You have a point, I didn't cover labor/services/exportation. I didn't do this because you have to have a steady, sustainable method for feeding your own population before any of these other things can happen. Otherwise, your only export will be your own people. Call me a cynical bastard, but there's no fault in saying this is an unwinnable situation. The world is going to do what it always does, for the first few weeks it will be a dick-measuring contest to see who can commit the most funds and aid (then barely deliver if at all, see the Indonesian Tsunami), then people will lose interest, a small group of people fleece the donated funds (see the Wyclef Jean foundation, happening a little earlier than normal) the population gets what's left and a little extra help for reconstruction, then everything goes back to normal. Haiti will still be a third-world nation, it's government still be corrupt albeit richer, it won't follow up on any reforestation or environmental programs started by the aid and donations, as a result it's people will go back to being starving, another hurricane will roll along like it does every couple of years, and things will go right back to the way they were. I hate to be so pessimistic, but I also have a few decades of history to back me up.