The request of future Prime Minister Kristen Michal not to place high expectations on him is a wrong step, Redgate Capital partner Valeria Kiisk said in the Äripäev radio program “Hot Chair,” Delovye Vedomosti writes. Partner at Redgate Capital Valeria Kiisk. Photo: Erik Prozes / Raul Mee / mollusk Media
The request of future Prime Minister Kristen Michal not to place high expectations on him is a wrong step, said Redgate Capital partner Valeria Kiisk in the Äripäev radio program “Hot Chair,” writes Delovye Vedomosti .
“Going into government saying you have no ambition is a little stupid,” says Kiisk.
“I want to see ambition, I want to see economic growth, priorities and people being thought about,” Kiisk said. “I would like to see where we are heading as a state.” In the 1990s we were seen as a low-cost manufacturing facility, which we are no longer. Are we a FinTech country or still a tourism country?”
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Kristen Michal previously said expectations from the new government should be kept low. “This way they can be positively surpassed,” he said last week.