Based on these lessons learned, they seek to double the size of the economy by 2030, in an inclusive and sustainable manner.
The vice president of the Republic, Raquel Pena, He stated that the pandemic has yielded three lessons that can serve as a model for achieving sustainable and inclusive growth.
They will also serve to promote Foreign direct investment (IED), investing in your workforce through training and upskilling that places more people in jobs that support families and unlocks diversified areas of growth and development.
The lessons learned are: the first agile and data-based decision making, to implement precise answers. The second is based on integrated and innovative models of collaboration with the private sector, academia and civil society. And the third focus on the welfare and livelihoods of the Dominican people.
“Based on these lessons, we are working to double the size of the economy by 2030, in an inclusive and sustainable way,” he stated in an article titled “Three lessons on sustainable growth in the Dominican Republic”published on the website of the World Economic Forum in the framework of the entity’s Annual Meeting in 2023 in Davos, Switzerland.
In addition, in the article she is a co-author Maria Eugenia del Castillospecial adviser to the Vice Presidency of the Dominican Republic.
“Despite this remarkable crisis management and economic recovery, we continue to face significant challenges: vulnerability to climate change, increased need for FDI for high-growth industries, income and wealth inequality; and the continuing humanitarian challenges brought about by continued violence and political unrest in neighboring Haiti. However, the experience of the pandemic has given us a plan to quickly respond to different complex challenges.