¿How do you visualize productivity and competitiveness in the country?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5377/entorno.v0i31.7047Keywords:
Quality in education, Educational opportunitiesAbstract
t is not a mechanical relationship. The fact that there is more competitiveness does not mean that there is more productivity, as theoretically is believed.
The inverse if it is true, the higher productivity is more competitive, the relationship is direct. Competitiveness must be sought in a broad sense.
It can have a strictly economic competitiveness, which translates into lower costs and therefore greater benefits, but can affect the productivity of the soil, because environmentally is poorly managed.
Or in the social area, to believe that it is competitive to have cheap labor, can affect productivity, because the labor force will be less prepared, educated, and with less access to food, therefore, it will be a weaker population.
We must have a broader vision of competitiveness that rounds off in a wider productivity, not only cost-benefit.
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