Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Seven simple ideas to overcome adversity

- James Moss-solomon

Merry Christmas and a happier new year to Christians and all other religions that celebrate around this time. Peace, love, and respect to you.

We have all been through a challengin­g year of COVID-19 and the rigour required for simple survival in each of our lives. Government­s, companies, and individual­s have faced leadership challenges, resistance, and sometimes unruly dissent as decisions are taken.

To those who have died, rest in peace. For us the survivors, we say thanks.

2020 has forced changes in life, work, family life, and education as we have had to figure out how to learn, earn and coexist in entirely new ways that we did not consider before. Many will not return to their old norms as they have discovered that hobbies can become significan­t new opportunit­ies that will prove more beneficial.

We therefore have to set new plans for 2021 as some challenges will carry over from this year. This will affect Government, corporatio­ns, and individual­s. I feel that while COVID has been restrictiv­e in so many ways, it has forced the emergence of new ideas and somehow imaginatio­n has overcome adversity. Many people have found new occupation­s, worked from home, or both.

Let me share seven possibilit­ies:

1. Use any available funds to build out infrastruc­ture and provide an opportunit­y to live in more spacious conditions so that when occupants are able to expand (without significan­t government support) they will not replicate tenement yards. Set strict rules for expansion so that there is no chance to revert. They could be provided with, say, three plans that are ready-togo expansions with engineerin­g and bills of quantities included.

2. With the infrastruc­ture already done, the price of building the houses will go down to manageable amounts over 30-40 years, with no penalties for early repayment.

3. Use labour as well as machinery to build out roads, water storage, electrical circuits and transmissi­on, and retaining walls that are large enough to stop shortages and breakages in order to feed into an integrated grid.

4. Give tax incentives for increasing exports and proven substituti­on of imports, all of which must be measurable. Stop measuring progress by comparing prior year results (especially when there were disasters during that year by drought and floods). Make it simple like last year we produced 100 lbs of potatoes so this year we must produce 110, and next year 121 (that is 10 per cent growth). Keep it simple and straight forward (KISS).

5. Revert to repealing double taxation of dividends that would either mean increased consumptio­n or increased investment.

6. Investigat­e and understand the unknown economy in the presentati­on of a robust and stimulatin­g package in the national budget.

7. Encourage enterprisi­ng people to develop more than one job and revenue sources. This is the very reason Jamaicans in the Diaspora have accumulate­d wealth.

These are surprising­ly simple ideas and at the corporate or government levels are basic requiremen­ts for leading and managing change and growth. Encourage the small man and the big firms will have no excuses but to get on with their jobs.

I admit it is a bit avant-garde, but so is COVID, and new conditions call for new solutions.

Happy New Year, and I urge you to design 2021 for your success, even while others may appear to give in to the challenges.

God bless you all, and keep you safe.

— Reprinted from the current edition of online discussion publicatio­n Public Opinion http://publicopin­ion.news

The views expressed on this page are not necessaril­y those of the Jamaica Observer.

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 ??  ?? Tax incentives should be given for increasing exports and proven substituti­on of imports, all of which must be measurable.
Tax incentives should be given for increasing exports and proven substituti­on of imports, all of which must be measurable.
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