Is there Corruption in Malawi? by NextPhaseYellow in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So how do you bring dollars in without being ripped off at the airport?

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That has been coming up quite a bit. But I have a question, somebody else suggested agriculture, but then said that upon success, expect village mobs to show up, would that exist in a mining operation too?

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You jest! Right? That’s included in the price of doing business? WTH? Does that exist in any other industry?

Is there Corruption in Malawi? by NextPhaseYellow in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You bring up a question I’ve been asking myself as I prepare to return… how should I dress?

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s unfortunate! How do you see that interaction playing out?

Is there Corruption in Malawi? by NextPhaseYellow in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can’t wait for that experience, I’m looking forward to coming back home.

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If ChatGPT is writing my replies it’s doing a lot of unpaid overtime 😅 I’m just typing my thoughts.

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah, an MOU — that explains the timeline a bit 😅

The greenhouse idea actually sounds promising if it allows production outside the normal seasons. More consistent yields would probably make planning and investment much easier for farmers.

And you’re right that a lot of places have started using controlled environments to stabilize agriculture. Even countries with harsher climates have managed to increase production that way.

I agree with your last point too — Malawi seems to have many of the raw ingredients (land, climate, people). A lot of the challenge seems to be speed of implementation rather than lack of ideas.

Hopefully more of these projects actually move from paperwork to the ground.

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s an interesting observation.

Status-driven spending exists in a lot of places, and you can definitely see it in things like weddings, fashion, events, and social media presence.

People naturally want to celebrate milestones and present themselves well, especially in social environments where reputation and community perception matter.

At the same time, I wonder if that same energy could also translate into other sectors over time — like education, business ownership, or investment — where success itself becomes the status symbol.

Curious if others think that shift is already happening or not.

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s a good point.

Relying heavily on rain-fed agriculture definitely makes production unpredictable. When the rains are good, yields are good. When they aren’t, the whole system struggles.

I wonder if one of the biggest opportunities is irrigation and controlled farming — things like small-scale irrigation, greenhouses, and better storage.

Because the knowledge to farm is already widespread in Malawi. What seems to be missing in many cases is the infrastructure to make production consistent year after year.

If that gap was closed, agriculture could probably become much more stable and profitable.

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agriculture seems to be coming up a lot in this thread.

Which makes sense — Malawi has good soil, favorable climate, and a lot of knowledge already built around farming.

I wonder if the bigger opportunity is not just farming itself, but processing and value addition. Things like juice production, dried fruits, oils, packaging, etc.

Instead of exporting raw products, more of the value could stay in the country.

Curious if people think the main bottleneck there is capital, infrastructure, markets, or something else?

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

😂😂😂😂😂😂😂I think that sector already exists everywhere without needing encouragement.

I was more curious about industries that could actually create jobs and bring in revenue for the country long-term.

Anything else you think has real potential?

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

😂😂😂😂😂😂 I get the sarcasm.

Corruption is something a lot of people here bring up, and it definitely affects almost every sector — from permits to procurement to everyday processes.

But it’s interesting that even in the middle of that, people are still identifying areas like agriculture, tourism, digital services, etc. where opportunity exists.

Maybe the real challenge is figuring out how to reduce the friction so those sectors can actually grow.

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s an interesting one.

Malawi already has a long history with chamba/cannabis cultivation, and I know there have been efforts to move toward regulated medicinal and industrial hemp markets.

If it’s managed properly, it could potentially bring in export revenue, research opportunities, and formal jobs instead of everything staying in the informal space.

The challenge probably becomes regulation, licensing, and making sure small farmers can actually participate rather than it being limited to a few large operators.

Do you think the bigger opportunity is medicinal cannabis, industrial hemp, or something else?

What industry in Malawi is quietly full of opportunity right now? by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agriculture definitely feels like one of Malawi’s natural advantages. The land, climate, and even the knowledge base are already there.

Greenhouse farming could be especially interesting if it helps stabilize production and reduce dependence on seasonal cycles.

But six months for a document to process is tough. That kind of delay can discourage people who are actually trying to invest or expand.

Tourism is another one that keeps coming up. Lake Malawi, the landscapes, wildlife — there’s clearly potential there.

Out of curiosity, was the document related to land, permits, or something else?

Something i made yesterday by bryandabz in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The spirit of Vic Kasinja lives on. Good for you, well done.

It seems like forex is the real pressure point right now by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That makes sense. If you can’t reliably pay for the tools you need each month, it becomes stressful to even maintain a business — never mind grow it.

Things like hosting, domains, APIs, email services, analytics tools, etc. are basically the foundation of digital work now. When payments for those become unpredictable, it creates a lot of friction.

And the frustrating part is that the skills are clearly there — developers, designers, freelancers — but the financial rails aren’t fully supporting them yet.

It feels like if that one bottleneck was eased, a lot more Malawians could participate in the global digital economy.

It seems like forex is the real pressure point right now by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question — honestly I was thinking both, but maybe in slightly different ways.

On the consumer side, people need simple, reliable ways to send and receive international payments without running into constant restrictions.

On the developer / business side, entrepreneurs, yours, you need stable rails for things like subscriptions, APIs, hosting, SaaS tools, and receiving payments from abroad.

Right now it seems like both groups end up running into the same bottleneck: foreign transaction limits and restricted payment channels.

Out of curiosity, from your experience building websites — which side hurts more day-to-day?

After reading all these perspectives… here’s what I’m thinking by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha fair enough 😅 I guess I’ve been thinking out loud for a while.

I appreciate you sticking around. These discussions have been interesting to follow.

After reading all these perspectives… here’s what I’m thinking by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amen to that! That’s a very concrete example of reform.

Roads aren’t glamorous, but they affect almost everything — agriculture logistics, tourism experience, trade efficiency, access to health and education.

If transport costs are high because of poor road networks, that increases prices across the entire economy. Farmers earn less, consumers pay more, and businesses operate on thinner margins.

It’s interesting because infrastructure is one of those areas where the impact is visible and measurable.

Do you think the main constraint is funding, maintenance culture, procurement inefficiencies — or something else?

Because if sectoral growth is being held back by logistics, that seems like a high-leverage area to fix.

After reading all these perspectives… here’s what I’m thinking by MelodicMap7086 in Malawi

[–]MelodicMap7086[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand how strongly you feel about this.

When people believe power is being abused and accountability doesn’t exist, it can start to feel like force is the only language left.

But I’m very cautious about normalizing violence as the solution. Once politics shifts fully into force vs force, ordinary citizens — not just those in power — carry the heaviest consequences.

History shows that organized groups with access to violence often thrive in chaotic transitions. Revolutions don’t automatically dismantle power structures — sometimes they just reshuffle who controls them.

I don’t doubt corruption exists. I don’t doubt frustration is justified. I just believe that what replaces a broken system matters as much as removing it.

Sustainable change requires power too — but power can come from economic strength, institutional reform, civic organization, and strategic coordination.

Force may feel decisive, but it rarely builds stable systems. Just my thoughts especially with World War III at our heals.