First of all, there is no “middle-class”; it is either the political and business elite (the two aer pretty much the same) and the rest of us. The only so-called middle-class would have to be the international community, which do not count.
When UNTAET was here, their mandate was to create a viable government and give it to the East Timorese.
Instead they created a hollow egg-shell government with no infrastructure and gave it back to Portugal.
The so-called leaders are so out of touch with reality, that it is nowhere near funny.
Yes, Timor is very poor, and the people are uneducated. But the land is rich and with proper agricultural methodology and technology, the country could feasibly become, agriculturally speaking, self-supporting. This would help the economy by allowing the people a less expensive option for sustenance: rather than paying foreign prices for foreign people to ship foreign foods into Timor, and then paying import and sales taxes, plus grocery store overhead, they could pay local people local currency (USD) to grow / raise local food…period. The shipping costs, import fees, sales taxes, and grocery store overhead would be all but eliminated, thus saving the locals lots of money and allowing the profits to remain in Timor and not being sent back to some foreign land. The food could be marketed in the local markets which have minimal overhead and no sales taxes.
The money that is then generated into the local economy could start being spent elsehwere in the local economy creating a much more stable and healthy economy.
Second, the government should lower the import and sales taxes (up to 40%) that are forcing the other products to be sold at such ridiculously high prices. Real world ecomonies have proven that higher taxes slow the economy.
Next, the education system should focus on national interests, (what technology or industry could Timor benefit from the most?) and start teaching towards that goal. Look at India, Singapore, and Japan, well, actualy most of Asia has a focal industry that brings in money for that country, but it can be focused towards domestic concerns as well.
Plus, they should consider ditching that stupid Portuguese language. No one else around here uses that language, so it is worthless to these people, less than 10 % speak it already. English is the only acceptable language for all things international, especially trade, tourism, commerce, and well, everything. But Bahasa (Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, and parts of the Phillipines) should be maintained as well as their national language of Tetun (National Pride).
The people have been lied to from the very beginning, in order to ensure the votes, the pro-independence hawkers told of all of the great things that freedom and democracy would bring, but they never explained about how long it would take, and the fact that no Timorese are competent to fulfill the required technical positions.
Speaking of Democracy, is it democratic to have a self-appointed PM?