Search This Blog

TANZANITE CITY: The Africa's Factory & Innovation Powerhouse!

TANZANITE CITY: The Africa's Factory & Innovation Powerhouse!
We Will Turn Bushes Into Highly Industrialized City

Sunday, May 26, 2013

FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IS NOT ALL THAT WE NEED

The primary motivation for building the Tanzanite Empire is modernization and self-sufficiency of our industrial sector that will be translated in economic gain, whether this is achieved in the short- or long-term. We at the Tanzanite Empire believe that, even if we might be very successful in importing high technology and/or gaining access to new technologies via foreign joint ventures and Foreign Direct Investment, this technology may not necessarily prove to be useful unless we have an ability to absorb, assimilate, and innovate these new technologies, concepts, processes, and equipment.
The key to utilizing acquired technology in an efficient manner is having a highly skilled workforce and exposure to international experts in high-tech fields. To succeed in our mission we must have a sizable pool of well-trained scientists, technicians, and engineers even if not on a per capita basis, our academics, engineers, and scientists should have opportunity of participating in international scholarly fora, meetings, and workshops that provide exposure to global standards and practices.
IN THIS era in which poor countries like Tanzania are engaging in the second war against new mode of colonialism after the first which lead to the political independence of our nations 50s years ago, High quality human resources and rich stock pool of skilled workforce, engineers and scientists is necessary. The availability of engineers and scientists determines the ability of a nation to develop competitiveness through differentiation. In terms of availability and quality of scientists and engineers, our country has a long way to go.
Consequently, it is necessary to continuously upgrade the manpower skills in technical and techno managerial dimensions. In a labor-deficit economy, new and efficient technologies must be highly encouraged, these results in a cycle where new technologies are always introduced, the engineers and technicians must continue to work efficiently, and the technical manpower quality must always be improved. Thus, making the continuous efforts to upgrade the talent pool the most important task of all, Opposite of that, this results in the brain drain phenomenon leading to flight of talent to advanced countries where the opportunities to upgrade exist. Our country has low ability to retain its qualified manpower when compared with other countries.
The Tanzanite Empire of Critical Thinkers is established to make sure scientific and engineering talent pool is secured instead of being at the disposal of countries that create conditions conducive to the nurturing and advancement of this talent pool. The Empire is aim to bring together geniuses and experts in various fields of science and technology, university college graduates and entrepreneurs and provide them with platform and facilities necessary for conducting researches & experiments, build new instruments, and scientifically test their ideas, hence contributing to our country’s ability to absorb, assimilate, and innovate these new technologies, which is a key to ensuring sustained growth and innovative capabilities in the future.
In the tanzanite Empire, Engineers apply the sciences of physics and mathematics to find suitable solutions to problems or to make improvements to the status quo. If multiple options exist, engineers weigh different design choices on their merits and choose the solution that best matches the requirements. The crucial and unique task of the engineer is to identify, understand, and interpret the constraints on a design in order to produce a successful result. It is usually not enough to build a technically successful product; it must also meet further requirements. Constraints may include available resources, physical, imaginative or technical limitations, flexibility for future modifications and additions, and other factors, such as requirements for cost, safety, marketability, productivity, and serviceability. By understanding the constraints, engineers derive specifications for the limits within which a viable object or system may be produced and operated.

No comments:

Post a Comment