The 3 challenges that Daniel Scioli must take on as head of Productive Development

The 3 challenges that Daniel Scioli must take on as head of Productive Development

1- Firstand more urgent, is put out the fire in industrial SMEs thatin line with national policy, substituted imports or invested heavily in machinery and now they are prey to the trap of the BCRA that do not allow it to complement national manufacturing with imported intermediate industrial goods, putting at risk its annual commercial planning, which would be a catastrophe.

Dynamize the interaction with other portfolios, such as those of Agriculture, Habitat and Science and Technology, to tune initiatives with common objectives that all push in tandem. Streamline and amplify financing tools and competitiveness for SMEs, which more smoothly reach companies with less than 50 workers.

2- The second is to create a battery of tools and initiatives, many of which even exceed the specific scope of the Ministry of Productive Development, but which must have as objective to create 100,000 new SMEs and 1 million new jobs in the short term. In this sense, simplify the labor and tax conditions of companies with less than 10 workers it is urgent; promote a simple legal figure to make companies, as was the SAS, it is necessary; making available non-bank credits assigned from intermediate institutions is the backbone for the financial inclusion of the 75% of SMEs that see banks as their enemy; create the SME Ombudsman to harmonize commercial relations within the value chains, and recover for the productive portfolio the immediate application of the Gondolas Law, the Care Prices and other active tools of the Secretary of Commerce.

3- The thirdand more importantly, is get involved in corporate politics thoroughly, give political space to national entrepreneurs and make them part of the definition of public policies. The lack of fine tuning in many good initiatives ends up not capitalizing on results neither for management nor for the National Government. The deafening silence of the thousands of businessmen and hundreds of cameras benefited by Kulfas puts white on black the policy of “taking everything and giving nothing” of many business institutions and corporations that are nourished by the resources of the State, that their lobby has penetrated the Government National as a whole, but they did not accompany until now nor will they accompany in the future the national policies in general terms nor the Front of All in electoral terms.

This vicious circle must be deconstructed and a new dynamic must be built with the sector. It is time for the business alliance for Argentine development to be formed, for the institutions and businessmen and women who want Argentina to do well, and act accordingly and in tune with national policies, to be convened. That is, build reciprocity with the development project with social inclusion.

*Leo Bilanski is president of the Association of National Businessmen and Women for Argentine Development (ENAC)

Source: Ambito

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