It is generally agreed that the root cause of this problem, in addition to the large number of displaced people (the largest in the Americas) is poverty and
lack of infrastructure providing young people with an opportunity to express themselves in cultural or sport hobbies after school.
Not exact matches
Britain
lacks an equivalent
of the German Mittelstand, attracting private capital for major public
infrastructure projects to tackle the chronic short - termism
of the capital markets, while
providing a much needed boost to economic growth.
Many - not all - believe aid
provided earlier can sometimes prevent larger and longer term damage to a national economy by preventing long term unemployment and loss
of job skills and prevent a
lack of investment in
infrastructure, health, and education.
However, both CELS and the NFER / University
of York study show that while schools» capacity to facilitate student participation is developing, some
lack the necessary
infrastructure to effectively identify and engage with volunteering opportunities
provided by external organisations.
The
lack of masters and mentors does concern me - as we've moved away from the
infrastructure that the guilds and the unions
provided (wherein an individual would be an apprentice, then a journeyman, then eventually a master and take on an apprentice
of their own) craft in general, not just printing, has suffered.
Currently, around 15 percent
of the world's population
lacks access to electricity, mostly in rural areas
of the developing world, where
providing power
infrastructure is more challenging.
(Sec. 299D) Establishes in the Treasury the Alternative Energy Sources State Loan Fund for loans to states and Indian tribes to
provide incentives to owners
of single - family and multi-family housing, commercial properties, and public buildings to
provide: (1) renewable energy sources for such structures; (2) energy efficiency and energy conserving improvements and features for such structures; or (3)
infrastructure related to the delivery
of electricity and hot water for structures
lacking such amenities.
The
lack of resources is the overarching impediment, and from this cascades a range
of capacity issues regarding staffing, office
infrastructure, contracting expertise, capacity to
provide education and training native title holders, and capacity to meet the obligations
of the ACA Act.
Jon Altman notes that a crucial issue that has arisen in the past in Indigenous agreement making is that governments have tended to substitute agreement moneys for government expenditure rather than using them to supplement such expenditure.107 This emerged as a key explanation
of the
lack of economic benefit flowing to the Kakadu region from the Ranger Agreement signed in 1978: a significant proportion
of mining payments was used to
provide services (like housing,
infrastructure and outstation support) that were the legitimate responsibility
of government.