trend that can be turned around.
Here's the thing. When old man Ford died he willed that all his employees receive a 100% pay raise. Not only did the company not go broke. They had the most highly motivated production force in the World and went on to share in global superiority in auto manufacturing, spinning off other companies and diversifying into other economic sectors. It took the company a generation to turn this good fortune into a management vs. employee war and that resulted in management ignoring the "bottom up" principle of innovation and process management. They thought that they were "too big to fail". The current generation has revived Ford by going back to the principles which Henry Ford I used to build the company and made stakeholders out of their (remaining) employees, including them in the development of process controls.
Think about it. 105 years ago (when HF started the company) few homes had indoor toilets or baths, the streets were lit by gas lamps, if at all, there was no refrigeration, diseases like typhoid and diptheria wiped out tens of thousands, in short it was a much different looking country. The kind of country we would refer to as "3rd World" today. It was innovators in the manufacturing and finance sectors who took the US from an agricultural economy to the industrial age which saw the nation rise to superpower status.
These are the types of individuals needed in the Dominican Republic today (not that the DR will ever be a "superpower" by a long shot) to bring the country out of it's 3rd World cycle. Innovation and self reliance will turn the country from an agro/ tourism economy to add manufacturing, finance, information technology, science and technology research, etc to balance the GDP pie chart and hedge against losses in their existing primary sectors. This will not get done with aid or loans. It will get done by cooperation between government and industry to forge the will to develop national self reliance.
I can't believe that one of those big tobacco (family owned) companies doesn't also build motoconchos...or cargo ships.
Given the fact that less is required to live well in the DR than in most of the industrialized nations they have a natural advantage in global business competition and it wouldn't take much to keep their employees happy at home I mean why would anyone want to leave a nice home in the land of their birth with family and friends all around them to go and live hand to mouth, alone in the cold in Nueva Yol? As Dominicans reinvest in the Dominican Republic, Dominicans will prosper at home. The place is beautiful. Tourism will always be there.
Worked for Japan and SOuth Korea
That is definitely a trend that can be turned around.
Here's the thing. When old man Ford died he willed that all his employees receive a 100% pay raise. Not only did the company not go broke. They had the most highly motivated production force in the World and went on to share in global superiority in auto manufacturing, spinning off other companies and diversifying into other economic sectors. It took the company a generation to turn this good fortune into a management vs. employee war and that resulted in management ignoring the "bottom up" principle of innovation and process management. They thought that they were "too big to fail". The current generation has revived Ford by going back to the principles which Henry Ford I used to build the company and made stakeholders out of their (remaining) employees, including them in the development of process controls.
Think about it. 105 years ago (when HF started the company) few homes had indoor toilets or baths, the streets were lit by gas lamps, if at all, there was no refrigeration, diseases like typhoid and diptheria wiped out tens of thousands, in short it was a much different looking country. The kind of country we would refer to as "3rd World" today. It was innovators in the manufacturing and finance sectors who took the US from an agricultural economy to the industrial age which saw the nation rise to superpower status.
These are the types of individuals needed in the Dominican Republic today (not that the DR will ever be a "superpower" by a long shot) to bring the country out of it's 3rd World cycle. Innovation and self reliance will turn the country from an agro/ tourism economy to add manufacturing, finance, information technology, science and technology research, etc to balance the GDP pie chart and hedge against losses in their existing primary sectors. This will not get done with aid or loans. It will get done by cooperation between government and industry to forge the will to develop national self reliance.
I can't believe that one of those big tobacco (family owned) companies doesn't also build motoconchos...or cargo ships.
Given the fact that less is required to live well in the DR than in most of the industrialized nations they have a natural advantage in global business competition and it wouldn't take much to keep their employees happy at home I mean why would anyone want to leave a nice home in the land of their birth with family and friends all around them to go and live hand to mouth, alone in the cold in Nueva Yol? As Dominicans reinvest in the Dominican Republic, Dominicans will prosper at home. The place is beautiful. Tourism will always be there.
It took patriotisme, a lot of military force and a stuborn will to just take what they want to get the US where they are today and a lot of inhabitants of this world including Americans do not like that attitude at all but thats common knowledge.
The DR will get its place in global business competition for sure, they are still growing and learning and sure, why shouldn't there be tourisme on this island, its a beautiful island with sunny beaches.
India is still a good example of how this nation grew from a country with cheap labour and as a cheap labour place where all companies were fighting to have a place in order to use that cheap labour for their own benefit with practical no return to India itself. In one way or another India has managed to turn that system in their own advantages and is now a pretty wel self managed country who delivers state of the art bussiness such as IT services to other countries. Not sure how the return is towards the country itself nowaday's but hence the quiteness in the area, must be pretty good.
Government does that by taxation, so it - of course - involves people.
One of the reasons expats and locals have a "cultural divide" is because some (not all) expats can be just so dang selfish, only concerned about what's six inches in front of their nose, without a care for a social legacy.
It's like retirees who denounce property taxes to pay for schools because they no longer have kids in public school. Even if you have to squint, it's often worthwhile to take the long view on such things.
Geez.
i pay my taxes. so there, my share of work for the poor has been done.
And those who constantly berate this country and complain need to go back to where they came from regardless of who they married or how special they think they are!
i am not an old retired bat
sadly no one asks me for effort, it is always "dame dinero"
i do not really befriend poor folks as they usually lack education, knowledge and even basic curiosity to ask abstract questions. nonetheless i treat them with respect they deserve (or with disrespect, if they are particularily viscious, poor or rich) and i am willing to give a hand when i can: soon i will be helping all day at a medical charity event. i will post some details later on.
methinks maybe i soften up towards the underpriviledged once i reach lambada's age and wallet![]()
sadly no one asks me for effort, it is always "dame dinero"![]()
methinks maybe i soften up towards the underpriviledged once i reach lambada's age and wallet![]()
Doesn't fit the UN template.If the UN wants to really help the DR poverty situation in any way they can, they should start by aiding those undocumented Haitians return home to Haiti, by providing them with housing and work in their own soil. God knows we can only handle so many of them!