As the biggest Shimbiris fanboy, I'd die a happy man within the first week of the regime![]()
You have no idea if you go through this thread discussion on Somali investment i made particularly about investments in affordable electricity and the local companies involved.They actually do though. @Idilinaa It's kind of wild how these conversations on somali history,buisnessman,academics, etc get repeated all the time as some dude/girl probably a teenager or in their early 20s who knows very little about this stuff develops an intrested in somali related matters and makes unfounded assumptions out of ignorance (youthful ignorance if I'm being generous)
Our yearly diaspora remittances 2.9 billion equal or even exceed FDI that Kenya and Ethiopia gets (FDI in Kenya (2022): $1.6 billion, FDI in Ethiopia (2022): $3.3 billion , FDI in Nigeria (2022): $5.3 billion). We recieve more in remittances than many African countries recieve in FDI.
We can realistically pull 5-10 billion investment capital from the diaspora and we can get 10-20 billion of investment from local businesses. This also gives us space to negotiate better deals if we attract foreign investment, to retain local ownership and retain wealth.
They should look at Japan and Korean model of funding infrastructure development without foreign loans and heavy reliance of FDI.
In a bid to encourage and promote renewable energy that is safe for the environment, the Salaam Somali Bank in 2016 allocated an investment for companies and organizations committed to preserving the environment. This was after Somalia signed the landmark Paris Climate Agreement in 2015 as part of its commitment to adopt climate-compatible and environmentally sustainable pathways
“After the collapse of the central government, most social services were provided by private companies. This does not mean that companies were not awake to the threats felt by the world over, so we have taken upon ourselves to reduce air pollution,” Salaam Somali Bank Investment Manager Yassin Omar said.