Turn that frown upside down . .
- Over 85% of this country will have Jobs at the end of the year
- We have a highly qualified workforce
- We have a diversified economy that has show an ability to adapt to changing environment better and quicker then other countries.
- We are learning valuable lessons that we would never of learned had things kept spiralling up. You can only learn from mistakes by making them. .
- Our state does have good social welfare systems to assist people who lose their jobs
- Falling salaries and land costs make us more competitive for foreign investment, particularly if you factor in the superior infrastructure we have in comparison to some of the countrys we have lost jobs, due to wage costs.
- As a country we probably have more empathy for our neighbour who is struggling financially. Whereas during the celtic Kitten we wanted to at least "keep up with the Jones's", now with pain being suffered across the country more people are learning (again) to show sympathy, not begrudgery to their neighbour.
- We have accepted that our country was not working efficiently and are addressing these obvious flaws in our financial services industry and the economy.
- We will have to , as a country, eventually mature to realise that to get ourselves back on track, we have to work and take pain collectively. This should push vested interest groups to one side. Like any relationship, if we work together , we will be stronger for it . .
- We will eventually recover from this collapse. . . Time will eventually heal the wounds . .
- As a nation our circumstances could always be worse . . .
- Over 85% of this country will have Jobs at the end of the year
- We have a highly qualified workforce
- We have a diversified economy that has show an ability to adapt to changing environment better and quicker then other countries.
- We are learning valuable lessons that we would never of learned had things kept spiralling up. You can only learn from mistakes by making them. .
- Our state does have good social welfare systems to assist people who lose their jobs
- Falling salaries and land costs make us more competitive for foreign investment, particularly if you factor in the superior infrastructure we have in comparison to some of the countrys we have lost jobs, due to wage costs.
- As a country we probably have more empathy for our neighbour who is struggling financially. Whereas during the celtic Kitten we wanted to at least "keep up with the Jones's", now with pain being suffered across the country more people are learning (again) to show sympathy, not begrudgery to their neighbour.
- We have accepted that our country was not working efficiently and are addressing these obvious flaws in our financial services industry and the economy.
- We will have to , as a country, eventually mature to realise that to get ourselves back on track, we have to work and take pain collectively. This should push vested interest groups to one side. Like any relationship, if we work together , we will be stronger for it . .
- We will eventually recover from this collapse. . . Time will eventually heal the wounds . .
- As a nation our circumstances could always be worse . . .