Venezuela is a broken country. It is another victim to the failure of central planning. It is another system of bureaucrats being know-it-alls, thinking they know what’s better for the people than what they know for themselves. Once the richest country in Latin America, it has descended into tyranny and poverty. There is no economic security or guarantees. This is socialist system was bound to fail.
The government is ultimately responsible for setting economic policy, enforcing the laws, and determining regulations. They have failed at all three fundamental basics. Property rights are nonexistent, the rule of law is ignored and excessive, the value of their currency is worthless. They are in dire straits with nowhere to go.
While the Venezuelan government is a lost cause, their people aren’t. Their people have a 97.13% average adult literacy rate. 60% of their population are internet users. A Venezuelan only makes $0.26/day, as of 2018.
Why post this information? It’s to highlight the failure of socialism, but also point out the potential that the population of Venezuela have. They didn’t want this, they’re victims of the actions of a few elites.
This is where Taskly comes in as a viable solution to the woes they face. The supply of Task (our coin) is fixed. It’s free to join and earn. There is no requirements to do work, except for having the appropriate skills to do the work. People control their own finances. They can spend as they please. If there an issue, it is democratically resolved in a transparent environment. All of this is the polar opposite of what Venezuela has to offer.
Taskly is what the people Venezuela need to prosper. It can be accessed from a mobile phone and work can be done on their own conditions. This individual responsibility is what make economies prosper. It is a practical solution to the needs Venezuelans have.
Here are some of the fundamental features we have, which will be of practical use to Venezuelans:
Democratic and transparent dispute systemEffectively, this is our legal system. It is what we use to resolve any disputes that may arise. The decisions are made in public by democratic votes tied to Task. This makes corruption and subjective enforcement of the rules impossible. This is a much fairer system than what PayPal has to offer, as their disputes are handled in the dark with no public insight. People vote on disputes, which cost Task, if one side wins their vote is has a higher weighting in future dispute votes. If the opponent loses, their vote loses value and they lose the Task they put in. This will make people pick wisely!
Open jobs marketThere is a lot of talk about freelancers and the gig economy. This is an excellent economy, but its scope is largely limited to work online. There is very little in the way of work that is physical and can be by a variety of people.
Taskly provides all sorts of categories to select from. This is both online and offline work. This choice is unprecedented in the freelance service economy. This gives consumers and workers choice as to where to engage their efforts. A large scope of users can now find anything they need in one place.
There is no degree required to start work. Workers can present a portfolio of their past work. Workers are only told to do work they are skilled at. This will create incentive to research, improve and upskill which brings further value to the Taskly system.
DecentralisedWe have a massive plan to make Taskly decentralised. Bitcoin brings decentralisation to sending money. Taskly is bringing decentralisation to how you manage your finances, how you access the platform, how you do work, where you do work. Keeping in mind, we are doing this all while making Taskly mainstream.
You can read more about our decentralisation plan on our website:
http://www.taskly.netThat is just a few ways, out of many, of how Taskly can help develop the Venezuelan economy. We are bringing a large, diversified economy into a broken country. The people of Venezuela are in need of practical tools like this to lift the burden they have on their shoulders.
Sources:https://countryeconomy.com/demography/literacy-rate/venezuelahttps://www.internetworldstats.com/sa/ve.htmhttps://panampost.com/sabrina-martin/2018/01/04/new-monthly-minimum-wage-in-venezuela-barely-enough-to-buy-daily-cup-of-coffee/