THE NATIONAL STRATEGIE FOR HOME GROWN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
MADE IN NIGERIA PROJECT OFFICE ABUJA ,NATIONAL STRATEGIES FOR ECONOMIC COOPERATION PROMOTIONS, SUSTAINABLE GROWTH AND ENTERPRENURSHIP DEVELOPMENT, MADE IN NIGERIA PROJECT, MiNPro,
MiNPro, created to support and promote HOME-GROWN ECONOMIES FOR NATIONS BULDING FOR RURAL AND COMMUNITIES DEVELOPMENT PROJECT .THE HOME GROWN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PRACTICES FOR RURAL COMMUNITIES,THE BEST APPROACH AND SUSTAINABLE METHOD FOR ECONOMIC REBIRTH, BUY NIGERIA, GROW NIGERIA, TRADE WITH NIGERIA, GLOBAL NIGERIA, MEET NIGERIA, PROUDLY NIGERIA MADE
BUY MADE IN NIGERIA MEDIA TEAM Said that “something special is coming in rural NIGERIA,” as “DEVELOPMENT PROJECT .
BUY MADE IN NIGERIA MEDIA TEAM Said that “something special is coming in rural NIGERIA,” as “there is a brain gain afoot.”
As THE NATIONAL COORDINATOR AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, someone who grew up in a small town and who loves rural communities, that headline warms my heart.
But, it’s really not that simple. BUY MADE IN NIGERIA ,BUY NIGERIA GROW NIGERIA PROUDLY NIGERIA MADE, YURM THE POPULATION INTO A PRODUCTION NATION
One-third of rural communities throughout the AFRICA, NIGERIA IN PARTICULAR are experienced and significant population gain And, economic opportunity and quality of life for many rural areas continue to deteriorate for residents. BUY MADE IN NIGERIA PROJECT TEAM COME UP WITH NATIONAL FAMILY -COMMUNITIES PRODUCTS DEVELOPMENT,PRODUCTIONS CLUSTER PROGRAM TO EMPOWER LIFES AND CREATE QUALITY JOBS FOR RURAL COMMUNITIES
The average age of rural AFRICA, NIGERIAN is 43 and climbing—that’s a full seven years older than city dwellers, according to Census and Bureau of Economic Analysis data. And the robust growth of post-Great Recession NIGERIAN has by and large bypassed rural communities. By 2023, the largest metropolitan areas had almost 10 percent more jobs than they did at the start of the financial crisis,
Rural areas still had fewer jobs in 2017 than in 2008.
But not all is lost: research from the Department of Agriculture Economic Research Services has shown that rural communities can attract and build innovative ecosystems with the necessary support programs and initiatives.
OUR EFFORTS revolved around highlighting and empowering the bounty of stakeholders and change agents that are so much more visible in smaller communities. My team and I then helped to connect and fortify the networks that generate opportunity internally and can insulate a community from uncontrollable external forces, whether it’s a company leaving for cheaper options or the decline of an entire industry.
So how can rural communities nurture these vital ecosystems?
Now more than ever before, economic development is driven by talent attraction and retention, and a community’s ability to foster the growth and expansion of its local industry base. This is the same for rural and urban communities alike.
Clusters matter for rural communities, too—maybe even more so.
Rural areas embrace business attraction and retention strategy that is cluster-focused. Industry clusters are groups of similar and related businesses in a defined geographic area that share common markets, technologies, resources, and talent needs. Simply put, clusters represent an area’s competitive advantages.
Rural communities can create greater opportunity and increase investment by expanding employment and resources within their respective clusters, especially within supply chains. This calls for an investment in a significant business expansion and support program; homegrown clusters are the future for our rural areas.
This also means that rural communities have to ensure their land use, business support programs, anchor institutions and infrastructure investments are completely aligned. where natural resources are central to the local economy, we’ve done exactly this with the city’s new five-year economic development strategy.
efforts for the foreseeable future will be centered on supporting local entrepreneurship and supply chains tied to its competitive advantages in next-generation forestry, advanced manufacturing, and engineering and natural resource management.
Homegrown talent is the pipeline that matters.
Business clusters and local enterprises need a strong talent base from which to draw the necessary human capital and skills. Therefore, it is essential for rural areas to partner with local schools and community colleges to ensure a strong workforce pipeline is in place.
school students HAVE the opportunity to simultaneously earn up to 60 college credit hours towards an associate degree or certificate program at no cost to their families. This innovative approach to workforce development leverages the support of a local anchor institution and offers a potential home-grown talent pipeline for the future.
Research has shown that investing in local talent has a major influence on economic development, offering residents the ability to improve their upward mobility.
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Home-making is key.
Small and rural communities must create, embrace, and promote their quality of place; it’s one of the most important elements of economic development today. Many call this “e is a brain gain afoot.”
As THE NATIONAL COORDINATOR AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, someone who grew up in a small town and who loves rural communities, that headline warms my heart.
But, it’s really not that simple. BUY MADE IN NIGERIA ,BUY NIGERIA GROW NIGERIA PROUDLY NIGERIA MADE, YURM THE POPULATION INTO A PRODUCTION NATION
One-third of rural communities throughout the AFRICA, NIGERIA IN PARTICULAR are experienced and significant population gain And, economic opportunity and quality of life for many rural areas continue to deteriorate for residents. BUY MADE IN NIGERIA PROJECT TEAM COME UP WITH NATIONAL FAMILY -COMMUNITIES PRODUCTS DEVELOPMENT,PRODUCTIONS CLUSTER PROGRAM TO EMPOWER LIFES AND CREATE QUALITY JOBS FOR RURAL COMMUNITIES
The average age of rural AFRICA, NIGERIAN is 43 and climbing—that’s a full seven years older than city dwellers, according to Census and Bureau of Economic Analysis data. And the robust growth of post-Great Recession NIGERIAN has by and large bypassed rural communities. By 2023, the largest metropolitan areas had almost 10 percent more jobs than they did at the start of the financial crisis,
Rural areas still had fewer jobs in 2017 than in 2008.
But not all is lost: research from the Department of Agriculture Economic Research Services has shown that rural communities can attract and build innovative ecosystems with the necessary support programs and initiatives.
OUR EFFORTS revolved around highlighting and empowering the bounty of stakeholders and change agents that are so much more visible in smaller communities. My team and I then helped to connect and fortify the networks that generate opportunity internally and can insulate a community from uncontrollable external forces, whether it’s a company leaving for cheaper options or the decline of an entire industry.
So how can rural communities nurture these vital ecosystems?
Now more than ever before, economic development is driven by talent attraction and retention, and a community’s ability to foster the growth and expansion of its local industry base. This is the same for rural and urban communities alike.
Clusters matter for rural communities, too—maybe even more so.
Rural areas embrace business attraction and retention strategy that is cluster-focused. Industry clusters are groups of similar and related businesses in a defined geographic area that share common markets, technologies, resources, and talent needs. Simply put, clusters represent an area’s competitive advantages.
Rural communities can create greater opportunity and increase investment by expanding employment and resources within their respective clusters, especially within supply chains. This calls for an investment in a significant business expansion and support program; homegrown clusters are the future for our rural areas.
This also means that rural communities have to ensure their land use, business support programs, anchor institutions and infrastructure investments are completely aligned. where natural resources are central to the local economy, we’ve done exactly this with the city’s new five-year economic development strategy.
efforts for the foreseeable future will be centered on supporting local entrepreneurship and supply chains tied to its competitive advantages in next-generation forestry, advanced manufacturing, and engineering and natural resource management.
Homegrown talent is the pipeline that matters.
Business clusters and local enterprises need a strong talent base from which to draw the necessary human capital and skills. Therefore, it is essential for rural areas to partner with local schools and community colleges to ensure a strong workforce pipeline is in place.
school students HAVE the opportunity to simultaneously earn up to 60 college credit hours towards an associate degree or certificate program at no cost to their families. This innovative approach to workforce development leverages the support of a local anchor institution and offers a potential home-grown talent pipeline for the future.
Research has shown that investing in local talent has a major influence on economic development, offering residents the ability to improve their upward mobility.
Home-making is key.
Small and rural communities must create, embrace, and promote their quality of place; it’s one of the most important elements of economic development today. Many call this “placemaking,” but recently I have referred to this as home-making: building communities that residents can call home.
With more residents forming strong attachments to their local communities today, communities must leverage amenities and characteristics that make them unique. Home-making is why more residents are returning back and reconnecting with their hometowns—bringing with them a few years or a few decades worth of know-how and ideas forged in much larger cities and markets, ready to apply to places eagerly waiting for them. A Homegrown Economic Reform Agenda: A Pathway to Prosperity
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,GLOBE ECONOMIC AND TRADE DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL,,PRESIDENT,GLOBE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY,EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,WORLD ECONOMIC AND INVESTMENT FORUM,WEIFORUM
7moBUY MADE IN NIGERIA PROJECT, THE NATIONAL STRATEGIE FOR HOME GROWN ECONOMIC GROWTH, PROMOTION AND DEVELOPMENT, FOCUSED ON NATIONAL GROWTH AND HUMAN CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT, TURING THE NATIONS POPULATION INTO A PRODUCTION NATION THROUGH ECONOMIC COOPERATIONS. TRADE PARTNERSHIP INVESTMENT AND BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT. www.nigeriaecbdforum.com
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,GLOBE ECONOMIC AND TRADE DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL,,PRESIDENT,GLOBE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY,EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,WORLD ECONOMIC AND INVESTMENT FORUM,WEIFORUM
7moA National strategies for Homegrown Economic Development, Reform and transformation in infraustural and community Development, boosting the growth ,powering opportunities ,BUY MADE IN NIGERIA PROJECT, BMINP
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,GLOBE ECONOMIC AND TRADE DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL,,PRESIDENT,GLOBE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY,EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,WORLD ECONOMIC AND INVESTMENT FORUM,WEIFORUM
8moHomegrown Economic Development Practices for Rural Communities, THE BEST APPROACH FOR ECONOMIC REBIRTH