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The first task in our business was establishing contacts.  Because we had business associates throughout America and Africa, this was relatively easy.  In addition, all our investors were bringing to the company many years of experience and through that, had already established many contacts.  We...

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Growing your Business

Growing your business does not have to be such a difficult task. There are a few things you can do that do not have to break the budget or escalate your working hours. For example, opening up your firm as a franchise opportunity, gives you the profits without the pain. Also, licensing your product...

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Saharan Africa

Posted by Geneva | Posted in News | Posted on 31-03-2013

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On the other hand, this myth of the market is always formulated as free, but wondered how the writer Rafael Argullol: Can a society in which greed, unbridled ambition and lies campan be free at ease? Of course not. And to all this, a recent OECD report (Association of the 30 most developed countries in the world) reveals that 1,800 million workers of the world (60% of the total) have no employment contract one. e. And as soon as have social protection, workers in impoverished countries (officially in development) going from those who are only half of the total up to those who are barely a quarter of all. Do you want to remember the inequality figures and insulting poverty of this world? Just 130 million people own 90% of the riches of the world, the rest to be shared between more than 6.3 billion. Nearly 450 million children suffer from malnutrition and in sub-Saharan Africa one person in three suffers from chronic hunger. One child in five does not have access to primary education and nearly 900 million adults are illiterate, of which two-thirds are women. Daily die 30,000 children under age 5 from preventable diseases. More than 1 billion people have no access to drinking water and 2,400 million people are deprived of satisfactory sanitation facilities.

Yet is there anyone who believes that the capitalist society, the society of free market, is the best system possible, consubstantial with the progress and well-being? The Brazilian, theologian dominico of liberation, Frei Betto, x-ray us with lucidity this market society: there where the market puts his hand leaves mark. The hand may be invisible but its brands do not. About everything when left in the helplessness millions of unemployed. The invisible hand shamelessly manipulates our life, favors some few and choking at the most and then naive and innocent we say that this world is badly organized, but not so. As the analyst Javier Ortiz reminds us, the world is well-organized, but for the benefit of the few. That the crisis serves us to start changing everything.

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