Another blithering post that probably doesn't make any sense.
I have been thinking about this one and what makes a "country a country" topics for a while now.
Cauldron of Ghosts,
A Call to Duty and the reissue of the first two Empire of Man novels, bunch of other stuff factor in.
I think the first thing that has to happen before any of the below is a unifying set of ideals. The next thing is probably the removal of perceived corruption in the political process.
You have to set up conditions for any of your stuff to work. Which is nigh impossible in the real world. Why should I as a citizen/subject give up this item or that item for the greater good. Any country is a nebulous concept, feeding my family is reality. The belief that if I give up money/labor now for a better future for my kids is a
really hard sell. I think the real reason it worked for the US is we took the stuff we needed from the natives because of a more efficient society. Them robber barons may have gotten rich in the process but they made settlement of the American west a reality that the mountain man or rancher couldn't much better than wagon trains ever could. Needed to get those land rush folks involved. 160 acres of free land for the taking is a powerful incentive.
I have not a clue how to do it.
And stay alive in the process.
I am just not that smart. Though Turkey since the WWI might offer some insight, from what I understand, haven't really researched it.
Thank you for many hours of scattered brain contemplation,
T2M
biochem wrote:Some of the recent posts regarding Saudi Arabia got me thinking. If you were the dictator of an oil rich 3rd world country how would you spend your trillions to build the country into a first world country that would remain a first world country when the oil runs out in 100 years?
I would start with:
1. Small business loans. The middle class is the rock of a first world economy and the first thing to do is to start building it one little business at a time.
2. Infrastructure. Start build very high quality infrastructure. Build to last centuries if possible. Build roads, railroads, utilities, cell phone networks. Infrastructure is the skeleton that the businesses use to grow and it is crucial to developing a first world economy.
3. Education. Build an education system sufficient to populate new jobs being created. But don't overdo it otherwise you have a bunch of unemployed college grads (like Egypt) who are very mad at being unable to find the jobs they were promised.
4. Legal structure for capitalism. You need rules regarding patents, property rights, fraud laws, antitrust laws etc. Capitalism needs rules to function well otherwise it descends into anarchy. But too many rules is a burden on the economy. So I would take advantage of the fact that I'm starting from scratch to have my legal experts pick the rules that are working the best around the world and establish the absolute minimum of regulation that is required for capitalism to function.
Other ideas?