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Hal Austin
Hal Austin

Introduction:
Now that the majority of the developed economies, the OECD-member states, are growing, and Barbados has drifted deeper in to recession, we now await political and business leaders to tell us what are their master plans for rescuing, stabilising and growing the local economy. It means that finance minister Chris Sinckler and his adviser can no longer hide behind the crude excuse of the global crisis for their ineptitude. The ruling DLP is trapped between a lust for power and the development of an applied programme for economic change. We have seen that when faced with a serious economic crisis, it has no ideological depth to fall back on, no ideas of the kind of society it will like to see since its political modus operandi has always been the status quo. As a result it has been forced to seek economic ideas from an intellectually exhausted band of elderly academics who, clearly, have lost touch with new developments in their own discipline. So, like a comedian past his best days who depends on the old jokes told in the same way for his laughs, the old economists resort to their own post-war textbooks for the answers to new problems in a world with a new economic architecture.

Managing the Economy:
But, to coin a phrase, this time is different. Whatever the official explanation, walking on the ground in Barbados sends out all the wrong signals: shopping at Supersaver in Oistins, in the fish market, in Fairchild Street, and in other shops, supermarkets and hawker stalls, the story is different. While the middle classes, the majority of whom are public sector employees, those lower down the food chain are telling a different story: postmen and women are not being paid and are given letters to their mortgage lenders begging for a period of grace; the men and women who sweep and weed the side paths are also forced to borrow from friends and relatives because their wages are delayed; and members of some credit unions are begging them for repayment holidays so they can get their children through university. Yet, some banks and retail outlets are offering cheap credit as if partying on the Titanic.

One explanation could be that the economy is in a better state than critics are allowing for; another is that there is a thriving black market; and, third, the non-banking sector is gorging on a pile of household debt which is mounting by the day. From the advertisements and promotions, I prefer to believe that the retail sector is taking the economy to the edge with its irresponsible lending, which, given the Christmas season, will get worse in the short-term before it gets better. You cannot get anything more irresponsible, to my mind, than the Royal Bank of Canada’s so-called “Spot the Difference Car Extravaganza” held at the Garfield Sobers Sports Complex on November 2. If ever there was a situation in which the governor of the central bank, the minister of finance and the Leader of the Opposition should have spoken with one voice about this vulgar invitation to Barbadian consumers to dig themselves further in debt by a Canadian-owned bank, this was it. These financial brain dead nit-wits were not inviting people to take loans to buy land, or homes, or educate their children, or take out protection insurance, but to buy cars and have them customised and cleaned. Where is the best banking regulator in the world when you need him most? If the RBC bank was really interested in the financial health of ordinary households, not only would they not be offering what can be seen as irresponsible credit, they would instead be offering their account holders decent financial advice. I am convinced they do not really care about the health of the Barbados economy – that is the price you pay for having an overseas-owned retail banking system. In any case, the regulator should have stepped in and stopped this behaviour, that is what financial regulation is all about. Sometimes we have to protect over-excited and materialistic consumers from their own stupidity.

We also have a situation in which the Canadian owners of the Barbados light & Power are in effect threatening the government that if they do not get an extended permit they will not carry through planned investments. Apart from the fact the government should tell them where to go with their blackmail, they should also point out to them that investment decisions are the concerns of their board, not the taxpayers of Barbados. The reality is that for all kinds of reasons some people may find it disquieting that ordinary Barbadians should make claim to the economy of their country. One senior permanent servant once told me that it did not matter who bought land in Barbados since the buyers could not take it with them. Given this flawed reasoning, the same can be said for our vital utilities. I would prefer to rephrase that: it does matter who buys land in Barbados since foreign buyers with multiple passports could always sell up and relocate somewhere else, but locals have to stay put. Our essential services should be controlled by Barbadians, even if not the public sector; they should not be low-hanging fruit for foreign carpetbaggers to come and make huge profits. It will take the IMF top force the government to get rid of statutory bodies and service providers that it should never have had in its portfolio.

The list is long: why should government own hotels, then subsidise a regional hotel chain and local businesses in order to compete with the Hilton and Gems? Sell them all. Why is government getting in to bed with Butch Stewart, the very man who held out at Paradise Beach before walking away? Is he now getting everything he wanted? I do not agree with selling CBC, for the simple reason that most of those who want to sell the broadcaster are just embarrassed and fed-up with its second-rate journalism and programming or simply want to buy it. It will be far better if government auction’s a broadcasting license so that all those who want to get their hands on CBC can indulge with their own money. What CBC badly needs is good journalism. There is also the missed opportunity to re-invent the City and its surrounding area, creating a dynamic youth and night-time economy, with a cluster of creative industries, centred around the Empire (for performing arts), and the back streets of Jordan’s Lane, Beckwith Street, King William Street, etc for the fine and digital arts, night clubs, restaurants, market stalls, etc. All this I have mentioned here before and still it falls on deaf ears.

Failed Policies:
Is Barbados another Detroit, with a generation of aspiring professionals who share one thing in common, incompetence and failure? The government has failed to develop a reformed educational system fit for the purpose of a knowledge-based economy; it has failed to stimulate small and medium enterprises; it has failed to understand that the crisis in housing, typified almost ever week by desperate people living in hovels crying for help; it has failed to reform the public sector. It has also failed to tackle youth unemployment, the crisis in the criminal justice system and what to do with the overload of state enterprises it has on its books. If this seems like repetition, it is, since the government, day after day, continues to fail to introduce new social policies or even debate them. Housing remains the major social issue, the barometer of our progress, with a continuing number of people still living in hovels typical of the pre-war days. How do you explain to a nation that a man, whatever his personal faults, living in 21st century Barbados in the most loyal constituency of the ruling party, is living in conditions that you would not put a pig in? This is a reflection on us as a people, a nation without a heart, not on his failure to provide for himself. Yet, for reasons best know to itself, the government has failed to tackle this easily resolved social problem. Where is his member of parliament, his church ministers, his social workers, his neighbours?

It is clear that the government does not understand that the housing problem is a supply side one, not demand, given, as I have said here before, one senior member of the current government when in opposition said there were about 30000 people badly in need of decent homes.  If this is the case, and there is no reason to doubt him, building two or three hundred single-family homes over a parliamentary lifetime will not solve this problem in a hurry. It is bigger than that, but it will be a start. Another of the big issues, of course is what to do with the crippled national insurance scheme, apart from using its contributions as a piggy bank. What the government should do, of course, is ring-fence the current contributions, de-risk the liabilities and launch a lifestyle-based long-term saving scheme with key point interventions, at births, marriages, housing, university and death. But such an innovation will call for independent thought, a deep understanding of policy-making, an empathy with ordinary people.

Analysis and Conclusion:
Barbados is facing what Kenneth Rogoff has called an economic Armageddon, with the vast majority of the people, including some who should know better, repeating the mantra about growth and foreign reserves like some religious sect, while few are even acknowledging that we are in a deep recession. Where are our innovators, our talent managers, our young men and women bursting with ideas to make fortunes while making the world a better place? Talking to ordinary people in the streets and supermarket queues one gets an impression of a nation that is depressed, tired, fed-up with the burden they are carrying; a nation dying on its feet. By far the greatest failure of the government, its technocrats and policy advisers is intellectual, a resistance to change or to confront new possibilities and challenges. They sit waiting for new ideas from Europe and Asia or even the IMF or for their new Chinese masters to hand them a bag full of money. The ruling political and policy elite is trapped in a black hole between rhetoric and the lack of a sound policy framework, between the notion of austerity and neo-Keynesianism.

Historically, they have depended on their civil servants to rescue them, then to claim the glory, but this time the civil servants, academics and the man in the rum shop are also short of original ideas. Their only answer to every problem is that old mantra of foreign reserves, even school children now shout foreign reserves. I say if we traded in derivatives and the futures markets we will be a more sophisticated financial market, but it is outside the experience of our central bankers so they do not want to encourage it. Instead, they are prepared to lock-up over Bds$1bn of cash doing nothing while the economy collapses. It is the kind of economic lunacy more fit for an asylum. The epidemic of household credit, apart from everything else, raises serious questions about consumer credit and the way it is regulated. Is there any affordability test when people walk in to shops and show rooms for credit on a 4X4 vehicle or a 48-inch flat-screen television, or are car salespeople and store staff so keen to earn a sales bonus that they will sell to school leavers?

In all this there is not a single word from the central bank, the institution responsible for monetary stability, or from the ministry of finance although the world is now recovering from a global crisis caused precisely by such lending. It is as if the Good Ship Barbados will sail on no matter how rough the seas. It is more likely the last voyage of the Titanic. Part of the reason why public discussion is so weighted in favour of the loudmouths and those with no views of their own is because of the historic Barbadian preference for personal abuse where political ideas should be. But, in terms of managing the economy, you can get in to all kinds of technocratic verbiage most of which is meaningless to the average reader. The bottom line, is that if we do not get our house in order, and soon, and go cap in hand to the IMF, the nation will collapse like a punch-drunk boxer. The steady decline of Barbados is not only the government’s fault, it is also due to the lack of an entrepreneurial spirit from the skilled and middle classes. One example reminds me of this and that is my conkie story: some time ago I was in Barbados on November 5, and, was not able to get a conkie in any bakery or supermarket. I was boldly told that I would have to come back on Independence Day to get a conkie. Here is a market crying out to be exploited. How about retired accountants and finance directors offering their collective services to small and cash-strapped businesses not individually? Instead of explaining to the people in simple terms why the crisis has come about in Barbados and proposals to resolve it, the ruling party has chosen to tell a consistent lie in the hope that some, if not all, of the people will eventually believe it. People want to know why they have been working so hard for so long yet their living standards are falling and they are living from hand to mouth. They need to be told that the global banking crisis was caused by the greed of American banks, the so-called subprime lenders, who embarked on a scandalous lending spree to inner city people who could not afford to repay them at the rates and the conditions lenders imposed on them. They want to hear that because of the ownership structure of local banks when head office wants greater liquidity they withdrew capital from branches and subsidiaries in Barbados, allocating money for high interest consumer lending. They want to know how a crisis in banking could become a global sovereign debt crisis, why politicians transferred all that debt on to taxpayers under so-called bail out schemes. They want to know why in Barbados taxpayers are underwriting incompetently managed family hotels, why they are buying the freedom of Almond Village only to lease it to Butch Stewart, why some new employers can apply for work permit for chefs and nurses, in a highly educated country. People are not fools. People want to know why a government that owns Mr Barrack about Bds$80m could refuse to pay him yet borrow money to spend like drunken sailors.

Finally, missing from the narrative is any mention of Caricom and the role it could – and should – play in the restructuring of member-states’ economies.


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93 responses to “Notes From a Native Son: The End of Dependency Development Has Come”


  1. The reality is that Barbados has become internationally a pompus nation that is in deep trouble but too proud to admit it. This has caused the financial parasites of this world to be attracted to the country, their sole reason is personal gain, they will wave exciting but dangerous flags in the face of amateurs and if successful, we would sell our very birthright to people like the Chinese, The T$T, and the Bjerkhams of the world. Time BAJANS wake up and grab Barbados before we lose it forever, our children and our children would blame us for what we have allowed.


  2. @Hal

    In Thompson’s first or second budget he mentioned about Barbados establishing a framework to attract international funds to operate register in Barbados. It is fuzzy but what we know is that it was never done. Will have to research it.


  3. Hal what would be the bajan emigration numbers per year to the uk before and after independence. As I see it if tourism keeps falling people must leave the island in droves to make it sustainable, but the good news would be in the long term they and their descendants would want to visit increasing tourism numbers. Back in the 1600 hundreds the island even then felt crowded and people were forced to the carolinas


  4. Well done HAL*…

    A lucid, cogent, coherent, well-articulated dissertation of the FACTS. Will anything change? No! Will the bow of this once great nation’s pride be broken? Yes! What will be the catalyst to brings it to pass? Insurrection & bloodshed! Is that a sure prediction? Yes! Is there historical truth which supports such findings given the social events of 1934 -1939 – just worst? Yes! When will these things happen? As soon as the fire is lit under the SOVEREIGN DEBT CRISIS and the “BUBBLE” we call the bond market bust and starts to ooze a fresh set of puss into the global economic system!

    What happened in the GREAT DEPRESSION years will be a LOL to what we will see in Barbados, throughout the Caribbean and around the world!


  5. @ Lawson
    You are right. The unexplored tourism/visitor market is that of people of Barbados descent. For reasons best known to itself, the tourism authorities do not see this.
    I have third and fourth generation Americans who want to visit Barbados to see their ancestral home, but do not want to live here. In other words, they are visitors with a purpose greater than just enjoying the sunshine.
    Where are our marketeers?


  6. In any business sector of Barbados, where at any time no money is actually moving around – and there are no balancing transactions involved, but there is information or terms provided by whomsoever to suggest that it is doing so, there must/ has to be a massive problem in the accounting process that provides the said information or terms.

    Take for instance, in Mr Clyde Mascoll’s column entitled: It Matters Most, where Mascoll wrote that the recent economic review (for the 9 month period January to September 2013) stated that the fiscal deficit (so-called) widened by BDS $ 117 million, and furthermore wrote that the growing deficit is being financed by the printing of money.

    Now, as far as the PDC is concerned, the information provided to support this idea called printing of money, means that the government is NOT actually printing any money, but is using electronic numbers to adjust information in the government credit/debt transfer numbers.

    So, as we have argued before on here (BU) and elsewhere, that on the whole government does NOT have expenditure (only in few instances it does), primarily because it does NOT get/have income/payments on the whole, does itself support the fact that this is another case – out of countless other cases – where the government is falsely purporting that money is moving around, when in truth and fact it is not moving around at all (and with no counter balancing transactions involved); just primarily the government continuing to manipulate electronic and other numbers to achieve its narrow political psychological propagandistic ends.

    Indeed, that there has been no actual moving around of money involved in these kinds of cases, helps to destroy the very inept argument that Mr Clyde Mascoll is making in his said latest column writings (2013-11-07) that, with the growing fiscal deficit BEING FINANCED (sic) by the printing of money, the foreign reverses will fall as happened since April.

    The fact is that the manipulation and presentation of thoroughly false fictitious statistical numbers by the Central Bank of Barbados CANNOT cause a fall in some other already false and overstated foreign reserves numbers. Nothing that is NOT happening CANNOT cause anything to do anything. What such implies is that there are other variables that are involved in the falsification of government financial accounts.

    By saying that the foreign reserves will fall, Mascoll, in some senses, refuses to make clear in his column what he defines as the foreign reserves, where they are located, what percentage of these are here or overseas, refuses to distinguish between foreign payments/reserves, and, most of all, refuses to acknowledge that the foreign reserves numbers as presented by the Central Bank of Barbados are false and spurious – that they have nothing to do with what is actually happening at the ground level/factually.

    Finally, the very gruesome thing about these falsified fake government accounting numbers is that they seriously severely affect the actual movement of money across the country and do have a severe impact on the REAL ACTUAL COST OF USE OF MONEY (local/foreign) in the country, as that, money and its use and movement are the real bases of and for them – with money having to or NOT follow them, whether these business sectoral numbers are really or falsely created.

    PDC


  7. @ PDC

    I agree with you. I do not believe central bank numbers and just prefer to ignore them. In fact a young man who worked(s) suggesting the same.
    Ask them about the recession and about how one moment foreign reserves figures were acceptable at one number and then, once reduced, they remained acceptable. Does that mean they were too high in the first place?

  8. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hal Austin:
    “As a result it has been forced to seek economic ideas from an intellectually exhausted band of elderly academics who, clearly, have lost touch with new developments in their own discipline.”

    You “band” presumably excludes Prof. Michael Howard (school contemporary of yours) who has given them advice to seek assistance before the economic gangrene sets in requiring amputation of the monetary limb connected to the US dollar.
    In the coming months the same band of elderly academics (headed by Sir Frank who is diametrically and antagonistically opposed to any IMF restructuring programme) would be singing in a most volt-face unabashed way the praises of the government for ‘seeking assistance’ from the same IMF.

    “There is also the missed opportunity to re-invent the City and its surrounding area, creating a dynamic youth and night-time economy, with a cluster of creative industries, centred around the Empire (for performing arts), and the back streets of Jordan’s Lane, Beckwith Street, King William Street, etc for the fine and digital arts, night clubs, restaurants, market stalls, etc. All this I have mentioned here before and still it falls on deaf ears.”

    You need to pay a visit to the same environs in their present state. You would be totally shock with utter disgust to see the deterioration of the place posing a massive threat to public health.
    This area was once a thriving residential cum commercial district with all the amenities of a sophisticated town. What is fast building up is a ghetto type run down drug-infested district reminiscent of Trench town of the 1970’s.
    Visitors from the cruise ships, in wandering around and finding themselves in that area as it currently appears, probably come into shock at what they are confronted with.

    What is paradoxically frightening is that the government is talking about constructing a modern marina and cruise ship terminal just a few hundred metres away from the expanding social hellhole.
    Why not stimulate the economy by upgrading the area with modern housing, shopping and recreational areas with a general environmental uplift as a way of getting rid of the blight.


  9. @Hal
    Bull from begining to end. You are swimming in a pond of stale water. November the fifth was celebrated in Barbados because it was a throwback to the English celebration of the day Guy Fawkes tried to blow up the houses of Parliament. It was the only time of the year when you could get fireworks. When we achieved independence the celebration of November fifth was abandoned, and celebration time was independence time. Conkies were then prefered on that day. In other words, Hal, we broke the tradition of English dependence, even in our celebrations. Sorry you still cling to the English of long ago, and long to have them in charge again. We have moved on. However, you can still get conkies on a regular basis toughout the year. Even though I am in Canada I had conkies last week. You also add: …”They want to know why in Barbados taxpayers are underwriting incompetently managed family hotels,” (I hope you were not directing this at Adrian, but I would like you to identify them. How many of the immigrants (former) living overss continue to contribute to their homeland? How much have you contribted, except sporadically through and occasional visit? Put your money where your mouth is start a fundraising drive for the country. Purchase a piece of equipment for the Hospital, collect money for scholarships for the students, Invest (and you are big on investment) in Government bonds or Treasury Bills, contact a broker in Barbados and buy shares in companies that are traded daily on the stock market (yes Barbados has a stock market, although you don’t seem to know that). Do something positive ad stop whining.


  10. On a broader view I don’t see an encouraging outlook for the world economy.
    Quantative Easing (Printing Money), with the same economists giving the same advice that brought everywhere into trouble, I can see only bigger trouble in the offing.
    Excuse the metaphor – it’s like Titanic having barely survived a collision with a medium sized iceberg, is determined by its captain to head straight for the big one.

    In a recent interview on Radio 5 the panellists were asked where they though the next economic crisis was going to take place. One said exactly where the current one took place because that is exactly where they are heading and that has been my sentiment advanced here and elsewhere.

    Economic theories hold good like when a perfectly round ball fits a perfectly round hole, mis-shape the hole into an oval and economists will be dumbfounded as to why it no longer fits so they’ll get other balls of the same size and shape to see if they will fit. It’s because they know arithmetic intimately but are clueless about geometry.


  11. @ Miller

    I take your advice and exclude Prof Howard. I know the City well; as I have said before, my paternal grand parents had a shop/bakers in Nelson Street for decades up until the 1960s.
    We need to get the bulldozers in. There is no excuse. This lot do not even have the audacity to turn Nelson St in to a one-way street; the result is constant congestion.


  12. Alvin…….sad to say, you are a man worshiper……check out the sweetheart deal Sandals got, while (i think it was either Sealy or Sinckler) lied to the media and people of Barbados and said ALL the hotels on the island got the same treatment/concessions, some are now saying that is a lie….now i don’t know who is right or wrong, don’t care, but do you think it’s fair to continually lie to the people who pay your salary?? cause that is what the DLP continues to do ad nauseam, I am sure you will say yes, give the politicians a chance….to do what, tell more lies??


  13. GULP….50 years on Mr Austin one-way in Nelson Street. That is so sweet.


  14. http://info.moneyweek.com/urgent-bulletins/the-end-of-britain/?infinity=gaw~DISPL%2BSPCFC%2BThe%20End%20Of%20Britain~DISPL%2BSPCFC%2BThe%20End%20Of%20Britain%2BPL%20guardian.co.uk%2BKW%20%20Debt%2BTXT~28198342509~placement:www.gizmag.com~c&gclid=CLHQyui91boCFSbHtAod6XcAuw

    I hope this URL is clickable, it makes very chilling reading, even well beyond anything I have written.
    I don’t think this applies only to Britain, it foretells a bleak well beyond UK shores.


  15. You cannot see this as an out and out ploy to drum up customers??? claim your 4 free issues. No wonder Barbados is always willing to buy a pig in a poke. I am not saying these things cannot come to pass but since time began someone has been running around with a sign saying the world is going to end eventually they will be right but at least they wont be around to say I told you so.


  16. Hal you are a disloyal son of this soil. Can you ever find anything good to say about Barbados? You perpetually write this bull about Barbados in the blogs. Surprise us one day and say something positive. I bet it will be about the BLP. If you wish to be taken seriously, please show some balance. Your writings are as clumsy and ill conceived as your appearance.


  17. Perhaps the time is right for us to woo residents of Shanghai to visit our shores .
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2490856/Smog-culprit-infertility-low-sperm-counts-Shanghai.html


  18. Every politician in Barbados who isn’t a moron knows exactly what things have to be done in order to make Barbados better over the long term.

    What they don’t know is how to do those things and then get [re] elected.

    Voters, understandably, will punish any government that takes the measures that are fast becoming unavoidably necessary.

    So who is to be held accountable for this endless, shambolic, denial-ridden muddling-through that can only have a sad ending? The elected or the electorate?

  19. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    “The ruling DLP is trapped between a lust for power”

    I cant understand where these idiots come from.

    The Democratic Labour Party is the Party elected to govern this country, and I might add they are doing a wonderful job keeping the ship of state afloat. They are the government of the people, by the people, for the people, it is your Barbados Labour Party which has the unbridled lust for power even though they have been rejected THREE TIMES BY THE ELCTORATRE. It is the Barbados Labour Party which is attempting to cause mayhem in this country so that they may become the Government through the back door.

    What sort of patent nonsense are you writing this week?


  20. This is a good Post
    Very good, I might add

    Congrats to the author


  21. So, as we have argued before on here (BU) and elsewhere, that on the whole government does NOT have expenditure (only in few instances it does), primarily because it does NOT get/have income/payments on the whole, does itself support the fact that this is another case – out of countless other cases – where the government is falsely purporting that money is moving around, when in truth and fact it is not moving around at all (and with no counter balancing transactions involved); just primarily the government continuing to manipulate electronic and other numbers to achieve its narrow political psychological propagandistic ends.

    PDC !
    The Government is just fooling those who they can fool. The propaganda has not now started, This is a practice that has been past down through the ages and while its complexion may change over time , the substantive reasons remain pretty much intact.. There are indeed those who derived and have derived overtime narrow political satisfaction from these machinations


  22. @Well Well’
    I am glad you are not a judge. How can you in all honesty and impartiality (for that is what a judge should be; impartial)say “…now i don’t know who is right or wrong, don’t care, but do you think it’s fair to continually lie to the people who pay your salary?? How have you determined who is speaking the truth ? What you are saying is that it does not matter whether the truth is told by the government, you have already come to the conclusion that whatever they say is a lie. Impartial? I think not. I invite you to go way back and see the concessions given to people who built, and continue to build in those areas designed as special development areas. Fort Ferdinand being one of the latest. Check out the concessions given to the condominium developments on the West Coast. Check out the legislations governing these developments. Check out the concessions given to the BTA; inncluding the concession given in the last budget. I could go on and on, but I challenge you to do your homework.


  23. @Hal
    You can’t tell me anything about Nelson street that I co not know. You may be seeing it through rose coloured glasses, but Nelson Street was always Ghetto. I was born in wellington Street twenty five yards from Nelson Street. I went to nursery school at Ms. Grosvenor’s school. I will agree with you that there are possibilities for the area in that it should be completely buldozed and completely rebuilt but not even your belovid Britain has the money that would be required to do this, and the social disruption and dislocation requires much more than wishes.. Stop trying to give the impression that it only requires the will of the politicians to accomplish the task. We have to live in a world of reality. Your suggestion is pie in the sky.

  24. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Alvin Cummins | November 8, 2013 at 6:43 PM |
    “Stop trying to give the impression that it only requires the will of the politicians to accomplish the task. We have to live in a world of reality. Your suggestion is pie in the sky.”

    Would you say the proposal to construct high rise housing at Exmouth near Spring Garden in an already densely populated area along with a performing Arts Centre are also pie-in-the-sky proposals hatched in the imagination of a Don Quixote pretending to be a MoF?
    Here is what the Don promised in the 2011 Budgetary proposals:
    “Finally on a recent State visit to China the Honourable Prime Minister in his very fruitful deliberations with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao engaged the continued interest of Barbados in developing a dedicated home for the performing arts in Barbados. The government of China equally expressed its desire to see that such a facility could become a reality in Barbados in the very near future.
    To this end, it would be remiss of me to let pass this opportunity to inform the country that following months of analysis and consultation, this government has decided to move ahead with the construction of a brand new multi-purpose state of the art Cultural and Performing Arts Centre.
    It is expected that the Centre will be financed and constructed through a grant from the Government of the People’s Republic of China and it is proposed that it will be located, once the Town Planner approves, on the land at Spring Garden opposite the Brandon’s Beach facility in the constituency of St. Michael North West. Further details on that too will be revealed shortly.”

    Is that performing arts centre under construction? After all, you are in receipt of the grant and not negotiating a loan.

    Can’t the Government get China to fund the renovation of that decrepit socially blighted community including Nelson Street that could be the underbelly of social upheaval?
    There is money for Urban Renewal projects. Why not approach the EU as part of the reparations demands?

    Are we going to see the start of the Exmouth housing project planned to start October 2013? Alvin, being a town man, maybe you can confirm its commencement.


  25. @Miller
    Alvin and his party haven’t a effin clue. The same Chinese are supposedly funding the sugar cane factory and Sandals too. You think part of the deal is to export construction workers?


  26. You ! this idea of bulldozing Nelson Street is a good one yeah
    A modern environ could evolve from this bulldozing of Nelson Street
    Wonderful idea. Good Good Good-(3 Goods)


  27. @ CCC, why the capital letters about the BLP being rejected? how many times was the DLP rejected before coming to power 5 years ago? your myopic political ramblings are pathetic.


  28. @Enuff.
    Get your facts straight. The Chinese, from what I heard the Minister say, are going to assist in funding for the purchase of Almond, and in the reconstruction of a news hotel. Sandals (Butch Stewart) is supposed to be managing a reconstituted Casuarina hotel to be managed under the Sandals brand. The rebuilt Almond, will be managed under the Beaches Brand, (Butch Stewart also)as an adult only hotel.. Different Brand name, different types of operation.
    @Miller,
    This is now 2013 less than two years after the pronouncement in the 2-11 budget, and less than a year after the general election. Be patient, you served in the government you know how the process works and how long it takes to have things implemented, surveys, architect drawings engineering studies environmental impact studies, feasability studies, tenders for works, etc and much more. As the old people used to say; those older than me, for I am an old man now, “if greedy wair, hot will cool.”Be patient all will be revealed in time. You all expressed the same sceptcism when instead of building the gymnasium at the corner of Baxters road and country road, the Chinese offered to build the Gumnasium in wildey. Didn’t it come to fruition? BBe patient.


  29. Alvin said:
    “How have you determined who is speaking the truth ?”

    ______________________________

    Alvin…….you can swing it and twist it whichever way you want to make it sound good to you, however, lies are lies and they always come back to bite the DLP particularly……….HARD.

  30. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Alvin Cummins | November 8, 2013 at 7:42 PM |

    Why don’t you stop with the Bullshit? You might be able to drop that shit around Well, Well and get away with it but not me, Alvin.
    We are in 2013 and do not want to hear you rehashing of the past ad nauseam and blaming all shortcomings of the current administration on the past indiscretions of the BLP administrations going back to GHA times.

    Why don’t you read what the lying deceitful prick of a MOF said?
    “To this end, it would be remiss of me to let pass this opportunity to inform the country that following months of analysis and consultation, this government has decided to move ahead with the construction of a brand new multi-purpose state of the art Cultural and Performing Arts Centre.”

    Do you think the Chinese would have agreed to grant funding unless a proposal involving all those prerequisites and conditions were met including the right to free entry by Chinese workers and materiel?

    Based on your stupid reasoning can we expect the proposal of a sugar cane industry, to be financed with Chinese money, to go through the same longwinded process as the Performing Arts Centre? December coming is scheduled to be the start of the sugar cane industry restructuring programme with a projected 2016 sugar crop. Can we depend on this schedule with the money ready to be drawn down for the initial phase of the project?


  31. Miller

    I love you…..but please stop defaming Cervantes. The Don was a holy fool. The man you mention is, I suppose, just a fool in your book (rightly or wrongly) and you may well be right because you usually are.

    I can’t understand why anyone would want to bulldoze Nelson Street. I would want to build it up – as a must-visit for bored tourists who want something different……Soho, New Orleans, Montmartre.


  32. Alvin……look at what you will condone and defend, it’s frightening… i am sure you saw this in the Toronto Star today………….lol

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/video-rob-ford-caught-cursing-wildly-article-1.1509765


  33. @ Alvin
    So the Chinese are indeed funding Sandals aka Beaches aka Butch Stewart hotel at Heywoods…….lmao. We all know Casuarina now Sandals is open and running after the Couples group was evicted. So my question remains: Will they be sending construction workers?

  34. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ robert ross | November 8, 2013 at 8:20 PM |
    “I can’t understand why anyone would want to bulldoze Nelson Street.”

    I agree. It sounds so terminal, so philistine so nihilistic. I would much prefer your suggestion of an upgrade or renovation with a more bohemian appearance.
    Why not a little Soho as you suggested. Maybe a little taste of Greenwich Village or the partition in gay Paris near the Champs-Élysées with a replica of the Moulin Rouge. Maybe we can get a local or Guyanese Rhianna lookalike to play Josephine Baker on stage in that “arrondissement” for live adult entertainment.

    PS: Would you suggest I stop referring to the MoF as an altruistic fool and see him more in the light of a simplistic comical ‘yes-man’ in the image of Sancho Panza the illiterate but proud ‘Moor” servant?


  35. Miller

    Exactly and exactly.

    But yes…the potential for Nelson St is enormous and what I don’t understand is why people like Mr Loveridge don’t see it. I suppose it’s because of the perception of sin in this ‘Christian country’……but YEAH…..SIN!!!. That will pull them.


  36. @ Well Well;
    Why on earth would you, or could you imagine that I would want to have anything to do with the likes of Rob Ford? I have said it before and to many other people, the guy needs serious help. He needs serious counselling. Show me our equivalent in Barbados politicians.
    @Miller.
    The only appellation I can give you at this stage is that “where there is novision the people perish”/ You are visionless. I am sure ;you have visited Toronto. Compare the harbour area with what it was some years ago. What has become of all the buildings there were? It is useless to try to rescue and renovate the Ghetto and its environs, the run down buildings etc that constitute that area. Maybe you should visit Dukes Alley, Queen Street, Ashby Alley and the environs. Unless you buldoze and reconstruct a well planned urban area you will perpetuate the filth and the accompanying attitudes. Let us have a fresh start and not try to emulate the Soho, which is not much different from Nelson street. Let a breath of fresh air blow through there plan a modern urban centre. While you are at it go to the proposed Sugar Point Cruise terminal Development and see what is planned. This can complement a new Nelson street well planned development. We have young architects who would jum at the chance to design such a new urban area, with well planned street as well as houses and businesses. By the way read Don Quixote again and try to understand it. Neither Din Wuixote nor Sancho Panza were fools. Read it again with understanding and in the proper context. By the way are you aware that Rhianna has been earmarked to undergo screen tests,to play the part of Josephine Baker in a proposed movie on her life? Strange you should make that suggestion in the way you have.


  37. Miller – c’est lui

    Josephine Baker…wonderful…see my reference above to banana skirts for Island…. ram-pam-pam…Miller j’ai deux amours…Josephine and Toumanova so yes we are in sync. And, in our different ways, we both play canaries on a swing….to an open cage.


  38. I smell gentrification.


  39. @Miller,
    Didn’t you say in a blog not too long ago >>>”Beggars can’t be choosers”? Make up your mind how you want it. I expect that reaction from you The fact is that the Chinese are going to fund it. (Grant not loan)And Josephine Baker was a great couraeous woman. The type of entertainment you are suggesting already exists, we don’t have to perpetuate it. Sorry you can’t be more modern than to want to perpetuate Soho.@Well Well
    You need to get to know me, to learn the type of person I am.

    a


  40. @Robert Ross,
    Les Cage aux foiles?


  41. Oh Jesus…….so many seemingly unimaginative, pedantic, big-time kill joys….all that ‘filth and accompanying attitudes’. Well, it IS about sin then. Alvin, you’re very nice but I want to tweak your prefrontal lobe processor.


  42. Ah Alvin…wit…not bad but I think you mean ‘Folles’ – and mind, on the subject of St Tropez – how about if we…….


  43. @Robert RossSlight typograpical error. Sometimes I have difficulty with the keys on the computer. of
    course it is ‘Folles’. St. Tropez (in the caribbean) fits in nicely with the planned Marina development. Can you see the development; stretching from Bay street all the way to River road? Especially now the carrenage is being dredged and the river refurbished and rebuilt and landscaped, along with the builting of the new parklike setting where church village once was joining Queens Park? That is vision. Just needs time and money and patience.


  44. I can’t understand why anyone would want to bulldoze Nelson Street. I would want to build it up – as a must-visit for bored tourists who want something different……Soho, New Orleans, Montmartre.
    ………………………………………………………………………………..
    As part of the building up process, a bulldozer would be given a full time job, for quite a while, just trying to get rid of the mountains of garbage in Nelson Street and its environs.
    And added to the above list ; Amsterdam, Hamburg (Palais la Amore,Reeperbahn) often referred to as ” die suendigste meile ” The most sinful mile.


  45. Yes Alvin, it’s a great idea but can you deal with bare this and that’s and boules in sundry places? Tell you what…..how about we go down Nelson Street and offer not-so-comfortable words to the indigent and fallen? Are you game?


  46. And Alvin, Colonel Buggy can come too because he’s been around and is obsessed with garbage.

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

    Alvin;

    I agree with you about the beauty and ultimate utility of the Canalisation project. I seem to recall that the idea is not a new one but was conceptualized or at least championed several years ago by Dame Billie in essentially the form it has taken on today. It promises to be really beautiful and should propel that side of Bridgetown truly into the 21st Century, while complementing the refurbishment of old Bridgetown.

    Top marks for the Government for sticking with and implementing the project.

  48. Michael Carrington Avatar
    Michael Carrington

    Hal, who are you and where can I find more information on you? Such an intellectual article and beautiful penmanship. Seriously run for government office. You have my X.


  49. @Miller,
    Damd Billie had vision. Her conceptualisation of the Boardwalk in Bridgetown, and the building of the Boardwalk in Hastings stretching from Accra to the coconut Gorve are to be complimented and should not be forgotten. I recall she had a battle to get her ideas implemented. But As I say I give credit where credit is due and she deserves accolades.


  50. @Robert Ross I further remember she was verymuch involved in the battle to have The Uneco designation of Historic Bridgetown and the Garrison and its evirons declared U N heritage sites. More compliments to her./

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