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Wisdom
Key to FAQ: Why?
Here's
my answer:
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Welcome to Montresor's Future Economic Plans for Haiti

MY ECONOMIC PLANS TO REVIVE
HAITI View
this site in other languages
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I will
introduce an all new commercial economic funding system that
will generate $10-20 billion dollars
within the first two years of my administration.
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One payroll, import and export tax system.
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One income tax return with tax rebates designed to help all
Haitians prosper regardless of class.
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One integrated social ID/driver's license
card.
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Improve Haiti’s customs for imports and
exports.
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Provide equal opportunity jobs for all Haitian
citizens so that they will stay and prosper at home.
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Open our country to investors and
manufacturers, thus providing jobs for Haitians.
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Establish benefit programs for all Haitians
including orphans, and those with handicaps and those in
unfortunate situations.
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Introduce standard humanitarian sanitation
systems with priority given to providing clean, pure water.
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Install better communications (telephone and
high speed internet systems) initiated by first providing
electricity to the Haitian citizens.
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Attract lending institutions and financial
businesses to our country.
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Improve public and private transportation and
agronomy productivity.
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Form new programs that attraction tourism for Haiti that
will boost Nationalism.
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I will work hard with the international communities to
reduce Haiti's national debt.
BENEFITS FOR HAITIAN
CITIZENS
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To provide health care to all Haitian citizens
worldwide within their motherland—even those born outside
Haiti are welcome.
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To establish and guarantee security to all
Haitian citizens.
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To establish and guarantee equal opportunity
housing to all citizens.
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To train teachers and develop an all new
public school system, thereby guaranteeing equal education
to all citizens.
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To train more protection agencies who will
understand and respect all Haitian citizens’ rights and
freedoms equally.
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To rebuild our forest and tropical fruit
trees.
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Last but not least, to rebuild Haiti's road and under
planning commercial/residential constructions.
Haiti get
ready for the best is yet to come! I'll see you in 2011 God
Bless!
PRESENT
ECONOMIC HISTORY OF HAITI
Haiti remains the least-developed country in the Western
Hemisphere and one of the poorest in the world.
Comparative social and economic indicators show Haiti is
falling behind other low-income developing countries
(particularly in the hemisphere) since the 1980s. Haiti now
ranks 150th of 175 countries in the UN’s Human Development
Index. Haiti's economic stagnation is the result of earlier
inappropriate economic plans, political instability, a
shortage of good arable land, environmental deterioration,
continued reliance on traditional technologies,
under-capitalization and lack of public investment in human
resources, migration of large portions of the skilled
population, a weak national savings rate, and the lack of a
functioning funding system to run the government.
Geography
Area: 27,750 sq. km. (10,714 sq. mi.); about the size of
Maryland. Ile de la Gonave and Ile de la Tortue comprise
Haiti's principal offshore territories.
Cities: Capital--Port-au-Prince (pop. 2 million). Other
cities--Cap Haitien (pop. 600,000).
Terrain: Rugged mountains with small coastal plains and
river valleys, and a large east-central elevated plateau.
Climate: Warm, semiarid, high humidity in many coastal
areas.
People
Nationality: Haitien
Population (2001 est.): 8.1 million.
Annual population growth rate: 1975-2001, 1.9%; 2000-2015
(est.): 1.3%.
Ethnic groups: African descent 95%, African and European
descent 5%.
Religions: Roman Catholic 80%, Protestant 16%, voudou
(voodoo) practices pervasive.
Languages: French (official), Creole (official).
Education: Years compulsory--6. Adult literacy (2001
est.)-50.8%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--79/1000. Life
expectancy--49.1 yrs.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: January 1,1804.
Constitution: March 1987.
Branches: Executive--President. Legislative--Senate (27
Seats), Chamber of Deputies (83 seats). Judicial--Court of
Cassation.
Administrative subdivisions: Nine departments (a law
creating a 10th department, approved by Parliament and
signed by then-President Aristide, was awaiting publication
to become law in November 2003).
Political parties and coalitions: Fanmi Lavalas (FL),
Struggling People's Organization (OPL), Open the Gate Party
(PLB), Christian Movement for a New Haiti (MOCHRENHA),
Democratic Consultation Group (ESPACE), Popular Solidarity
Alliance (ESKANP), several others. The Democratic
Convergence is a coalition of most leading opposition
parties formed to protest the results of May 2000
legislative and local elections.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (FY 2002): $3.5 billion.
Real GDP growth rate (FY 2002): -0.9%.
Per capita GNP (FY 2002): $425.
GDP by sector (2002): Agriculture--27%; industry--14%;
services--52%; indirect and import taxes--7%.
Inflation (2002 CPI yearly): 14.8%.
Natural resources: Bauxite, copper, calcium carbonate,
gold, marble.
Agriculture (27% of GDP): Products--coffee, mangoes,
sugarcane, rice, corn, cacao, sorghum, pulses, other fruits
and vegetables.
Industry (15.5% of GDP): Types--apparel, handicrafts,
electronics assembly, food processing, beverages, tobacco
products, furniture, printing, chemicals, steel.
Services (52% of GDP): Commerce, government, tourism.
Trade (2002): Total exports f.o.b.--$248 million: apparel,
mangoes, leather and raw hides, seafood, electrical. Major
market--U.S. ($244 million). Imports--$870 million c.i.f.
From U.S. $674 million-- grains, soybean oil, motor
vehicles, machinery, meat, vegetables, plastics, petroleum.
Note: There are serious problems with national accounts in
Haiti, including incomplete coverage and the questionable
accuracy of data.
Haiti's
debt to international financial institutions and foreign
governments has grown from $302 million in 1980 to $1.134
billion today. About 40 percent of this debt stems from
loans to the brutal Duvalier dictators, who invested little
of it in our country.
Supporting Montresor for President in 2011 means you are a
good steward of Haiti's future.
Contact Us:
montresor2011@gmail.com
Early Financial Support is the
key to Montresor’s Successful Campaign.
Haiti Mission,
Inc. 216 N Main Sand Springs Ok, 74063
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