4.01.2009

The Emerging World: American Opportunity: Part 1

The "rubber meets the road" in American Foreign Policy, as it relates to the developing world, with our efforts in matriculating the creation of new economic opportunities abroad. 
With over three billion people, or roughly half of the world's population, struggling for economic improvements that will lead them out of poverty, and over one billion people barely surviving on less than $1 a day, the developing world needs a cohesive economic strategy. Further, this over-reigning strategy can not be a one size fits all program, but rather an accumulation of tailored mechanisms for each culture, country, and society, that adheres to some core principals.
These principals, or rules of the road, are primarily four fold: 
1). environmental sustainability, cradle to cradle product cycles, and global energy program stability,
2). fair dispersal and stable growth of development, and it's residual dividends,
3). global education access and advanced development of education reforms,
4). greater global development of the aide infrastructure necessary to effectively deploy basic vaccinations, medical care, and safe drinking water.
Successive posts will address these four points individually.

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