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Dr. Justin Robinson, Department of Management Studies, Cave Hill, UWI

In its most recent review, published on November 13, 2009, the Credit Rating Agency, Standard and Poor’s (S&P) affirmed Barbados’ investment grade international credit rating, but adjusted its outlook from stable to negative.  The S&P report has generated much public comment and debate on the state and management of the Barbados economy, as the economy wrestles with an economic crisis of biblical proportions, the worst since the great depression of the 1930s. I propose in this brief article to offer a perspective on the performance of the Barbados economy utilizing three widely used metrics of economic performance, the level of employment, the level of foreign exchange reserves and the state of public finances.

At the end of the third quarter of 2009, the un-employment rate in Barbados was reported at 10.1%.  Table 1 presents data on the un-employment rate in Barbados since the year 2000, as reported by the Central Bank of Barbados.

Table 1

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Unemployment Rate
9.4% 9.9% 10.3% 11.0% 9.6% 9.1% 8.7% 7.4% 8.1% 10.1%

The data suggests that the average un-employment rate in Barbados over the last decade has been 9.36%, and the median 9.50%.  Readers may want to note the increase in un-employment in the aftermath of the mild global economic slowdown after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York.  Due to the structure of the Barbados economy with its heavy reliance on tourism and international finance, we are uniquely vulnerable to global economic recessions.  Given the magnitude of the current global recession, an un-employment rate of 10.1%, after well over a year into the current global economic crisis, represents a measure of success to date. I am inclined to credit this to the commendable restraint shown by the private sector in terms of layoffs, and the choice by the government to maintain levels of employment in the public sector as well as implement a moderate fiscal stimulus.

In a press release of November 13, 2009, the Central Bank of Barbados reports that current levels of foreign exchange reserves provide 20.7 weeks of import cover, well above the accepted norm of 12 weeks import cover.  Readers may want to compare this to the recession of 1991, when reserves provided 2 weeks import cover.  Barbados does not appear to be in any imminent danger of an exchange rates crisis, or have any need to enter into an arrangement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).  The fact that Barbados appears likely to emerge from the current global economic crisis with its fixed exchange rate regime and independence from the IMF intact, represents a measure of success in navigating the economic recession.  I am inclined to credit this to the lessons learnt from previous crises, especially the strategy of pre-emptive borrowing of foreign exchange reserves.

In assessing the state of public finances I will utilize the fiscal balance as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).  The fiscal balance is the government revenues minus government expenditure, and the total is then divided by GDP.  Table 2 table provides data on the fiscal balance in Barbados since the year 2000 as reported by the IMF..

Table 2

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Fiscal Balance to GDP (%)
-3.1 -6.2 -12.8 -5.9 1.4 -3.6 -3.8 -6.00 -5.6 -7.1 (proj)

The data suggests that Barbados has had an average annual fiscal deficit of 5% of GDP over the last decade.  Readers may want to note the dramatic worsening of the fiscal deficit in the aftermath of the global economic slowdown after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York.  Given the Barbados economic model of a high commitment to health care and education spending in particular, economic slowdowns wreak havoc with government finances.  Of interest is the worsening in 2007 when there was no global economic slowdown.  I am inclined to attribute the worsening of the fiscal deficit in 2009 to the slowdown in government revenues as a result of the global economic crisis, and the choice by the government to maintain levels of employment in the public sector as well as implement a moderate fiscal stimulus. In this respect Barbados is far from alone.  Economies major and minor, developed and developing have seen their public finances worsen as governments try to mitigate the impact of the worst global recession since the 1930s.  To provide some perspective, table 3 presents the latest figures as reported by the Economist magazine of November 7 2009.

Table 3

United States Japan China Britain Canada
Fiscal Balance to GDP (%)
-11.90 -7.70 -3.40 -14.50 -2.40

In summary, I would suggest that the Barbados economy has performed reasonably well to date in terms of levels of employment and the levels of foreign exchange reserves.  The public finances have, however, suffered as the government has sought to maintain levels of employment in the public sector, and stimulate the private sector by implementing a moderate fiscal stimulus.  The change in the outlook from stable to negative by S&P is largely driven by the increases in the fiscal deficit. The international credit rating is important and the nation should try to hang on to it.  Hopefully we can find a way to maintain desired levels of employment, make the needed fiscal adjustments and hang on to the investment grade rating, in the midst of this deep and stubborn global economic recession.  Given the Barbados economic model, this is far from being anyway near as easy as the S&P analysts seem to be suggesting.  My question is, as raised by my colleague, Dr. Don Marshall, if the adjustments in the fiscal deficit required to please S&P necessitates that the economy be plunged into an especially deep recession, would that be in the best interests of Barbados as an economy and a society?


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178 responses to “How Is The Barbados Economy Doing?”


  1. BARBADOS IS IN DEEP SHITE*(excuse my French) AND THERE ARE FOLKS WHO WOULD LIKE TO HOODWINK* YOU INTO BELIEVING OTHERWISE….

    I offered the PM my advice 2 and a half years ago (FREE OF CHARGE*) – I have the emails to prove it…

    But some folks have to learn the hard way when they choose to pander to popular opinion and follow the “herd” mentality for the sake of political expediency and maintaining power at any cost…

    On the eve of ANOTHER* Independence anniversary – my country has lost it way, politically, economically, morally and spiritually…

    Where there is “NO VISION” – people perish!!!

    Enough said….

  2. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @dreamstarworld // November 28, 2009 at 9:41 PM
    “I offered the PM my advice 2 and a half years ago (FREE OF CHARGE*) – I have the emails to prove it…” [Would you be prepared to forward the relevant messages to David and myself, or anyone who is ‘public’ (such as ROK or Chris Halsall, if I can take names in vain), so that someone else could see this proof?

    Governments are not obliged to take advice, even if free. But the content and response to the messages may tell us something about how to better offer advice so that it is harder to refuse. My interest is largely as someone who has been in public and economic policy making for a long time, and having some sense of how processes can derail good ideas. Thanks.]

  3. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    dreamstarworld // November 28, 2009 at 9:30 PM
    “The FEDERAL RESERVE is not telling the average American that they fear another mortgage crisis in 2010 – 2011 because of the mortgage reset schedule which is coming. ” [Some have argued recently that the Fed is VERY aware, see http://www.dailymarkets.com/economy/2009/11/25/the-fed-knows-another-mortgage-mess-is-in-the-offing/. But it is not a given that the next resets will be as you indicate, see Dallas Fed’s Fisher’s comments in May, http://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-Housing/idUSTRE54E3ET20090515.

    Whether you can understand what the Fed has been saying may determine if you feel you are being ‘told’. The messages of pending problems in housing and other asset classes are there.

    Also, it is not clear which tile will push over a set of dominos. The resets are known events, but any number of unknows could occur before and with worse impact.]


  4. Please crave our ignorance on the matter of mortgage resets. Why wouldn’t financial institutions forgo profit margins to protect the integrity of its loan portfolio. Simply put why not amend the mortgage agreement and reschedule the reset until a better time?


  5. David:

    Stop being so reasonable.
    You are making a mockery of the plan.

    Sincerely.
    Lloyd Blankfein


  6. Poor Dreamstarworld’s nose is out of joint because he “offered the PM my advice 2 and a half years ago (FREE OF CHARGE*) – I have the emails to prove it…” and it was rejected. Looks like we missed the boat on obtaining advice from an economics savant. Dreamstar, my advice is to keep plugging away someone out there may be listening; good things come to those who wait…..

  7. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados

    @David, it is not necessarily a matter of profit margin, but cost of funding the loan. Long term assets are often funded from shorter term sources, so rates on loans are not often far off cost of funding. Wait for better times? If you can be sure when that will be you are a lucky guy. What if we never get back to ‘normal’?


  8. DAVID* IS THE ONLY PERSON I WILL BE WILING TO SHARE ANY INFO WITH AND THAT WOULD BE ON A 1 TO 1 BASIS WHEN I HOPE TO BE IN BARBADOS IN JANUARY 2010….

    As to the comment regarding my (BIG) nose out of alignment over prophetic advice given to the King…. (nothing new there, just read the Scriptures) – too many instances of the words of the prophets, seers and advisers not being heeded, until the writing is suddenly on the wall…

    What is lamentable is that those who suffer are always the poor, dispossessed, marginalized and the affected working classes….

    The rich and infamous continue as always been…

    It’s easy for all of us (including myself) who live in the lap of luxury to point fingers, heckle from the sidelines while jeering and mocking as the Titanic goes down….

    “I TOLD YOU SO” – is a favorite BAJAN* maxim…. But then it seems folks like it that way….

    The attitude of a lot of Bajans (home & abroad) is crystal clear – “I DON’T CARE WA’ THEY DO, IT AIN’T MY BUSINESS”…

    As an educated & literate people, it appears that for most of us “IGNORANCE” knows no bounds!!!

    Again, I will reiterate my position as I did in times past – PM- DT is merely a man in a position of authority because the electorate has put him there…

    If you believe the BIBLE* (as some clearly DO NOT*) – the Word is clear: “GOD* sets up kings and take down kingdoms”…

    All we can do is pray for our leaders to make wise decisions while holding them accountable for those said decisions…

    Equally, we pray that the inspired advice given to our leaders will be acted on so they will do right by their people…

    That’s all any of us can do….

    Anything else is a colossal waste of time and energy!!!

  9. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados

    @dreamstarworld, share as you feel comfortable. However, it is to me intriguing that you wish to keep your good advice so close to your chest as it surely is meant to be for the general public good. Maybe one day we will see good advice as a ‘common’ good not proprietory? One presumes that the ideas will remain relevant. We live in hope for January 2010.

  10. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @David // November 29, 2009 at 10:45 AM It’s hard to generalise, but once you start asking banks to hold impaired loans on their books (which would be one aspect of a rescheduling) other things start to happen. That may involve banks being asked to come up with more capital, for instance. It could also mean that borrowers are inclined to, or are forced to, ‘walk away’ from their loans and banks would then be left with the collateral–houses–which they do not want.


  11. January is such a cold month, a letdown after the Xmas festivities with all the family get togethers, the social activities with the many friends and acquaintances some of whom you haven’t seen for a while. Now, I have something to look forward to in January, Dreamstarworld is going to share his plan to save the world or at least Barbados with David. Xmas? What Xmas?

    Delusions of grandeur anyone?


  12. Hey Guys,

    I apologize for the act of public non-disclosure at this time due in part to an agreement between friends….

    I cannot share what is sacrosanct…

    Sorry to be a “Scrooge” at this festive time of year…


  13. @ Denis the flip side of the current economical crisis is the theft of properties and institutionalised fraud performed within the legal circles. Firms are acting in collusion breaking data protection laws, with favour exchanges between each other manipulating the legal process undervaluing properties for foreclosures and racking up extortionate legal costs. Please do not defend the banking and legal scum.
    No sell out !
    p.s. I sent an anon posting to your blog which you are still sitting on, or must have disappeared up your backside


  14. 303.— General control of trustee by the court.
    (1) If a bankrupt or any of his creditors or any other person is dissatisfied by any act, omission or
    decision of a trustee of the bankrupt’s estate, he may apply to the court; and on such an application
    the court may confirm, reverse or modify any act or decision of the trustee, may give him directions
    or may make such other order as it thinks fit.
    I Need A Roof

  15. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @kiki // November 30, 2009 at 4:40 AM
    “p.s. I sent an anon posting to your blog which you are still sitting on, or must have disappeared up your backside” [My blog states very prominently, ‘*PLEASE READ COMMENTS POLICY–NO ANONYMOUS COMMENTS, PLEASE*’, so I may presume you did not want the comment published. If yours was “all trades…” I can assign a name to it and publish on confirmation.

    “the flip side of the current economical crisis is the theft of properties and institutionalised fraud performed within the legal circles. Firms are acting in collusion breaking data protection laws, with favour exchanges between each other manipulating the legal process undervaluing properties for foreclosures and racking up extortionate legal costs. Please do not defend the banking and legal scum.” [So, did banks did lend for properties that were correctly valued or undervalued initially? If they are undervalued now ‘for foreclosures’, where is the residual value going? I cannot dispute ‘extortionate legal costs’, but that is a generic problem with the law as practised worldwide.]

  16. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @kiki, “manipulating the legal process” is meaningless. Laws are not absolute, and the mere matters of interpretation, presentation of arguments, and judgement, mean that the law is to be manipulated. If it were not so, one would need only have a ‘check box’ system and wait for results to pop out.


  17. DJ yes you may i confirm the above anon statement. properties are being foreclosed by creditors and debt buyers without original loan notes for petty amounts. the extortionate legal costs was an understatement which should be treated as fraudulent.

  18. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @kiki, the comment has been published.

    However, you want to look at it, nothing has an intrinsic value, and nothing other than a person’s life can be claimed to be truly owned. So when we discuss what something is worth, or who has rights to it, it’s a matter of degree how much anyone one can say the ‘property’ has been extracted. So, it we are to engage on that debate let’s not be partial, and we always need to go back to origin, rather than end points.

    We all engage in ‘games’ about value, and win or lose because they are all gambles of different order. Life is possible, but death is certain. In between, we take chances.


  19. dj thanks for publishing the post eventually.
    re: mortgage or asset backed securities
    Instruments bundling sizable mortgage portfolios will by definition be big and highly lethal potential risk exposures especially when markets crash


  20. BU stands by its previous comment regarding the amendment to mortgage agreements which would assist homeowners in the US who are out of work to keep their homes. If banks subsidize the cost of funds rate it supports the BU point that they will be giving up margins. Bare in mind the market in the US has a close to 0% interest rate on deposits for some time now if we want to talk about cost of funds. There is also the ridiculous situation where homeowners in the US have equity which they could use to offset current financial difficulties but for banks in the US it makes more sense to foreclose on the homeowner, they make more money if they do so is our read of the situation.

    Let Barbadians pray the banks in Barbados don’t go down that street.

  21. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @David // November 30, 2009 at 7:55 AM
    “If banks subsidize the cost of funds rate” [Once you say subsidy, you must accept that you are giving someone financial assistance. Your argument is that banks can afford to pay this and give up on some profit margin. But, the US banking system is currently running losses in major part, so their losses wont decline at best and will get bigger at worst. Also, with the current ownership, your subsidy is really a charge on government. That may be the best way to deal with it, and then tax payers can decide if that is what they want, and deal with repaying the debt/dealing with the deficit being created.]

    “market in the US has a close to 0% interest rate on deposits for some time now if we want to talk about cost of funds.”[Banks are not getting all of their money near to 0%. Maybe the best can for some of their funding. But look for instance at the WSJ table on rates, http://www.bankrate.com/rates/interest-rates/wall-street-prime-rate.aspx. If banks pass on the true costs of funds across all of their business it would be near zero.

    If equity value is less than the loan what do you expect to do with that? It was reported last week that 1 in 4 US borrowers is ‘under water’, ie has negative equity in housing, see http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/11/24/business/econwatch/entry5760111.shtml?tag=cbsContent;cbsCarousel. You cannot use negative equity to offset ‘difficulties’.

    Banks dont really have a big incentive to foreclose as they end up with devalued assets for which the market is weak.]


  22. Dennis,
    its the credit card companies that are
    ruthless cowboys, mortgage companies
    are not properties repossessing per se.
    but their offshoots are


  23. Off interest about Credit Rating Agencies:

    Global credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s, which rules on a company’s or government’s ability to repay its debts, said the announcement "may be considered a [debt] default".

    Our correspondent said: "Standard & Poor’s and Moodys immediately downgraded all six state-backed corporations in Dubai, downgrading some to junk status." Junk is the term commonly used to describe bonds that are rated below investment grade by ratings agencies.

    full article


  24. if you think about it..
    the one thing government’s really hate
    is dirty money that isn’t theirs..
    so maybe the global crisis is to force every one into penury
    to see who survives financially
    as they must be crooks (or agents)
    (b.t.w that’s the problem with the legal system)


  25. financial legislations like the patriot act
    money laundering and surveillance technologies to fight against terrorism etc
    were looking in the wrong direction
    lawmakers are the lawbreakers


  26. […] post: How Is The Barbados Economy Doing? « Barbados Underground AKPC_IDS += "156,";Popularity: unranked [?] Share and […]

  27. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    Useful to see Barbados in its larger context, as reflected first by Moody’s comments about certain Aaa rated countries (such as UK, US, France, Germany, New Zealand, Switerland), http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=abkKiCx36_oE&pos=3. Note important phrases such as ‘but which display, in our opinion, an adequate reaction capacity to rise to the challenging and rebound’.

    Note also that newswires report Greece has just been downgraded to BBB+ by S&P (see warning of this yesterday, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/6755179/Greece-put-on-standby-for-debt-downgrade.html). Again, note comments such as “unlikely to secure a sustained reduction in fiscal deficits and the public debt burden”.

    Heavily indebted countries using the Euro, such as Greece, have characteristics similar to Barbados in their being bound to not changing their exchange rates. As the report notes, ‘Some commentators suspect that Greece is particularly vulnerable to a fiscal crisis, since, as a euro member, it does not have the luxury of being able to devalue its currency or inflate its way out of a growing fiscal burden. It must either deflate and accept slow and painful economic stagnation, or default on its debts…’


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