Hal Austin
Hal Austin

Introduction:
After a few days in Barbados, mostly resting, but spending time with friends and acquaintances alike, I have returned with a feeling of deep sadness for a nation for which I have a very deep affection. But, we have a situation in which the national political discourse has been reduced to a leading minister inviting the leader of the official Opposition to strip naked and run down Broad Street, our main thoroughfare, to grab attention. While, at the same time, the governor of the central bank could announce that the economy is in recession and the minister of finance, the captain of the nation’s economy, did not see fit to respond to, the Opposition did not speak out on, our academic economists kept their opinions to themselves nor did our feeble media see it fit to inform their readers.

As I have said before, the nation is in serious crisis, only this time it is much worse than it previously was. Yet, there is an epidemic of denial: a police force that is imploding and cannot properly guard against organised criminality, medieval religious practices and family abuse. We are a nation that has lost faith in itself, when we could appoint a Canadian – repeat the word, Canadian – as head of our football association and every spare bit of land bought by dubious foreigners because our policymakers are addicted to foreign reserves. The New Barbados has also lost its moral purpose, its sense of decency, as is reflected in the obscenities that desecrate the airwaves as a matter of course; of the total national silence when a toddler can make sexual gestures over an apparently drunken woman at Crop Over, our leading cultural event; when our leading news paper thinks that pornographic pictures of juveniles having sex in a class room is newsworthy. Even more, not a single senior executive or director of the publishing firm has made a public statement about the obscenity. If ever there was a case for ordinary Barbadians to show their power as consumers and ban that publication, it is now. This is a long way from the nation I know as a young man, when, in the 1960s it was exporting people to work on London buses, trains and in the national health service, routinely gave them a printed booklet on how to behave in Britain. Those were days when the nation was concerned about its global reputation as reflected in the behaviour of its citizens.

Others have sensed our weakness when the Canadian owners of Barbados Light & Power, who by rights should not be running our light and power company, is threatening to blackmail us with a gangster threat that unless they get an extended deal to 2040, they will not invest any more in the existing plant. What is worse, government has not told them where to go with their threats and future investments. One explanation for our policy-making weakness is that there is a futile attempt to close down the public intellectual argument with nonsense about undermining the government and de-stabilising the nation. A government that in place of sound policies is resorting to fear and threats of military action to silence opposition. Such folly says more about the advocates of such negativity than it says about the level of the public discourse. On the one hand we talk, boast even, of the level of our public education, then on the other try to avoid or censor debates. A robust public discussion is good for the development of the nation, it strengthens our democracy, improves the nature of public understanding and, as a result, leads to better policy-making.

Managing the Economy:
However, it is to the incompetent management of our economy that we must turn, since our immediate prosperity depends on this. And the paucity of ideas by our political master and technocrats is now official, well sort of: the ministry of finance is inviting people to submit papers on economics and finance; in other words, the ministry is fishing for ideas they can plagiarise, six years after coming to office. This, I offer, is a humiliating climb down for the minister, his apologists, other advisers, the central bank executive team, and all those who offer advice to the government. Some of the minister’s cheerleaders and advisers, such as Professor Frank Alleyne, to my mind need a crash course in economic policymaking. It is tempting to ignore, what to my mind, is the economic semi-literacy of the great Professor, who in a misguided recent statement (if reported correctly) said the economy was well managed. Such ignorance is appalling. Had an A level student written this nonsense I would have failed him.

To fully understand the depth of the mess we are in as a nation, here is a brief glimpse of the global situation. Having a reality check is one of those phrases meant to put down an intellectual rival, but in the case of our minister of finance, the governor of the central bank and our economic policy-makers, there is an urgent need to face this reality. Until the global banking crisis of 2007/8, the global economy had experienced nearly three decades of growth, the highest in global history. Even with the set back of the global crisis, an event that started on the books of the private sector (the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the sub-prime meltdown and the fog of SPVs and SIVs) and later transferred to the public sector in a series of bail-outs, the global economy has returned to higher than expected growth.

By the end of 2011, the total value of the global financial sector – equity market capitalisation, sovereign and corporate bonds, loans, etc – had risen from US$175 trillion at the end of 2008, to $212 trillion at the end of 2010, higher even than it was at the end of 2007, before the global collapse. According to one report: “Still, the recovery of financial markets remains uneven across geographies and asset classes. Emerging markets account for a disproportionate share of growth in capital-raising as mature economies struggle. “Debt markets remain fragile in many parts of the world, and the growth of government debt and of Chinese lending accounts for the majority of the increase in credit globally.” In 2010 alone, global debt and equity grew by US$11 trillion, with debt accounting for $5 trillion and government bonds by a further $4 trillion. New lending in emerging markets by the Chinese accounted for US$1.2 trillion in 2010, while other emerging markets added $800bn. That year, cross-border capital flows reached US$4.4 trillion, 60 per cent below their peak, according to the study.

In simple terms, as a nation, even if a small one, we are missing out in a bad way, made worse by our leaders going cap in had around the world begging for hand-outs. But now is decision time. The government has got a choice of taxing income, or taxing wealth or toughing it out as we decline as a nation. As things stand, it appears as if it prefers that ordinary taxpayers should subsidise the wealthy, including the expatriates who have colonised our West Coast and those who make massive amounts of money from them. If you have any doubts about this, just look at the incentives it gives to businesses like Cost-u-Less, Sandals, and others, or have a quick read of the Tourism Development Act to see what hoteliers can bring in to the country duty free on a promise of creating jobs. Does anyone every follow up these promises?
The redistribution of the nation’s wealth should be the preferred option, social policy number one, for this or any other government, so that we do not have the extremes of dirt poor people, living in hovels, on the one hand, and those on multi-million pound mansions on Royal Westmoreland, on the other. That was the implicit promise of constitutional independence. Further, the economic debate should be about the debt-to-GDP ratio and the continuing spiralling IOUs the government is piling up, not the bogus one of foreign reserves, which is an intellectual con trick. However, for reasons not made public, combined with media ignorance, the focus remains on the foreign reserves mantra.

Improving Services:
But we are not just economic people. How we interact as humans, as citizens of a small island, is central to how we grow. The first principle of having a service economy is the recognition of what ‘service’ means. Sometimes it is embarrassing going in to banks, shops and government departments seeking a service and having to tolerate the most lackadaisical, obstreperous, obstinate of workers, who in better times we are told by NISE, are the best workers in the world.

Vision:
We also need a clear vision of the kind of society we want to create. Any government of national unity must have a clear vision of what the key issues are and what it wants to achieve. First on the agenda in these times must be sorting out the economy in the short term; but putting our young people, our most valuable resource, back in education, employment or training must equally be high on the to do list.

Also high on the agenda must be the role played by the public sector, both in terms of making a contribution to productivity, and therefore growth, and as a key part of the engine of future prosperity. There is no real practical reason why, for example, it should take more than five working days to register a new company in Barbados and make the necessary utility connections to a new office, apart from a collective administrative inertia.

Analysis and Conclusion:
The time has come when concerned citizens, and those who have the privilege of living in our country, should step forward and put in place a dynamic plan for growth. We can no longer wait on an incompetent government and public sector workers who clearly do not have any new ideas. A national culture of profligacy, of denial, of selfishness and greed; a national culture that has lost its moral compass, allowing the leading newspaper to publish, at various times, a toddler making sexual gesture on a mature woman and one alleging sex in a classroom – these are just the symptoms of a decaying society. The danger is that in the absence of any real alternative to collective political incompetence is that there will be a rise of popular nationalism, looking for simplistic answers and rallying round a charismatic leader which will be bad for the nation and could fully reverse everything that Barbados has ever stood for.

The dangerous flirtation with Beijing, the capital of a nation that does not hesitate to sack university professors and journalists for expressing incorrect views, may well end in tears. Barbados is but one of many Caribbean islands, most of them members of Caricom, forming a queue in Beijing to worship our new Chinese masters. We are now all Confucian, or confused. In Jamaica, the country that along with Guyana that should be piloting Caribbean economic growth, senior policymakers have now borrowed to finance a new toll road, giving the Chinese a fifty-year period of grace in which to collect tax-free tolls, and in exchange have given the Chinese 3000 acres at Goat Island. The Chinese, through a company called Chinese Harbour, have taken over most of the Jamaican sugar plantations on an 80-year lease, on condition that they put at least some of the factories back in service, but they have al ready refused to refurbish the factories, breaking the original agreement. Yet, the Jamaican government, like most other Caribbean governments, has refused to enforce the agreement. The Jamaican government is also contemplating withdrawing visa requirements (Jamaicans will still be required to have visas to visit China) and arrangements have been made for 100000 Chinese to visit Jamaica every year; whether these will be visitors or residents is not clear, nor is it clear if the workers building the roll road will be allowed to settle in Jamaica.

That is not the only national humiliation; there is a Chinese owned shop, similar in terms of business model to Costco, in which customers are served through a hatch by two local women. Shoppers are not allowed to browse with their trolleys as in any other supermarket; worse, I am told, when the manager wants to go to the toilets, he locks the two women in like monkeys in a cage so that they cannot serve the waiting customers.
Those who think the Chinese are a soft touch should take a closer look at what they are doing in Africa, the Caribbean and Latin America. This is a modern form of Trojan Horse entryism and will lead, in time, to serious social conflict. All this in the modern Caribbean which, in the English-speaking islands, are celebrating decades of constitutional independence.

I have said before, that flirting with the Chinese is a highly dangerous game; if people imagine that Europeans are racists, then wait until Chinese, Indians and other ethnic minorities get a hand on us Africans. But to our political leaders, the relatively small amounts of money handed down to them from the Chinese politburo, for their support in international bodies and turning an eye to Chinese human rights indiscretions, is a price worth paying. However, like many things, it may all end in tears. If you are seriously concerned about the future of our nation and want to form a discussion group, please email me in the first instance.

184 responses to “Notes From a Native Son: The Time has Come for all True Barbadians to Put Country Before Party”


  1. I cant imagine having massive foreign exchange reserves is a “con”. The con is having a dollar with FX controls and a pegged rate to the US$ of 2 to 1.

    Take a look around you and see the massive import bill we all create which has to be paid for in a currency that has a market to trade in. The con was that we could convince the world the Barbados dollar is really worth half of a US$.

    If you think we can get along without all of the imports, fine we got a chance but unless there is substantial cutback on imports to balance out the reduced amount of what is coming in, the near future is looking bleak..


  2. Hal yesterday you claim you don’t look down your nose at people but today you go after enuff ( usually you would play with his mind but its Friday or you have no time for his comments) what is that then . I feel for the pain you must have suffered having that head jammed up your ass but I guarantee you didn’t learn your uppity attitude from your mothers rum shop. This is your problem trying to relate to real people.


  3. @lawson
    No need to bother with Hal, he genuinely means well with his contributions just that at times he is dead wrong on the facts and inconsistent. Few weeks ago he was pontificating on the virtues of learning Mandarin in school, this week he is demonizing Chinese. The truth is that on this matter of land use etc, I am confident Hal is talking ish and that’s why he ran.


  4. I agree , but if you are going to talk the talk, walk the walk you cant cry about the economy if every time you come home you try and cut corners, cheap out Each year I rent houses or apts even though I could stay with people, because I know the island economy needs the little bit of money I can give them. If every one helps a little it may be a way out of this mess. Other than that I have noticed Hal, is after the whites the soccer players caravan owners etc lately I think he is loosing focus on the real problems.


  5. Hal Austin your are a whole nutcase who pretends to have the perfect solution for each problem and most times you appear aloof, and out of touch. Police officers being charged for criminal offences only shows the integrity and openness of the force. It says that they are not prepared to entertain dishonesty within their ranks ‘clownbert’ Understand that they are making examples of those who seek to sully the image of the organization rather than cover up’ foolbert’. The force is like any other organization where the devious will try to penetrate. It is indeed exemplary of the force to seek them out and place them before the court. And madman please see the issue with the last commissioner as the authorities working to maintain the stellar image of this impeccable organization. Now to those who gambled in your mother’s shop. You are indeed speaking of harbouring gamblers and police to drink alcohol in uniform. Both are criminal offences with liability to the to the owner /occupier of the premises and disciplinary offences for the policemen. Were they caught your mother would have a criminal record. So you see you speak not of the character of the force. Think on it.


  6. Just as a new civilization breaks through and begins to establish themselves as a force to be reckoned with they are demonise and ostracize it seems that as a civilized people even though we have come a long way from being antiquated we have not been able to let go of the many of the obstacles that have got in the way weighing us down and forever getting in our way The Chinese are expectional in that building bridges have not been a problem a technique they have mastered that others can learn from

  7. St George's Dragon Avatar
    St George’s Dragon

    @ Hal
    You say in your response to Lawson “Wishful thinking does not solve a problem.”
    One of the key points in your post is “The time has come when concerned citizens, and those who have the privilege of living in our country, should step forward and put in place a dynamic plan for growth.”
    Government is in charge of the country. No-one else is in any practical position to do much except make suggestions for change.
    That “concerned citizens” should be able to solve the country’s economic problems is indeed wishful thinking.


  8. SGD

    Unfortunately, with the wishful thinking being the MO by those in charge of the country, for those concerned citizens who are now feeling the pain and for those who will be added to the ranks of those feeling the pain, it will not seem like a privilege to be living in Barbados.

  9. Rational Thinking Avatar
    Rational Thinking

    Anyone listened to the Minister of Finance not long ago?

    It is now abundantly clear not only the charge of Wire Tapping and Eavesdropping the only dishonest act she has been involved in but it is also being reported that Mottley has not been paying what is due to the VARIOUS office on both Pelican Football and her billings Four Seasons being one such case, now this is the same one who even while crying down the use of NIS funding for Four Seasons is the very same one and the first to draw her cheques from Four Seasons after the injection of the NIS Funds into the project, what are left to believe about this vicious woman beater and FRAUD and Vagabond oh let’s not forget that she is a Mottley do I need to say anything more ?


  10. Letter writer in today’s nation
    berating Sinckler and Stuart
    the writer is on point
    what is Barbados coming to
    Stuart should have been
    more statesmanlike in response
    to the Sinckler comment
    Very divisive
    These politicians need to be more responsible
    and understand they are the government of all
    and not only fo Dem supporters
    With the election result of 16-14
    Both parties were obligated to together for Barbados
    given the result
    Electioneering and campaigning should stop
    as soon as a result is known
    Winning party shouldpledge to work with opposition
    Opposition- the same-(pledge to work with governing party)

    Too much arrogance and foolish talk is coming the from governing party
    It influences people in the wrong way


  11. ‘ St George Dragon

    Concerned citizens are consumers, a key part of the economy.


  12. @ Rational Thinking
    You see what Rove style politics have done to the United States?


  13. @ Enuff
    I have never pontificated on the virtues of learning Mandarin. To make it simple, you got the wrong person, although I believe in continuing learning.
    I did mention Mandarin, but that is what we used to call irony.


  14. @ Lawson

    You have a problem about talking down to people. I get enough of class and race in London.


  15. Why not discuss the issues?

    It is not an offense to disagree but the personal attacks, what does it achieve?


  16. You are right David but I put my money where my mouth is, each year I get my family home I believe in Barbados and want it to succeed not to forward a political agenda, race agenda or to fulfill some false sense of self importance. I want Barbados to succeed because of a genuine love of the island and its people white or black .. dlp or blp.. can a lot of you say the same


  17. Barbados will make it but we will have to negotiate heavy turbulence for a while.


  18. However with all tne naysaying abot the CHINESE .they have outsmart outmaneuverd. and managed to out performan most of the leading giants .One being america and Britian who have been caught like a deer in the highlights as they economies faltered and China keeps moving upward. Right now neither Britian nor america can offer any of these poor countries hope as they struggled with burdening debt as a lost hope turn to china

  19. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ac | November 1, 2013 at 8:17 PM |
    “Right now neither Britian nor america can offer any of these poor countries hope as they struggled with burdening debt as a lost hope turn to china”

    Instead of making these stupid assertions why don’t you come up with proposals to ease the squeeze on Bim? Why not propose to your imaginatively creative dull administration to copy what the Grantley Adams administration did and make a deal with China to accept some of the locally unemployed graduates and trained people to work in China.
    Many Bajans emigrated to the same Britain and America to ease the employment pressures on their native land. Would China be prepared to offer your kind of people such an invitation?

    BTW, China grows because it is able to dump cheap manufactured goods made with stolen technology and Western capitalism onto greedy consumer markets in America and Europe. No demand for conspicuous goods by the West no China. China is making hay while the sun shines while Barbados rolled in it with all ending back in China, Japan, America for GM foods and T&T for oil; and in Jamaica and St. Vincent for dope.


  20. @millertheanunnaki China is making hay while the sun shines while Barbados rolled in it with all ending back in China, Japan, America for GM foods and T&T for oil; and in Jamaica and St. Vincent for dope
    …………………………………………………………
    But according to today’s Nation ,Bajan made products are now flooding the market on Bush Hill.


  21. Say what anyone might about china demoize! castrate! castigate and much more if one wishes . china isa financial giant who has proven that being last and communist does not have any bearing on how the psyche of poor countries would embraced and embarked out of principal when their survival is at stake. China has been waiting and watching the West like a hungry lion and its thirst for invading poor nations is unquestionable .they have arrived at these nations doorsteps and their is no turning backnow


  22. 10000 Chinese immigrants in exchange for a loan, AND we snubbed our brothers and sisters from Guyana, Jamaica etc

  23. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad

    http://www.stabroeknews.com/2013/news/regional/11/01/caribbean-countries-near-brink-collapse-pm-anthony-2/

    Hall my words are here and been here for a while , Just because you dont call the fire truck , it does not mean the house that the house is not burning,, if you dont listen to US then listen to some one else but please listen to some one,,, Land issue is the key, All on the land will suffer more , but yes we will make it,
    We have the keys , so we know and working on the fix , Truth then the fix


  24. WATCH AND CRY.! watch wunna selves Chinese is going to take barbados.
    dont fool your selves.WARNING FROM ME.

  25. Son of Prodigal Avatar

    Hal Austin’s tirades exclusively target the majority population and the politicians who come from among them. There is a grouping who retain a head lock on the economy who sail by happily and comfortably under Hal’s biased radar.

    Perfect example is COW who in the news praising the PM of one the low islands. Here is a man who became a billionaire off the labour and sweat of the majority taxpayers and politicians on both sides.

    Never has Cow or Bizzy, for that matter any member of the business elites uttered a word of praise or encouragement to local leaders. Local leaders Dees and Bees who they have fleeced for decades. Hal fails to call that tiny mega rich cabal to account.

    Only Denis Kellman a man seen by most as a joke attracts words of praise from Cow and his boys and girls like Francis Chandler. Mind you Kellman got a big portrait of COW family prominent in his Moon Town shop.

    You have to wonder why Cow claim admiration for Kellman? He harmless? He’s not a threat? He easy to manipulate? COW making mock sport of Kellman ?What?

    Cow talks a lot but his deeds depend strictly on big government contracts. Despite government’s generosity he and his ilk not only disrespect this country’s democratically elected representatives and the majority but they don’t invest a cent to get the economy moving.

    Hal let us hear from you if the cold hasn’t frozen your brain. You require the warmth and sun of Bimshire.

  26. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Hal

    A very important PERSON wrote on my FACEBOOK timeline about your rubbish article. I must say their sentiments match mine to a “T”, as I am of the firm belief that you know little about England and nothing about BARBADOS. You just seem to have a lot of time on your hands and you use to write nonsense on the behalf of your Barbados Labour Party in order to blacken Barbados in the eyes of the World.

    “Hal Austin
    ‘’As I have said before, the nation is in serious crisis, only this time it is much worse than it previously was. Yet, there is an epidemic of denial: a police force that is imploding and cannot properly guard against organised criminality, medieval religious practices and family abuse. We are a nation that has lost faith in itself, when we could appoint a Canadian – repeat the word, Canadian – as head of our football association and every spare bit of land bought by dubious foreigners because our policymakers are addicted to foreign reserves’’
    Hal Austin | November 1, 2013 at 12:00 PM |
    The Acting commissioner was reported as saying that some officer were corrupt and he knew who they were. That was reported in the local press. Is he lying?
    We have police officers on bail for alleged criminal offences; we have a former commissioner now taking legal action about his dismissal.
    Ends quote
    This man Austin knows nothing about the UK and very little about Barbados. I will give you a few examples
    (1) Randolph Harris , a bred and born Bajan, was elected last year, 2012 to serve a 4 year period as President of the Barbados Football Association. I have never heard that he is a Canadian.

    (2) Corruption in the Barbados Police Force is child’s play to corruption in the UK Force. Here are some of the captions which made headlines in the UK newspapers so far for the year.
    (a) A vicious crime boss, his corrupt police cronies and a scandal that could have been buried for ever

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2357977/A-vicious-crime-boss-corrupt-police-cronies-scandal-buried-ever.html

    (b)Police corruption openness urged
    http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/421270/Police-corruption-openness-urged

    © Corrupt police officer jailed for leaking intelligence to four different criminals she was having sex with

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/corrupt-police-officer-jailed-leaking-2119340

    (d) An end to ‘police investigating police’: Police complaints investigators not trusted and corrupt officers should have pensions docked, say MPs

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/an-end-to-police-investigating-police-police-complaints-investigators-not-trusted-and-corrupt-officers-should-have-pensions-docked-say-mps-8680722.html

    (e)Police officer arrested in corruption inquiry
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/police-officer-arrested-in-corruption-inquiry-8892961.html

    (f) Police officers and Sun and Mirror journalists charged over corruption

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/police-officers-and-sun-and-mirror-journalists-charged-over-corruption-8799636.html

    (g) Police corruption: Criminals ‘give officers steroids’
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21154316.

    (h) Cardiff Three police corruption inquiry interviewed more than 50 officers

    http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/sep/30/cardiff-three-inquiry-report

    (i) Escort paid corrupt police officer £19,000 to plant evidence on ex-boyfriend
    http://www.theboltonnews.co.uk/NEWS/10728457.Escort_paid_corrupt_police_officer___19_000_to_plant_evidence_on_ex_boyfriend/

    (j) Scotland Yard undercover officers spied on police corruption critics
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/10140184/Scotland-Yard-undercover-officers-spied-on-police-corruption-critics.html

  27. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Hal

    Do you really live in the UK? And you somehow don’t know about all of this going on in the UK or are simply out to fool some stupid Bajans me not included?

    “China doesn’t own the UK—yet

    By Liza Jansen October 22, 2013

    Liza Jansen is a journalist who used to work at CNBC in London. She received a master’s in financial journalism at London’s City University.

    The UK is set to build its first new nuclear power plant in more than a generation thanks to a deal with France’s EDF Energy and two Chinese nuclear giants. This is the latest multi-billion dollar deal the UK has sealed with China in a matter of months. +

    The investment raises the question whether the UK has become dependent on China to keep its lights on, and keep its economy humming. +

    UK prime minister David Cameron was thrilled about signing the nuclear power station deal. He hailed the job opportunities and the energy security the deal would bring—the new nuclear plant could reduce energy bills by more than £75 ($120) a year in 2030. +

    Despite the government’s praise, British trade union GMB said it’s not a good sign if a country’s energy sector requires financial aid from abroad. “It shows Britain is unable to determine its own energy strategy and therefore gets forced to turn towards foreign investors,” said Gary Smith, the GMB’s national secretary for British energy. +

    Other UK energy firms with Chinese stakes include Talisman, which China’s Petrochemical Corp bought a 49% stake in last year; Emerald Energy, which is fully owned by Sinochem Group, China’s fourth largest petrochemical corporation; and Ineos, which PetroChina, China’s largest oil and gas producer, holds a 50% stake in. +

    What’s more, China’s investments in the UK in the past six months aren’t limited to energy firms.+

    Earlier this month, a Chinese billionaire announced that he’ll spend $810 million on rebuilding London’s Crystal Palace, the world’s largest glass and steel building in Hyde Park that burnt down in the 1930s. The Chinese property developer ABP signed a deal in May to revive London’s Royal Albert Dock, once the center of UK trade before the arrival of large container ships, and turn it into the city’s third financial district. And Wanda, the Chinese property group, is going to build a luxury hotel on London’s “new South Bank” site, as part of a £700 million ($1.1 billion) investment in the city. +

    Suwei Wang, partner of the China Business Group at PricewaterhouseCoopers, told Quartz that the UK should not fear becoming dependent on Chinese investments. “The UK has traditionally been an open economy. One of the strengths of the UK economy is its ability to draw on the opportunities of the global economy, and serve as a platform for the global economy.”
    +

    Wang argues that the recent surge in Chinese investments is the result of the London 2012 Olympics. “The UK successfully organized the games, which showed China how open the UK economy is.” She expects the investment wave to continue, especially following finance minister George Osborne and mayor Boris Johnson’s visit to China last week.

    During this visit Osborne said China’s new appetite for investments in the UK should be embraced as an opportunity, not hailed as a threat.+

    The UK is currently China’s top investment destination in Europe, according to Heritage Foundation. Since 2005, China has invested up to $17.8 billion in the UK compared to $9.2 billion in France, the second highest recipient of investment in Europe. +

    In his book Why China is not buying the world, Peter Nolan, professor of Chinese development at Cambridge University argues that the world should not fear that it’s being bought by China. So far, China has been unsuccessful in developing globally competitive companies with leading global technologies and brands. Its powerful multinationals are owned by the government, and are focused on commodities, construction, banking, transportation, and telecommunications. These firms make use of technology products, rather than producing them. There are only 23 Chinese companies in the FT 500, which is why Nolan argues that “we are inside China, but China is not inside us.”
    +

    The UK is going to considerable lengths to get China’s financial backing. Since investments focus on construction projects and the energy sector—and help fuel the UK’s economic growth by creating jobs—it’s currently a win-win situation. If China however continues this pace, the UK economy could actually become dependent

  28. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Hal

    Notice these pointed words by your English PM, “During this visit Osborne said China’s new appetite for investments in the UK should be embraced as an opportunity, not hailed as a threat.”

  29. Let them gather for they shall soon scatter Avatar
    Let them gather for they shall soon scatter

    Son add to that his brother Bizzy injected over one million dollars in cash into the BLP campaign and much more recently another $150,000.00 into the Queens Park Outing and their conference part of which was used to pay VOB for the air time that they paid for to pollute the airwaves last Sunday Morning and then the Crocodile Tears it is pathetic and sad.


  30. Are there no good and honest Barbadians, is there no one who wants to be remembered as a lightning rod for hope on the island. Everyone has an agenda or an ulterior motive if you read all the comments about politicians ,the rich the lawyers etc. no one is sincere. I find that hard to believe Instead of attacking people that cant be shamed anyway if what is said is true focus on the building up of the people of principal and good works that is how change will come. Everyone wants remembered


  31. Amazing that cow and jada can pretend for the benefit of the weak black leaders that they won Barbados in a lucky dip prize and can fight over the spoils…….when will the leaders let the two self-serving pimps, whose only motive is to sell the island out to the highest bidders, know that they are the ones managing the island or are the black leaders too weak to squeak……lol

  32. Back in Time Jack Avatar
    Back in Time Jack

    Bjerkhamn and Tempro want to buy Four Seasons for less than the debt the GOB owes on the property plus they want the GOB to put up US$30 MILLION to buy preference shares. Also their proposal calls for the GOB to pay off US$7.50 MILLION in debts to creditors, the majority of which are Jada companies.

    Bjerkhamn and Tempro offer for Four Seasons is US$60 million subject to the other conditions above.

    The other offer on the table is from Colony Capital of the USA, a US$25 BILLION fund which owns 1,500 hotels around the world including the Caribbean. Their offer is US$77 MILLION but the don’t need the GOB to put in a cent.

    The Minister of Finance has recommended that Bjerkhamn and Tempro be given the property.


  33. @Well Well
    Come on now. It is time to get off that bandwagon trying to demonstrate to the world that COW and Bizzy are the bad boys of the Barbados private sector.Why has no one paid attention to other leaders like Sir Allan fields, lately chairman of BS&T.? Bizzy deserves accolades because he builds up this country. He spends his money and supports local enterprises. COW has accumulated his wealth by dint of hard work and enterprise. give them a break. I have known COW from the day when he entered my classroom at Cawmere (First form..when he got “dustboxed”) before he later went to Lodge. He was not born into money. His break came after the building of the Deep Water Harbour, when he bought the used trucks from Costain and was able to begin his trucking and construction business. It took business accumen and guts to build up his “empire” and maintain it. He is a Bajan like us and must be admired. His colour would have helped during the early days, like many others, but he is still a born and bred Bajan, and we must praise any bajan who is successful. He bought land and invested in property. don’t crucify him for doing what Warren Buffet, and so many other successful entrepreneurs have done. This is the ethos of capitalism. Admire him. Don’t denigrate his accomplishments. Bizzy spent the early years post secondary school studying electrical engineering at UWI. He did not just start out owning big businesses. He worked at Emptage Electrical, (just behind VOB) AND he used his knowledge to progress from there. He is loyal to his country and has the interest of the people at heart. His wife (A BEAUTIFUL WOMAN) is one of us. What does his colour matter? It is what is in his heart that is important and he has shown where his heart is. When are we going to stop pulling down our succcessful people (whatever their colour)and praise them?
    COW and Jada did not foster the concept of “selling the country out to the highest bidder. This was a recommendation of the IMF some years ago, rejected by Prime Minister Sandiford, but wholeheartedly embraced by people, like “Miller’ and his cohorts of Pre 2008 days. Keep your epithets for them. If YOU have the interest of Barbados at heart BUILD it up. How many persons have you invited to visit the island in the last year? How many will you the island. Pledge to stop the criticism; and say at least two positive things about the country, to everyone you meet, and there are many positive things to be said. Pledge to spend at least some time doing something good for the country this year, and above all remember: “There is a little good in the worst of us and a little bit of bad in the best of us.”


  34. @Back in time and for general information:
    Colony Capital:…
    Colony Capital’s strategy is guided by an investment philosophy based on three key principles:

    • Cautious Contrarianism: during downturns or secular changes, investing in out-of-favor sectors or markets to exploit misalignments

    • Exploitation of Inefficiencies: capitalizing on information advantages to identify micro-market imbalances and secure investments on favorable terms

    • Value-added Management to Optimal Exits: creating capital appreciation opportunities through repositioning, restructuring, development, and intensive management

    Seems to me like Bjerkham and Tempro offer is the more acceptable since there is more local control, and at least GOB (thus the people of Barbados) will have some equity in the undertaking.


  35. Time2Act | November 1, 2013 at 10:00 PM |
    10000 Chinese immigrants in exchange for a loan, AND we snubbed our brothers and sisters from Guyana, Jamaica etc
    ……………………………………………………………..
    http://www.stabroeknews.com/2013/news/regional/11/01/jamaicas-weave-imports-set-hit-j1-billion-2013/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+stabroeknewsguyana+%28Stabroek+News%29

  36. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    Back in time Jack;

    Yuh Lie!!!!!!! ?
    Say it aint true. Anyhow we will soon know.

  37. Let them gather for they shall soon scatter Avatar
    Let them gather for they shall soon scatter

    Back in time Jackass, you have not got a clue, go tell lies in Arthur’s backyard not here on BU.
    The real money in the other offer has nothing to do with Jada money, a load of hogwash from another BLP Lout.
    While at it go encourage Mottley to pay the VARIOUS office the money she owes to the Treasury, really a fine model and example of leadership wanna bees robbing from the VARIOUS Office to sustain her football and tell people that VAT had a short fall in income, maybe had she been paying her fair share it would not be showing a shortfall.

  38. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    Alvin; Didn’t read your post above before I posted mine. Seems like you also have some inside information. But if BITJ is correct Colony Capital might still have the edge, given our perilous situation and the need to get and conserve FX. Choosing the Local Multimillionaires seems a bit contrary to the usual MO of this Government, except that it could explain Jada’s need to show a new caring side to its corporate image. It could also explain COW’s reaction to Jada’s new faux philanthropic image burnishing.

  39. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    Alvin; I forgot to ask above. Why does the Barbados Government need to have equity in another Hotel at this time? Does it have equity in the new Casuarina Sandals hotel?

  40. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    And, Wouldn’t it have enough equity in the Almond Sandals Beaches whenever that materializes after being managed by Hutchinson, torn down, built to Sandal’s exacting specifications and then turned over to Sandals for management, all presumably at the Barbados’ taxpayers expense?

    What equity, what?


  41. Whoever gets the go ahead from the government to buy Four Seasons has NOTHING to do with what is best for Barbados or its citizens or the economy. The deciding factor is solely who is prepared to give more money to Sinckler, Inniss and consorts. Anybody who believes differently needs to get a grip on reality

  42. Let them gather for they shall soon scatter Avatar
    Let them gather for they shall soon scatter

    Fed up I think you are confusing yourself with the style of the former now defunct devoid of honest or sensible thinking what was once a Political Party the BLP, it was because of their raping of Barbados that they were put out to pasture.


  43. @ Let them gather for they shall……..
    Nope, not confusing myself. BLP or DLP….. same difference. Coming to think of it, the current bunch is a lot hungrier and also more in a hurry to get money. Must be that they fear they won’t be able to get kick backs for much longer.
    Let me tell you something: a lot can be achieved with simply the magical amount of BD$ 37.000 in an envelope. And if you don’t know that you are a yard fowl who doesn’t have glue of what’s really happening.
    How I wish I was confusing myself. Lot of people indeed voted for the DLP, hoping that the corruption would be less. Sadly, that did not happen.
    Why you think transparency legislation is on the back burner, while it was a hot item during election campaign in ……when 2008?


  44. @C Buggy

    r u one of the product flooding the market at Bush Hill? Just Asking


  45. @AC

    was it the Field man who feeling out the leader of the Union that was represented at the ILO about the organizing a march similar to the 199’s ? Just asking a question.


  46. Alvin Cummins | November 2, 2013 at 12:01 PM |

    @Well Well
    Come on now. It is time to get off that bandwagon trying to demonstrate to the world that COW and Bizzy are the bad boys of the Barbados private sector.
    ________________________________

    Alvin……..you really are a little too weak to speak, you were not too long ago complaining about this same bunch hogging everything on the island, you cannot speak out of both sides of your mouth since you are not capable of being neutral…..too steeped in party politics.

  47. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    A government of the people, for the people and by the people.

    Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg on Thursday, November 19, 1863

    FROM FACEBOOK:

    GUNPOWDER, TREASON, AND PLOT

    In law, sedition is overt conduct, such as speech and organization, that is deemed by the legal authority to tend toward insurrection against the established order. Sedition often includes subversion of a constitution and incitement of discontent (or resistance) to lawful authority. Sedition may include any commotion, though not aimed at direct and open violence against the laws.

    USUALLY, I HAVE A PROBLEM WITH SEDITION LAWS, ESPECIALLY AS THEY TREAT TO INCITEMENT, BECAUSE I FEEL THAT A PERSON SHOULD BE FREE TO CRITICISE HIS/HER GOVERNMENT. BUT IT IS ONE THING TO CALL YOUR PM A JACKASS AND TELL PEOPLE ‘DOAN VOTE FUH HE’. IT IS QUITE SOMETHING ELSE WHEN MEMBERS OF THE PRIVILEGED CLASSES TRY TO CONVINCE THOSE OF OTHER CLASSES TO REMOVE A DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED GOVERNMENT OF 10 MONTHS BY MEANS THAT ARE UNLAWFUL.

    SUDDENLY VOCAL MEMBERS OF THE MIDDLE CLASS AND THEIR MINIONS ARE RUNNING AROUND TALKING ABOUT COUPS AND REVOLUTIONS. WHAT FORRIN BRAND OF IDIOCY IS THIS? ”

    Requel Gilkes

    Never let it be forgotten that there is the “RIOT ACT”.

    A government of the day is legally bound to use all legal means to prevent insurrection and chaos in the country.

    That it owes to all Law abiding Citizens of Barbados.

    All of these Idiots who are calling for Riots in the Land, will be hiding under their beds when the foolish among us heed their unwise calls. When their blood, guts and lives are spilled, and the bullets stop flying, the Cowards who instigated them will then crawl, smiling, from their hiding places under their beds.

    I have no doubt that the Government will do whatever it has to do to maintain LAW AND ORDER in Barbados, come hell or high water!!!!


  48. ccc
    you afraid of losing power and your pick?
    you sound like the jewish leaders in john 11


  49. Are you kidding me, if tourism isn’t bad enough you are talking about riots, how stupid can it get down there. Please somebody with guts step up to the plate preferably the prime minister if laws are broken jail somebody, if people aren’t doing there jobs fire somebody, and if you catch whoever murdered that woman the other day…hang somebody

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