Posted on 01/13/2009 3:39:58 PM PST by SandRat
| CAMP VICTORY, Iraq, Jan. 13, 2009 Improved security has enabled an economics team to step up its efforts to help Iraq move forward.
Ross explained that economics and governance go hand in hand. If government officials are qualified and competent, he said, they can stimulate economic growth. With a stable government, investors will trust that their money will grow and wont get lost in a broken system. We are doing two things with economics in Multinational Division Center, Ross said. We are working with the provincial governments to try to get them some training to help them build their capacity and skills to attract business and grow the economy, and we are working directly with provincial reconstruction teams and brigade combat teams to try to get business into the economy. Several programs in the divisions area of operations help to develop and sustain economic progress. A team of experts in entrepreneurship recently completed an initial tour in Najaf to gain understanding of the dynamics of small businesses and entrepreneurship in southern Iraq, with the goal of increasing employment and growing the job market. In another initiative, an advisor for the Najaf Provincial Investment Committee will work through the Najaf PRT to provide expertise for both short- and long-term dollar investments. There are a couple of other initiatives, with some being from the government perspective and others also trying to cover the private end as well, Ross said. We work with the government a good bit, but we also need to realize we need to get the private industry going. Ultimately, the more private industry we get here, the better it will be. One successful example is a new dairy factory that recently received a $500,000 private loan from the Bank of Baghdad for an expansion project. This project alone will produce 200 to 300 new jobs. This project reaches about 4,000 Iraqis, Ross noted, a number that includes family members supported by these jobs. This is why I say private investment is so key, he said. Small businesses in the area can consist of just about anything, as long as entrepreneurs and capital are available. State-owned industries, such as an automotive factory, textile industries and a transportation business, also operate in the area. Its not just the number of people actually employed, Ross said. It is the number of Iraqis that are now feeling satisfied and have money coming into the house and dont have to turn to other means, such as terrorism, to get money to support their family. That is why economics is so important here. (Army Staff Sgt. Amber Emery serves in the Multinational Division Center public affairs office.) |
| Related Sites: Multinational Corps Iraq |
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As much as our soldiers are working hard in improving life at the grassroots level, what America isn’t seeing at all is the state of the Iraqi economy as a whole.
The big picture is that J. Paul Bremer, from the very beginning, set up Iraq’s high level economic structure to become an economic powerhouse. He took the best, proven elements of a dozen other economic systems, in their ideal form, without all the baggage they accrued in their home nations.
Much like postwar Japan’s MacArthur constitution, which caused explosive development in Japan for decades, the Bremer organization will in our lifetimes give Iraq the economic power of Switzerland.
Their stock and bond markets, insurance, currency, banking, etc., are textbook ideals that no other single country shares. When they take off, Iraq is going to be something else.
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