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Submitted by Bajan Yankee

1. Accountability: Bajans have to start using the power of the vote to elect leaders at all political levels who by virtue of their experience, education and talent can bring about significant reforms to restructure the economy of our nation. The current short sighted emphasis of electing “talking heads” who can’t execute meaningful reforms is killing us slowly. The Westminster form of governance in it’s native form is not working for Caribbean nations as a whole with major reform needed to encourage problem solving vs ridiculous academic and often endless debates the product nothing.

2. Leveraging our strengths: With one of the highest literacy rates in the world the people of Barbados need to be viewed as an underutilized commodity. Government must and can market our masses of educated people to demonstrate why Barbados is the best place for that next call centre or manufacturing facility, which is not occurring today at any meaningful level. They are great Bajan products that can be taken to a global stage, the import export business has been dominated by a few companies who are not doing the nation as a whole much, there is a role for government to play in assisting Bajan products in getting to the world market.

3. Education: Education should inspire innovation, which is the practical use of knowledge. We have an extremely rigid view of education which hinders true innovation.ย  Because a person has a wall full of degrees does not in itself mean they can transform that knowledge effectively in the real world.

4. Solution seeking: Whenever we in the region have a problem supported my the IMF or world bank we think that a bunch of euro consultants can solve it, not the case. We have to start looking inward to consultants that understand our culture and norms. Euro thinking to the exclusion of US and Caribbean thinking in solving matters is and has not worked.

5. Our minds: We have a broad concept of thinking that says “white is right”… Not the case, we have to find outcomes to our thinking that is Carib-centric in all we do politically and economically.

6. Culture: We have to recognize that we are a special people, whenever I speak to folks that have visited Bim they often comment on how nice the people are, yes we are chill people which is a marketable commodity the tourism industry had missed and continue to ignore it’s more than filling empty hotel rooms.

7. Race: A unique form of racism still exist in Barbados, fact. We need to have open and honest discussion on why the colour of ones skin still today, directly parallels what access to financial resources one can obtain. This is one of our more difficult issues to solve as it is so deep rooted.

8. So smart we fail: Having participated in this blog for a while and being in Bim yearly, it is clear to me that local Bajans still have a plantation house slave mentality. They will take you to the mat on academic formalities but have little by way of actionable contributions to problem solving many local view points on this blog completely demonstrate that fact.

9. Redistribution of wealth: This point will totally scare the upper classes of Barbados. White people both local and international control too much of the wealth in Bim, fact. Deep rooted economic racism is why this reality exist. It is time for government to attempt to balance this reality by incubating and supporting black entrepreneurs in an effective wealth building manner….Fair is fair, instead of always giving in to those with deep pockets.

In conclusion, I love Barbados and I’mย  very proud of my island home, these observations are made with my grandmother who raised me in silver sands in mind. She was the first entrepreneur I know as I watched her sell ice having the only refrigerator in our gap.. She had been gone a while now but what she represented at a local gap level what can be achieve onย  the global stage in these troubling times.


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112 responses to “Suggestions On How We Build A Better Barbados In These Troubled Times: A Bajan Yankee Perspective”


  1. Barbados wil never attract low paying call center and manufacturing jobs. Cheap labour is dime a dozen in this region in countries like Mexico, Dominica Republic, Hiati, Honduras etc and not to mention all those surplus of labour in the far east.Our competitve advantage lie not in cheap labour but rather in our small educated work force.We must attract knowedge-intensive industries ( High finance, Medical, pharmaceuticl, IT etc) or better as you rightly pointed out , use our knoweldege resource to do research and development.I agree we need to foster a culture of innovation ….our food and beverage sector comes to mind in this endeavour. It makes no sense announcing to the world about our literacy rate .and free education
    but have nothing substantial to show for it.


  2. What did we learn growing :have a good education; Get “A”Levels or O”level certificates. Then become a teacher, a Nursepreferably go to England. No !we were not taught to be entrepreneurs we were taught to slave for others. That is why the country is in the position it is in now ,having to get outsiders to come in and help build the bajan brand.!!


  3. The main problem is that we stopped being Bajan and started being more Bajan Yankee! Anyone that studied the “real” history of Barbados would realise that ironically Barbados was more resourceful, more innovative, more entrepreneurial, more resilient and more independent during colonialism than we are today.

    Start your protests. (b.t.w. I never said that life was good for most Barbadians or that racism and inequality were not the foundation of past Barbadian society.)


  4. B.Y,
    Good article.

    Bajans are enslaved in their minds/culture, made worse by the people who represents them.
    We are perhaps 97% literate but is not easily detected through communication.

    We are trained ‘parrot fashion’; to obey, not to ask questions but accept what is told.

    When most young people go to a place of employment, they often have difficulty adjusting; they must decide for themselves and this is responsibility never dealt with before.

    We have already been brainwashed into thinking in a particular way.The slave mentality is being forced upon us by our own people.

    You must think and behave in a particular way. Don’t question authority, whether it is your teacher, police, or parent!

    Our politicians have now become our slave masters to some degree, fuelled by greed.; the “I am alright now mentality”.

    Will there be change? I can’t see it in the near future, except some strong foresighted person sees where we are heading and come to our aid.

    Wil it happen? the answer is up to the readers!


  5. ac wrote on // April 9, 2010 at 9:53 PM …”What did we learn growing :have a good education; Get โ€œAโ€Levels or Oโ€level certificates. Then become a teacher, a Nursepreferably go to England. No !we were not taught to be entrepreneurs we were taught to slave for others.”

    Please explain to me how being a teacher or a nurse=being a slave. And can you tell me if white teachers and nurses are also slaves? Or is it only a lack people thing? And can you also explain why you believe that being an entrepreneur is the highest good? And is it indeed the highest good?


  6. Instead of criticising we ought to find ways of supporting each other. Bajan Yankee has made a lot valued comments what I would like to see happening is more mentoring by entrepreneurial people to the younger generation encouraging them to start up their own businesses,if food and accommodation can be made more affordable people would have the courage to do what some may say or call the impossible .What is always at the back of ones mind,when one thinks of doing some thing adventurous is can i feed my self tomorrow what will happen if things go wrong.And yes all of those certificates don’t mean any thing when you can’t put into practice what knowledge you gained in those years of formal education,being surrounded by so much ocean can we use it to our advantage,one idea can we have a mariners school collage where people can come and learn to navigate and learn to sail ships,dive schools scuba and like,another thing we need to stop doing is exporting money, yes exporting money we inviting tourist in get their money and then going up to Florida and importing beef and the like to feed them i call it exporting money


  7. @J

    My point being that we give our knowledge to foreign countries where we worked very hard for others and get very little back in return.


  8. There is no one solution to the issue of what path Barbados should follow to to sustain itself. For example foreign exchange inflows from Barbadians living and working abroad is significant for us. We have always exported labour because on a little rock opportunities are limited. We therefore can’t knock the idea that we export nurses, policemen, doctors, hospitality workers and the like. We have to make sure we plan in such a way the domestic market is well served. We have discussed our education system and the need to place it under the microscope regarding relevance. We have discussed the need to reform our civil service which is critical given the government is a critical cog in the wheel to Barbados becoming a world class competitive jurisdiction.

    It is heart warming to read the comments and contributions coming from Barbadians at home and particularly overseas. We are all in this together. Barbadians it seems always want to contribute to the little rock from wherever they are located. Let us keep the dialogue reading because we know people in positions of leadership are reading.


  9. I do believe that if barbadians were given a chance to own their business in past years. They would have been more Bajan owned Stores in places like Swan Street.


  10. @ac

    I have to agree with you that the only thing wrong with our society is that we have not given ourselves the chance to grow. Bajan Yankee is just another interference. While ours is not a perfect society, show me one?

    Furthermore, with all the advice and fingering of what is wrong in our society, just try fingering what is wrong in Yankee society.

    We have a culture. We have a way and we can only but grow out of our roots. Bajan Yankee has gone and adopted a different root. It is not our root and what works for them in the main does not work for us.

    The power of the vote is a good one. We have been doing it for years. We graduated from corned beef and biscuits to Grantleys.

    Neither the Westminster system or the Republic system is any good for us. We have tried to incorporate democracy in both systems but have failed. We don’t understand democracy. We think that it means you can do as you like and that once you follow the rules all is well, but even the rules in themselves are not democratic in nature.

    We live in a system that was set up so that certain people can get what they want. Others will get through the door too but on the whole, not many will be able to squeeze through and when they do, you change the goal post.

    The only thing we need to do is shed the colonial mentality as America shed theirs and grew into what they consider to be the most powerful country, but what we have to be careful of is that we don’t replace the colonial mentality with a neocolonial (American) mentality. If our society is to develop, it ought to do so without interference, otherwise we are doomed to start again when that interference withers or dies.

    There is nothing democratic about America. That country alone calls the shots in the OAS, in the UN and is keeping an unreasonable embargo against Cuba in place. Furthermore, they have created an imaginary terror in this world all on their own. Then think about New Orleans and then landing troops in Haiti as priority over humanitarian aid. Yet if there is one country in this world that can be declared bankrupt, it has to be USA. Are these the things we are to emulate? What society what? USA don’t have a thing for us. Not a single solution. I find this very hypocritical; maybe even the same “Bajan colonial mentality” that we here need to get rid of, but in a different skin.


  11. @ROK

    Let us accept that Bajan Yankee is a Barbadian who although living off-rock is entitled to share his experiences and perspective about how we can work to keep our society productive and wholesome. The fact that many of us have concerns about the direct Barbados is taking does NOT mean that Barbados is not a good place to be. What it means is we recognize the need for constant dialogue, itโ€™s the nature of the beast.


  12. @ac
    “My point being that we give our knowledge to foreign countries where we worked very hard for others and get very little back in return.”

    To put it more correctly, we keep getting set up to be raped. It is a 400 year old crime being perpetrated upon us. We have become like robots, supplying the labour for ….


  13. We is often want to say that Barbados lacks in different ways. But do we?

    I mean i wouldn’t call Barbados a poor nation, because we don’t have any ‘ghettos’ in the true sense of the word. Poor in Barbados usually mean that you live by your uncle and you don’t have more than 3 pairs of shoes.

    Poor in other most other nations means you live on the edge of a land fill and spend most of your time digging for some sort of sustenance. I really think Barbados has done a remarkable job at maintaining a very high ‘minimum’ standard of living.

    Where we are wrong is that we have the wrong definition of what being developed is. The ‘first world’ says they are developed, but still the leaders are desperately pushing there nations to be ‘green’ and ‘sustainable’ i suggest we try to leap frog the ‘first world’ in our quest to be develop and be green and sustainable as well.


  14. @David

    “Let us accept that Bajan Yankee is a Barbadian who although living off-rock is entitled to share…”

    So share, I have no problem with that, but you know, one can look at an attractive person and still point out flaws… but the flaws are part of the beauty…


  15. @ROK

    Do you accept that although Barbados is a successful nation relatively so, by our own standard we have to remain vigilant to ensure we can sustain our level of success hence the current national dialogue about rebalancing the economy, perceived moral degradation, public sector reform, enabling an entrepreneurial class etc. Let us all discuss because we all care about the rock.


  16. @David

    I think that the stage we are at, with all the discussion and dialogue, we are seeking the means that will help us deal with turbulent times. The problem is that we are seeking solutions that lie within the system not realising that the system is the problem in the first place.

    I would therefore like to discuss the system. To start with, what is money? Where does it get its value? Start with the rudiments, how can we produce value? What is value and wealth? Then let us deal with our health and after that, justice.


  17. @ROK

    You can be as esoteric as you want but by your own admission we are IN a system. The more relevant or pragmatic view is how can we optimally survive IN the system. We canโ€™t change the rules of the system can we?


  18. @David

    “The more relevant or pragmatic view is how can we optimally survive IN the system. We canโ€™t change the rules of the system can we?”

    You are wrong here, of course we can change the system. It is a question of perspective. The DLP made bus fare for school children free. The DLP established a system of Constituency Councils, which, if allowed to work can bring about a serious change in the governance structure of Barbados.

    The three most important changes, however, must be in education, banking and justice systems.


  19. @Rok
    “I have to agree with you that the only thing wrong with our society is that we have not given ourselves the chance to grow. Bajan Yankee is just another interference. While ours is not a perfect society, show me one?”
    This statement is filled with bile,along with the whole thing that you have written,if you have had a bad night last night i would suggest that you go back to bed with an ice pack on your head and please don’t kick the the cat or dog on way back to bed


  20. david can you remove my e mail address


  21. @ Anonymous who wrote “Anyone that studied the โ€œrealโ€ history of Barbados would realise that ironically Barbados was more resourceful, more innovative, more entrepreneurial, more resilient and more independent during colonialism than we are today.”

    Bajans have dove very well with limited resources and finances.

    No matter how good an idea is, you always need start up cash especially if you manufacture a product for export.

    There is also the difficulty of getting Bajans to Invest in Business ventures. Bajans making $10,000 or more per month are more likely to spend on a mansion and a bimmer than a startup business venture.

    Future prosperity in Barbados is likely to depend on Financial services and online business.
    The Tourism business will continue to do well in the future because people who live in the cold will vacation in the heat.

    Just remember that it was Bajans who built Barbados into what it is today.
    Hardworking Bajans did back breaking work in canefields,quarries and on the wharf etc. Sent their children to school where most got a better education that their parents and became Civil servants,accountants,Doctors, Engineers Lawyers…

    Now we need good ideas to sustain the progress made over the years and prehaps make Barbados even better.

    I live in Canada and I have visited and worked in a few cities in the USA.

    IMHO Barbados is still one of the best places in the world to live and work.


  22. David many thanks to you


  23. ROK you are a good person and michael i feel you are also but please am not Bajan Yankee but I am feeling like he problem is right now never wants to contribute as a Bajan living off the rock in the US because we always think we know it all. Now you all have to just accept peoples opinion. I was some what shock ROK did not write what he wrote in a different manner.


  24. @Anonymous

    “I was some what shock ROK did not write what he wrote in a different manner.”

    What would be the different manner. All I am saying is that it is a well known fact that societies develop their potential when there is no interference by people who don’t live in it, but think they have all the answers and I am not simply referring to Bajan Yankee, I mean cultural interference.

    There are many Bajan Yankees and Limeys who would tell you that Barbados is their heart but they can’t live here; different life altogether.

    You see, outsiders (people living outside) can talk as they like, the bottom line are those who are living in that society; the decisions they make and the life they choose to live. Now I would have no problem if Bajan Yankee came home to live and was battling it in the trenches, then he/she can spout, but to take a few pot shots and run is just not cutting it.

    In the end and as David said, everybody is entitled to their opinion. What matters are the minds of the people living and working together.


  25. @ROK

    Maybe we are saying the same thing.

    The system referenced in earlier comment cannot be viewed in a domestic context only. The world which Barbados has to operate in e.g EPAs, cultural penetration all kinds of treaties and protocols makes changing the system in which we operate not a simple process. Any society which we plan for ourselves is heavily influenced by the interconnectivity of the world in which we live now.


  26. @David
    “Any society which we plan for ourselves is heavily influenced by the interconnectivity of the world in which we live now.”

    I know that we are saying the same thing and seeing the same problems but the approach to a solution is slightly different. While you are thinking that the rest of the world impacts us, I am saying that we are sitting and allowing it to happen as a matter of dependency rather than interdependency.

    Let us not discuss size. How big was Rome when it ruled the world? What about Britain?

  27. ''''''FIRE'''''' Avatar
    ”””FIRE”””

    OFF TOPIC but very important to me

    MY PARTNER IS SOMEONE WHO ANSWERS A QUESTION WITH A QUESTION–DOES ANYONE ELSE HAVE THAT PROBLEM

    The answer brings the noise or more like the response brings the noise because there is harly an answer


  28. @David

    You know, one of the mechanisms that helped black people in England was the creation of allotments where people could go and grow their food. Let us face it, we cannot do without agriculture. Everything comes from it; food, clothing and shelter.

    We are said to have some of the most potent aloes but we import refined bottles of poor quality aloes as hand cream, etc. and feel comfortable doing it. It is the thing to do because we don’t make hand cream, right? Nor can we make any, right?

    We import soap, yet we have all the scents and many know how to make soap. White flour is giving us diabetes but yet we get there with the Canadians to build a flour mill that makes us sick. Meanwhile, we have turned our minds against the cassava and yam that we should be eating.

    We are surrounded by sea water and sea salt is the best, but we allow foreign investment to come here and pollute our waters and never a fella tried making sea salt because salt on the market is so cheap. BTW they should tell you that the salt is full of chemicals.

    We have all the sun you could want and all the sand too, yet we have not done anything with solar technology. This thing seems so hard, but others are producing who don’t get half the sun we do or have the sand.

    With all the GM foods that we are ingesting and the chemicals we using, we are getting sick. Our health and food bills are astronomical and this can be avoided. We have come to realise that the job that paying us the money to live don’t give us the exercise we need to be healthy; so what are we following?

    I refuse to be stuck in the mindset of comparative advantage at all stages. Whether or not it is done cheaper elsewhere, we should be doing ours here because then we are sure about what we are producing for our own consumption.

    Of course, there are many more examples, from sweets to fuel to clothing to shelter. So while I am all for interconnectivity, I think we need to be stakeholders and not mere consumers. At a meeting of Internet Governance, I made the statement, “we trying to control what is not ours, we have no stake in it but we want say.” I was looked at as if to say, this man knows nothing about internet governance. Realising what I was up against, I simply retreated.

    The simple fact remains that we don’t have to rely on the USA for internet, only for interconnectivity with them to complete the grid and every country should have their own internet and then interconnect. Before there was internet, we had our BBS which quickly disappeared when the internet monopolist came.

    It is my opinion that we have been pushed into dependency and we are accepting the brainwashing that would maintain it. We need to understand what it is to maintain a family; certainly not going out to work so you have the money; to buy poor quality food that makes you and your family sick and then have to turn around and break yourself at the doctor. What are you working for then? Only to pay bills?


  29. Some good points ROK, we have become trapped in the mindset which our politicians have bought into i.e. we need services, tourism, offshore etc to drive the Barbados economy. While this is true to some extent we need to understand that we have to manage risk. We need services yes but we also need to leverage home-grown strategies, thinking, resources to maximize how our country can perform to the optimum. Currently because of the thinking which says we have to direct significant of our resources at tourism and the offshore sectors we have seen a cluster of activity which is influenced by it. No doubt this skewed approach has led to a mendicant/lazy mindset which has resulted in some social ills. We have become a lazy society in the last decade choosing to take the path of least resistant.

    Your point about the Internet and being able to use it to support local enterprise is an interesting one. A look at this at work can be seen in South America. They use the Internet in the same way North Americans use for commerce. However we should note the big difference. Using the Internet to spur commerce can only happen if the financial institutions are on board. We need the banks or some government sponsored proxy to drive the support for business on the Internet. So far we have heard only lip service. It is one reason BU has always supported a large bank or financial institution owned by Barbadians. We currently have international banks in Barbados who offer these services elsewhere but the smallness of the Barbados market seems to be a turnoff to introducing here. Our political parties have become so use to making every issue politically partisan that constructive engagement appears to be an elusive exercise. Unfortunately we live in a Barbados which is led by the politicians. Until they get their heads out of their asses and recognize the old model has done well to get us this far but we have to change gears we will year by year head to the poor house. Perhaps this is what Bajan Yankee is talking about when he wrote โ€œ. Accountability: Bajans have to start using the power of the vote to elect leaders at all political levels who by virtue of their experience, education and talent can bring about significant reforms to restructure the economy of our nation.โ€


  30. @ROK

    re:comment April 10 9.34 am
    Exactly! couldn’t have said it anybetter. I can never understand why people would go to build another country when they an use the knoweldge to do the same for their country. The irony of it all is that when they get too old to contribute any thing of real value
    to that countrythey are pushed aside and in the meantime theyhave gained very little of anything of real valuein the years they spent living there.

    @Rok .
    How about your birthday !Hope I haven’t miss it.In any case HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

  31. Angry Yank-E Bajan Avatar
    Angry Yank-E Bajan

    I think Caleale makes more sense. He’s a Bajan Yankee, but he doesn’t think like “Bajan Yankee”. More like Bajan disgrace. Caleale offers some thoughtful insight and promotes Bajans to become more concerned about their economy, even when they’re abroad. So I wouldn’t say that Bajan Yankee’s mentality is a Yankee mentality. There are Yankees that are truly concerned about their country’s development.


  32. BTW ROK forgot to mention that although Bajans on the rock have to be the ones to shape Barbados it does not mean we can’t listen to feedback from all quarters.


  33. David,

    Accountability in the Barbadian political context cannot be limited to the use of a vote at election time. The DLP skewered the BLP last election campaign with charge upon charge of corruption and malfeasance and used lack of accountability very effectively to bring down the Government through the exercise of the vote.

    In order to achieve this, though, the DLP promised that it, if elected would be accountable to the people. It promised an end to corruption. It promised a declaration of the assets of its members. It promised integrity legislation. It promised freedom of information. It promised us ACCOUNTABILITY. And the people, with hope in their breasts, answered their call.

    We have been treacherously betrayed. The DLP lied and knew that it was lying and what do we do…nothing. We talk about holding them accountable at the next election. And re elect who? the last lot, who we have good reason to believe were in fact corrupt? Don’t even mention the PDC. And most of the people who were complaining bitterly about the lack of accountability in the last lot have gone silent. Damn hypocrites.

    How long are we going to continue allowing ourselves to be victims of politicians’ lying and greed and hunger for power? We need to be more pro-active in holding our elected officials accountable, because it is the nature of the Barbadian politician to sneer at the principle of accountability once in office.

    They are not going to submit to higher standards of accountability unless forced to do so. And only the people can do it. All that’s lacking is the will. And the politicians know it.


  34. @Rok, who wrote”I can never understand why people would go to build another country when they an use the knoweldge to do the same for their country.

    I respectfully suggest that the majority of Overseas Bajans left Barbados with no more than Primary school or Secondary school education and continued their self improvement in their “new” home.

    It appears most have contributed to the betterment of Barbados by remittances and building homes in Barbados thereby providing employment for Bajans.

    “Overseas Bajans” are a profit centre for Barbados.

    Hopefully we will see more Bajans returning at a younger age when they an use the knoweldge they acquired Overseas to do the same for the country of their birth.


  35. @Hants

    “@Rok, who wroteโ€I can never understand why people would go to build another country when they an use the knoweldge to do the same for their country….”

    Sorry, but I did not write that.


  36. @ac
    Thanks for the birthday wishes, you were only 9 days too early.


  37. @Rok and people with his point of view

    “There are many Bajan Yankees and Limeys who would tell you that Barbados is their heart but they canโ€™t live here; different life altogether.

    You see, outsiders (people living outside) can talk as they like, the bottom line are those who are living in that society; the decisions they make and the life they choose to live. Now I would have no problem if Bajan Yankee came home to live and was battling it in the trenches, then he/she can spout, but to take a few pot shots and run is just not cutting it.”

    i don’t know who you speak with or who you have spoken to but let me say this every thing a person tell you is not always the truth and when a person tell you some thing in what context are they making the statement,paragraph one in the above statement

    that is such a loaded statement,are they talking about the slow pace of life,are they talking about the attitude of service they get in some shops,are they talking about how they are being treated by some family members,are they talking about the driving standards,some time people say things for the sake of saying them

    The outsiders as you call them did not choose to live out side it was a matter of circumstances,you should give thanks that you have an academic ability not all of us have that,so what would you like the ones who have not got your ability to do sit on the block for six months of the year waiting for a job that may not come, when a person live out side of bim life does not stop people start families and families have to be fed, so people find them self trapped in circumstances they have no control over what would you like them to do?bring a family home that they can’t feed if bajans did not like bim they would not send money home the amount of money sent back by bajans living abroad is substantial they don’t vote yet you want to condemn them for voicing an opinion you should be picking your fights with mp’s that were in power for the 18 years and now that they are out of power they family come first so now they are off to Canada,most bajans living abroad promise them self when circumstances permit they would love to return and is what they try to do most bajans love their place of birth even with all its faults.as for pot shots you should go and check with central bank how much pot shots were deposited with them over the years from from bajans living abroad


  38. @David
    “…it does not mean we canโ€™t listen to feedback…”

    I thought I made my position clear on that. Anybody can make their comments, I have no problem with that. All I am saying is that the answers do not lie in imposing a foreign system as we see from our colonial experience. No amount of correction will reduce the problems unless as you say, we resort to home grown measures.

    One thing though, it seems that the USA have more power on us than they have over its own states. California has already decriminalise marijuana and is getting ready to legalise it, yet the same USA is pushing us into spending millions in the fight against marijuana. Would Barbados dare?

    Now this is what I mean by self determination. If we had self determination instead of interference we would not be in this state of dependency. Why then are we looking to the same nation for answers? The only answers we will get from them is to fall further into the dependency.


  39. Sorry Rok.

    It was ac who wrote
    โ€I can never understand why people would go to build another country when they an use the knoweldge to do the same for their countryโ€ฆ.โ€


  40. @Inkwell

    Can find very little with what you wrote.

    @ROK

    Sorry about that, you are correct.


  41. @michael

    I don’t know that I condemned anybody for having an opinion. I am simply saying that we are looking in the wrong direction for answers.

    Funny you should ask, “…so what would you like the ones who have not got your ability to do sit on the block for six months of the year waiting for a job that may not come…” because you will hear many better-offs talking about the fellas on the block don’t want no work, implying that work is available. Let me say that with all the ability you bestow on me, I too am unemployed but I ain’t going nowhere. I suppose that strengthens your point.

    I do not envy or wish to deny anybody an opportunity which they perceive they have, that is their choice, but I choose to lie down where I made up my bed. I am not going to the USA to tell Bajan Yankees what they should do to solve their problems. You notice how development is pulling us down by making us spend what we don’t have? I am therefore not for development as spouted by the developed world, we must make our own way; socially, politically, economically and otherwise. I would suggest that Bajans at home are doing their best under the circumstances.

    As for the pot shots in the Central Bank, I suppose you here now using your economic power to make a telling point. Wow! So typical, well I never get none of those pot shots.

  42. ''''''FIRE'''''' Avatar
    ”””FIRE”””

    Donโ€™t even mention the PDC
    ——————————

    HOW YOU MEAN –DONT MENTION PDC

    ARE YOU CRAZY
    PDC must be mentioned
    PDC aint come from MARS
    PDC, I believe, is made up of individuals who have rights and they have aspirations. Whats wrong with that.

    Yuh see this attitude of not accepting people as people and likened certain other people to supreme beings—it is what is going to do we in –Trust me

    There are people like you who think that only people like David Thompson and Mia Mottley and others of that ilk can manage BARBADOS or should have all the say -the only say.

    Down with thinking like that

    I am supporting PDC
    ————————


  43. @ROK
    I have no pints that need strengthen, the boys on the block have not got jobs, those people who say that are lying and fooling themselves, as to what can be had out there, what these people want is for the so called boys on the block to work for them for nothing, the big ups, politicians and the land owners have the money, they are paying them self large sums, and true Barbados need new political leaders where they are going to come from I have no idea,i see mia motley singing the praise of tom Adams grand son a white man and i ask my self is this how she is working for the ordinary bajan i have no pleasure in knowing that you have not a job i wished every young man/woman in bim had a job or can be given the opportunity to get one i was there last year when young guy told me of the hard time he was having though he was employed,a lot of what you said at
    April 10, 2010 at 6:30 PM, is true but how are you going to get there i have not clue,let me say this, we that live abroad are not seen as nationals of the countries we reside in we are still seen bajans we dont have the best jobs and some people do the most menial jobs out there


  44. The Modern Sociology Of Barbados: Nothing Changes Unless The Underlying Structures Change

    This is what the research shows:-

    In Barbados, the economic elite is predominately white, either local or foreign born, and the political elite is comprised mainly of people of African descent. Upon receiving independence from England in 1966, the state was taken over by the black middle class. According to Marshall (2001), the new leaders of Barbados were faced with a series of problems, such as high unemployment and social expectations, a militant trade union, limited modern technology, and a savings gap. The new state faced two options: either adopt a developmentalist framework where it would have to force merchant capital to transform itself, or adopt a populist agenda that would allow some social mobility for the masses of people while also allowing the economic elite to retain their hegemonic position. Because the white merchant capital would have threatened to leave the country should they be compelled to transform themselves, the state adopted a populist agenda.

    The Barbados economic class grew out of their control over commercial agriculture and commerce. Historically, their major source of power was control over the distributive trades and agricultural production (mainly sugar). In the post-independence period they consolidated their position in low risk commercial enterprises such as real estate, insurance, finance, import trades, transportation, communication and tourism. According to Marshall, the populist state and merchant capital “eventually became united by the lowest common denominator interest: that is, to reap and extend the benefits of the status quo. Business as usual thus became a simple solution grounded in the need to placate the fears of the elite, while providing the government with income to provide infrastructure and to distribute patronage” (Marshall 2001: 279).

    In a similar fashion, Lewis argues that in Barbados “the dominant class is prepared to make concessions to the dominated classes, provided that the long term interest of the former are not challenged or undermined” (Lewis 2001: 153). The state used revenue from taxes to provide social services for the masses, managed by a state bureaucracy. A new white-collar class emerged based on an expanded state bureaucracy, and a petit bourgeois class of independent professionals. Also, some skills and trades developed that depended on the corporate sector for their success (Marshall 2001). The economic elite were given a protected local market based on the principles of import substitution rather than on export-oriented industry. The hallmark of import substitution is the use of duties and taxes to protect local markets from foreign competition thereby ensuring continued accumulation by local economic elites. This scheme was completed by incorporating labor elites into a formal social pact between the state and capital. Labor unions were co-opted into arrangements between economic elites and political elites by the promise of income redistribution. This means that, in general, Barbados enjoys a relatively peaceful relationship between labor and capital.

    There have been few successful challenges made by the Black Bajan middle class, or organizations such as trade unions that represent working Bajans, against the power of the white economic elite. Lewis (2001) notes how the Black Power Movement, which challenged white hegemony in the 1960s and early 1970s throughout the Caribbean, was stifled in Barbados by the state and the trade union movement. The Government, with the support of the unions, introduced the Public Order Act, the aim of which was to “prohibit individuals from engaging in any serious discourse on race from fear of inciting racial conflict and tension” (Lewis 2001: 158). Another challenge to white economic hegemony came in the 1980s when a group of Black middle and lower class policyholders in the Barbados Mutual Life Insurance Society, controlled by the white elite, sought to have Black directors on the Board. Despite these challenges, the white merchant/commercial elite in Barbados have remained the hegemonic class (Marshall 2001). Following structural adjustment policies in the early 1990s, the Government of Barbados entered into agreements with the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the Caribbean Common Market (CARICOM) aimed at trade liberalization and attracting direct foreign investment. The plan was to have a phased reduction in the tariffs on manufactured goods, agricultural products, textiles, and clothing. The direct implication of such policies is that the protected market enjoyed by the merchant capitalist class would be lost.

    The power base of the local economic elites in Barbados is observable when looking at the contribution of each sector to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The data presented below is for the period 1980 to 2000. The power of local elites is based on their control over the distribution, financial, and tourism sectors. The wholesale and retail sector continues to be the single largest contributor to GDP, consistently contributing between 17% and 22% of GDP annually. The importance of financial services to GDP has increased over the years. In 1980, financial services contributed approximately 12% to GDP; by 1999 it had increased to a little over 18%. Tourism, the largest foreign exchange earner for the Barbados economy, contributed between 9% and 14% of GDP per annum over the period. The contribution of manufacturing to GDP, however, has declined from just over 11% in 1980 to less than 6% in 1999. The populist agenda of the state and its accommodation with economic elites to tax and spend on infrastructure and distribute patronage is evident as the state continues to be the largest employer and the single largest contributor to GDP. During the period under review, the government’s contribution to GDP has been increasing and in 1999 it was over 17% (all figures taken from The Central Bank of Barbados 2000).

    In Barbados, the economic elites are more merchant elites: their power is rooted in control over the distributive trades with state protection. Protected markets allow economic elites to make their profit, and allow the state to tax in order to raise revenues for spending on social programs and employment creation. The social pact with labor makes for a fairly peaceful industrial relations climate as wage increases have been given to keep the working people happy.

    Globalization, however, involves trade liberalization, financial liberalization, and competition and, thus, would put the Bajan economic elite at a serious disadvantage. In such a situation the state is likely to delay the process of trade liberalization as long as possible.

    Barbados’ policy of adjustment, however, did not completely embrace globalization… The social pact between economic, political, and labor elites allowed all parties to be happy and get what they wanted. Business elites got a protected market, the state got revenues from taxes to distribute patronage, and labor was given increased wages. Moreover, the state sought to provide an environment in which the local economic elites could make profits, thereby reinforcing their economic position. This is evident in the policies practiced by the Democratic Labor Party (DLP) in the late 1980s…Something that is still representative of both political parties today…

    TOURISM* remains a protected market under elite control…

    SEE the link below to see the government’s move to help prop up an industry under siege:

    http://cmvlive.com/index.php/news/regional-news/38-regional-news/425-foreigner-good-west-indian-bad–what-mirror-image-is-depicted-by-barbados-prime-minister-for-regional-integration


  45. This is a documentary about a teacher’s experiments that divided a white class of children about 7 years old, by EYE color and shows how in 15 mins friends became enemies. It proves that racism is a learned behavior and has no belonging in any society.

    A must see for everyone that notice the problem of racism prevalent around us.

    http://www.watch-documentaries-online.com/you-are-watching-a-class-divided-by-jane-elliot


  46. @TMB

    Nice!


  47. It is interesting that in recent years we have had Knighthoods dished out to Sir David and Sir Alan who have made their millions from distribution and then there was Sir Roy. It kind of reinforces the point ROK and now TB have made.


  48. @ROK

    Tell THEM. TRUE ! TRUE TRUE!

    I am convince that the same vigor and determination
    that Bajans used in building other countries would have been well served in building Barbados.


  49. @ac

    Unless you can refute Michael’s earlier position that many Barbadians leave to better themselves i.e.improve skills and education and in the process have remitted money which has helped to build Barbados then you need to back up your argument. In fact what you are attributing to ROK is not what he wrote.

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