『Ep 2: Erick Bremen: The Radical Bet Behind Honduras' Private City』のカバーアート

Ep 2: Erick Bremen: The Radical Bet Behind Honduras' Private City

Ep 2: Erick Bremen: The Radical Bet Behind Honduras' Private City

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

概要

Mr. Henderson sits down with Erick Bremen, co-founder and CEO of Prospera, a privately governed jurisdiction on the Honduran island of Roatán. Rather than debating politics inside fixed national rules, Prospera asks a more radical question: what if the rules themselves are the product? If governance can be redesigned like software or a company, can better law actually outperform the nation‑state?

Early in the conversation, Erick explains how Honduras' post‑crisis search for investment opened the door to a Hong Kong–style special jurisdiction, backed by private capital but embedded in Honduran sovereignty. From there, they walk through what Prospera looks and feels like on the ground, why it runs on common law and arbitration, how it became the first place to allow full Bitcoin unit‑of‑account operations, and how the project fits into nearshoring, BPO, and broader Central American development.

In this episode, Andrew and Erick discuss:

● Why Prospera exists at all - Honduras opened the door to a privately run, Hong Kong‑style jurisdiction so it could test whether better rules, not just more aid, could drive real development.

● How Prospera treats governance as a service: a common‑law framework, for‑profit arbitration in place of traditional courts, and a revenue‑share deal where Honduras earns without putting up capital.

● What life and work in Prospera look like today, and more about the resort‑meets‑startup hub on Roatán that blends tourism, young founders, crypto and biotech companies, and a growing community of remote workers.

● How Prospera plugs into global money and crypto: Bitcoin approved as legal tender and usable as a full unit of account, plus clear, entrepreneur‑friendly rules for crypto and financial firms.

● Where the real economic upside lies: bilingual Honduran talent for BPO and professional services, plus a planned mainland hub near La Ceiba aimed at agro‑processing, light manufacturing, and nearshoring to the US.

● Why Erick thinks this model matters beyond Honduras. How it provides long‑term legal stability, proof it can survive hostile politics, and active interest from other countries that see competing jurisdictions as a way to unlock growth.

Follow Erick: Erick Brimen | Prospera
Andrew Henderson: Website

まだレビューはありません