Please can you ask him where is that money going to come from. Every responsible president will tell that to the citizens. That’s education. Unfortunately, this man has no education.
Increasing salaries is a sign of failure. Reduce cost should be the priority. With the kind of inflation in The Gambia, increasing salaries is definitely not the solution. The Gambia is not safe.
Reducing costs through subsidies often leads to inefficiency because sellers incorporate these subsidies into their pricing strategies, reducing competitive pressure. Subsidized markets can distort true supply and demand, encouraging inefficiencies and overproduction. Sellers may become dependent on subsidies, focusing less on innovation or cost-reduction measures. This can result in artificially inflated prices that do not reflect actual market conditions. Ultimately, subsidies often benefit sellers more than consumers, negating the intended cost-reduction impact.
@@malickbah3452 nobody talks about subsidies. Respectfully, do you know what you are talking about. I, as an economic student, don’t even believe in subsidies. I believe in self reliance. And we can easily do that in The Gambia if we’ve the right leadership. Thank you sir.
Good for you
Please can you ask him where is that money going to come from. Every responsible president will tell that to the citizens. That’s education. Unfortunately, this man has no education.
Adama Adu Calpeh Barrow, Before you increase the salary of civil servant. Create job for the youths.
Increasing salaries is a sign of failure. Reduce cost should be the priority. With the kind of inflation in The Gambia, increasing salaries is definitely not the solution. The Gambia is not safe.
Reducing costs through subsidies often leads to inefficiency because sellers incorporate these subsidies into their pricing strategies, reducing competitive pressure. Subsidized markets can distort true supply and demand, encouraging inefficiencies and overproduction. Sellers may become dependent on subsidies, focusing less on innovation or cost-reduction measures. This can result in artificially inflated prices that do not reflect actual market conditions. Ultimately, subsidies often benefit sellers more than consumers, negating the intended cost-reduction impact.
It is called "rent seeking capture"
@@malickbah3452 nobody talks about subsidies. Respectfully, do you know what you are talking about. I, as an economic student, don’t even believe in subsidies. I believe in self reliance. And we can easily do that in The Gambia if we’ve the right leadership. Thank you sir.
GO move civil servants deserve better salary ❤
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Never trust them they need something from you
Another lies. I am really tired
No you are working very hard