MONROVIA, April 30 (LINA) - The attainment of the middle-income goal by 2030 may be highly unlikely unless Liberia reaches the point at which the right policies and actions are put in place and realized.
The Governance Commission (GC) made the observation in a report issued recently at a local hotel where a panel discussion was convened on achieving the Vision 2030 policy of government.
The report indicated that Liberia must develop appropriate policies that should be enforced by the government to answer the important concerns related to the internal and external efficiencies of the system.
Government must also create the right policy recommendations that lead to the path of economic success with the constraints of Liberia’s human resources, the report added.
It noted that as the education system begins to respond to better policies and action, the system may produce higher quality graduates and, in turn, eventually establish equilibrium between market supply and demand functions that enhance the country’s economic prospects.
“The real issues may be linked to the external and internal efficiency of the system and coordination rather than the lack of resources in the country,” the report observed.
It stressed that these are the critical challenges the society and nation is faced with and success depends upon the “critical choices they make based on deep and critical analysis.”
According to the report, the education system could be putting the nation to risk given the inefficiencies and the number of uncoordinated activities that are occurring in its present form.
LINA DMW/JGT/PTK
