What can we do for the development our country. only from rihaankapoor91
Answers
Answered by
0
are countless ways to develop your country. First and foremost, you will have to decide on your economic system, your political system and your laws.
There is only one system developed so far that guarantees the development of your country without any major risks, if you do it right, that meets the necessary and basic needs of your citizens without resorting to some heavy divide regarding wealth, priorities, social environment and objectives - Communism/Socialism.
A Communist country has an economy that is centrally planned, meaning all supply and demand is calculated by the government based on statistics compiled by informative bureaus. This means that the economic input and output of the country is only based on what is necessary, not what is wanted/needed/estimated to be wanted/needed like in Capitalism.
The upside to Communism is that it’s an economically viable system, that is also politically flexible. A Communist system doesn’t necessarily have to be one party.
There is only one system developed so far that guarantees the development of your country without any major risks, if you do it right, that meets the necessary and basic needs of your citizens without resorting to some heavy divide regarding wealth, priorities, social environment and objectives - Communism/Socialism.
A Communist country has an economy that is centrally planned, meaning all supply and demand is calculated by the government based on statistics compiled by informative bureaus. This means that the economic input and output of the country is only based on what is necessary, not what is wanted/needed/estimated to be wanted/needed like in Capitalism.
The upside to Communism is that it’s an economically viable system, that is also politically flexible. A Communist system doesn’t necessarily have to be one party.
Answered by
4
The answer is : there are countless ways to develop your country. First and foremost, you will have to decide on your economic system, your political system and your laws.
There is only one system developed so far that guarantees the development of your country without any major risks, if you do it right, that meets the necessary and basic needs of your citizens without resorting to some heavy divide regarding wealth, priorities, social environment and objectives - Communism/Socialism.
A Communist country has an economy that is centrally planned, meaning all supply and demand is calculated by the government based on statistics compiled by informative bureaus. This means that the economic input and output of the country is only based on what is necessary, not what is wanted/needed/estimated to be wanted/needed like in Capitalism.
The upside to Communism is that it’s an economically viable system, that is also politically flexible. A Communist system doesn’t necessarily have to be one party.
But in many cases around the world, it is. And this is either a downside or an upside, depending on how the regime is regulated by the public.
If a regime is benevolent, then the country will see great triumphs and it will protect it’s people from outside threats effectively, like China has.
If a regime is malevolent, then it can become a hellish experience for the public, where an actual fascist dictatorship poses under the guise of a Communist state.
A Capitalist country can be a risky venture, if your basic economic elements(land, capital, labor) cannot support it’s objectives.
Capitalist countries refuse to trade with Communist countries, because the Communist country is self sufficient and can dictate prices and agreements unilaterally.
Capitalist countries are free market, meaning they only want to dictate prices and rules however they see fit. If a Capitalist country cannot back up a demand, it loses in value over time, gradually depreciating.
Capitalist countries can sometimes be fascist dictatorships, sometimes democracies, sometimes fascist dictatorships working under the guise of a democratic system but having only two leading political parties that, behind the scenes, are not separate entities but only pose as such to create the illusion of a democratic society, such as the US and Canada.
Capitalist countries can flourish in the short term, if they have major bargaining chips. Capitalist countries such as the US flourish because they destroy their competition periodically through use of military force, forcing other countries to trade with the US in absence of the destroyed countries which were their original trading partners.
There is only one system developed so far that guarantees the development of your country without any major risks, if you do it right, that meets the necessary and basic needs of your citizens without resorting to some heavy divide regarding wealth, priorities, social environment and objectives - Communism/Socialism.
A Communist country has an economy that is centrally planned, meaning all supply and demand is calculated by the government based on statistics compiled by informative bureaus. This means that the economic input and output of the country is only based on what is necessary, not what is wanted/needed/estimated to be wanted/needed like in Capitalism.
The upside to Communism is that it’s an economically viable system, that is also politically flexible. A Communist system doesn’t necessarily have to be one party.
But in many cases around the world, it is. And this is either a downside or an upside, depending on how the regime is regulated by the public.
If a regime is benevolent, then the country will see great triumphs and it will protect it’s people from outside threats effectively, like China has.
If a regime is malevolent, then it can become a hellish experience for the public, where an actual fascist dictatorship poses under the guise of a Communist state.
A Capitalist country can be a risky venture, if your basic economic elements(land, capital, labor) cannot support it’s objectives.
Capitalist countries refuse to trade with Communist countries, because the Communist country is self sufficient and can dictate prices and agreements unilaterally.
Capitalist countries are free market, meaning they only want to dictate prices and rules however they see fit. If a Capitalist country cannot back up a demand, it loses in value over time, gradually depreciating.
Capitalist countries can sometimes be fascist dictatorships, sometimes democracies, sometimes fascist dictatorships working under the guise of a democratic system but having only two leading political parties that, behind the scenes, are not separate entities but only pose as such to create the illusion of a democratic society, such as the US and Canada.
Capitalist countries can flourish in the short term, if they have major bargaining chips. Capitalist countries such as the US flourish because they destroy their competition periodically through use of military force, forcing other countries to trade with the US in absence of the destroyed countries which were their original trading partners.
Similar questions