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Hal Austin
Hal Austin

Introduction:
As the IMF troops gather at the gate, the people of Barbados have little time to reflect on how a once proud nation has found itself in this economic mess. But, as night follows day, it had to come; it is a modern-day example of Sodom and Gomorrah, of a people living so much beyond their means, partying and fornicating, that they forgot how hard work and good ethical behaviour has its rewards. For the national decline is not just economic, only that this time it is manifesting itself in an economic meltdown, but it goes right across the range of our social and cultural values. Although we can blame the 14 years of the Arthur administration for sowing the seeds of this predictable car crash, and rightly so, after nearly six years in government the DLP government can no longer use that excuse. The failure to manage the economy is theirs and theirs alone, first with the Thompson regime being caught off guard when it won the general election, and the political ignorance of Freundel Stuart to impose his mark on the post-Thompson government. But we are where we are and it is no good crying over lost opportunities. However, to kick off this period of tighter fiscal controls, government should impose a Bds$50m windfall tax on the commercial banks and use that money to fund a post Office bank; also encourage the credit unions to establish a joint credit union bank, both operating on balance sheet principles.

Policy Inertia:
Part of the DLP’s policy inertia has been its lack of vision, a mainly professional middle class and cadre of policymakers who do not read outside a very narrow self-confirming set of publications and, even if they travel overseas, they wear cultural and policy blinkers. The result is a very narrow vision of what is politically possible, and the absence of any intellectual curiosity to drive them towards looking for new answers. You can see these people in London and New York, Toronto and Paris, straight from Grantley Adams Airport doing the familiar things they do at home: black pudding and souse, dominoes, watching cricket, drinking too much. Sometimes one is left to wonder how people could visit some of the great cultural capitals in the world and have not the slightest curiosity about visiting the theatre, or a top restaurant, or museum, or even good bookshops. This is the root of the problem, of the failure of policy, since they depend on a small self-justifying group of people for their ideas, people they have known since entering the infant school system until they emerged from university. The net result is a cultural and intellectual deficit which expresses itself in the lack of innovative policies back home.

The same thing for the economy: failure to analyse closely how other governments are dealing with the problems faced by their economies since the global crisis means that the DLP government is left with a number of patch-work, juvenile economic programmes. They have failed to understand that the ultimate tool to combat a recession is to restore demand and this can only be done through the mechanisms of private sector investments, consumer demand or government spending. It is clear that the artificial demand driven by cheap money, such as the scandalous so-called Car Extravaganza offered by RBC, is a return to the boom years of pre-2007/8 which saw sub-prime lending getting out of control. It is true, the private sector is having problems of its own, especially the small hotel sector, but these are cash flow problems that could be resolved with innovative financialisation. Attempts by the government to drive the economy through a massive amount of unsustainable loans is quite obviously not the answer. The latest proposal to resolve the problem, widespread public sector sackings, smacks of desperation, but it has serious repercussions for the wider economy. It will reduce overall demand and put more households in serious debt while at the same time cutting the tax take.

Keynes has shown that a deficit is not the end of the world; governments, like households, must spend carefully, prudently, and borrowing or printing money to pay salaries is carelessness. Governments however must also invest for the future, so that generations to come can reap the benefits. This government has no such vision. One explanation for the policy failure which is now crippling the economy is that it has taken this government nearly six years to realise that the global banking crisis and the following recession was an opportunity to restructure the entire economy. Instead, it chose to focus on inter-party rhetorical rivalry, not realising that the party in power had all the levers to impose its own policies. And, when necessary, it milked the national insurance scheme as if it was the government’s piggy bank.

Housing:
Any government that wants to promote prosperity and redistribute national wealth should look first at housing. Since the Second World War, it is residential housing that has been the driver of household wealth in every western democracy. And this government had a black piece of paper on which to draft its housing policy – from clearing up the awful slums populate the city to many of the old traditional towns and villages.

Further, in an island of nearly 300000 people and only just over 100000 acres of land, density is important therefore comprehensive planning is of central importance. We cannot spread out, build swimming pools and golf courses, create recreational spaces, allocate agricultural land, an extensive road-building programme along with enough space for houses, offices, churches and other civic buildings. Something has got to give, and I suggest it is family housing that will have to give. This generation of politicians does not fully understand the transformative effect of home ownership, especially in the socially conservative environment that envelopes Barbados like a cloud.

Other Policy Failures:
Within the first 100 days of the Thompson government the DLP should have decoupled the Bajan from the Greenback, fix it against a basket of commodities and currencies, which would have provided a hedge against the need for a massive foreign reserve fund. Government should also outlaw the US dollar being used as legitimate currency for over-the-counter business in order to retain control over its money supply and reduce opportunities for small business people to carry out tax fraud by hoarding cash. It should raise the statutory school leaving age to 18; reform the school system with selection at age 14 to decide who would be best suited in an academic stream, a technical stream and a administrative stream. The next four years of their education will be focused on those streams as part of a wider policy on education and training. Government should also invite in new manufacturing and service industries, diversifying the economy away from an over-reliance on tourism. It should develop a sophisticate leisure sector, principally for Barbadians, but also of use to the tourism sector – a dry ski slope in the Scotland district, a permanent funfair in the Ragged Point/Culpepper Island area, develop the Seawell are as a commercial mall complete with restaurants, cafes, a three-star hotel, and a mono-rail running in the first phase to Codrington College.

When Barbados became constitutionally independent, we had a 15-strong trawler going up the Gulf fishing for shrimp. Why have we lost that industry? What has replaced it? We also had a very good, if small, dry dock, which we can also put back in operation servicing small yachts and boats.

Weymouth/Transport Board:
Government must act immediately to draw up a list of non-core assets which must be sold off in a strategic way. It has the biggest land bank in the country and should be compelled to come up with development ideas on how best to use that land, deciding what is for agriculture, what for recreational space and what for housing and commerce.

Government had an open goal with the under-performing Transport Board, its dilapidated vehicles and a prime development site. Combine all these with the need for financial innovation, in this case the need for a balance sheet retail bank, and the DLP administration would be in a position to claim, rightly, that it had done more for the economy of Barbados than 14-years of BLP rule under Owen Arthur.

First, St John is the safest DLP seat in the country and the nation’s poorest parish, so it was a no brainer to re-locate the Transport Board to St John. Then government should separate the business of public transport from that of vehicle repairs and maintenance and establish them as separate businesses. It should then replace the existing vehicles with a working fleet of buses and a professional management team, which it should then privatise, offering 51 per cent of the shares to existing and retired staff, unions and ordinary non-institutional investors. The other 49 per cent should be offered to local and Caricom institutional investors with a mandate to return a profit of at least two per cent above the base rate.

The current staff mechanics and managers should be formed to a limited liability team and offered the repair and maintenance contract for an initial three years after which it would have to compete in open competition with other service providers for the contract. The Roebuck Street site should then be developed in to homes, offices and shops for mainly young professional people, with at least 200 per cent of the units used for social housing. With properly architecturally designed homes and office and shop provisions for a doctor’s surgery, offices, a grocery, a membership gym, a swimming pool, and, including the Weymouth playing field, other amenities such as tennis, a leisure centre with an ice rink, badminton, squash, basketball and netball courts. The apartments could be offered to young professional men and women – through 100 per cent interest-only mortgages if necessary – and to non-Barbadians looking to buy holiday homes. With a deadline of three years to build the apartments and with off-plan sales, guaranteed by an independent NHC (which ideally would be part of an umbrella Sovereign Wealth Fund), the development would be self-financing within five to ten years.

Analysis and Conclusion:
As the dark clouds close in, there are two dominant issues that have led what passes for policy in Barbados down a cul-de-sac: first, the obsession with foreign reserves is out of date in contemporary macro-economic terms, as has been suggested on a number of occasions. The examples set by the big developed economies: the US, eurozone, Japan and UK – in printing money to refuel their economies then steadily withdraw those funds, what Ben Bernanke has called tapering, have proved very productive. The US saved the motor industry and until this week to pumped US$85bn a month in to the economy; it has now reduced that to US$75bn. In the UK, the Bank of England spent £375bn purchasing gilts back from institutional investors, mainly the banks and the European Central Bank has written a black cheque (whatever it takes). Instead of obsessing over foreign reserves for an exogenous shock that may never come, a reasonable proportion of those reserves could have been used to fund small and medium enterprise and create jobs for young men and women. Government missed that opportunity. Most of all, the government has failed to develop a youth policy which should go beyond just finding jobs, however, unproductive, to embrace education, training, recreational activities, and the criminal justice system.

Instead of dipping in to the NIS, government should have used the crisis as an opportunity to put in place a long-term saving vehicle and the creation of a sovereign wealth fund with a remit to return a minimum of two per cent above the rate of inflation annually. And with a Barbadian being one of the leading sovereign wealth fund analyst s in the world, we would have been starting from a pole position.

Sacking people at any time is devastating for the individual, but doing so in the middle of a recession (which the government and central bank governor still refuse to admit) could have long-term effects, as Steve David, of the University of Chicago, and Til von Wachter, of Columbia University, have pointed out (see: Recession and the cost of job lost).

Finally, we must look seriously at our growing population and the ill-thought out policy on the CSME free movement of people. It was bad when it was first introduced and it is even worse now in a serious economic crisis. All that is left to say is to wish you a most enjoyable Christmas and a most prosperous and traditional New Year.


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265 responses to “Notes From a Native Son: Pride Comes Before a Fall, Even for Some Governments”


  1. “Finally, we must look seriously at our growing population and the ill-thought out policy on the CSME free movement of people. It was bad when it was first introduced and it is even worse now in a serious economic crisis. All that is left to say is to wish you a most enjoyable Christmas and a most prosperous and traditional New Year.”

    Enjoyable xmas and a prosperous and happy new year to you and family as well Hal; but how does the free movement of caricom nationals affect our current economic position?

    Rate This


  2. @balance

    Yes, you are very right on that point. CSME makes NO SENSE from an economic perspective for any of our countries. Barbados was dumb to sign the revised treaty of Chaguaramas and now it should seek to withdraw and concentrate on its own economic development. But you should concede that it was Owen Arthur who pushed this silly idea the hardest. He came here to the Bahamas and pressed for it heroically. Fortunately, he was fighting a lost cause as no Bahamian government would be so foolish as to push that idea on the electorate.


  3. Most of our problems can be solved by cutting back on imports and gathering an abundance of FX so we can buy the things we have become accustomed to. And if we can’t figure out how to gather that FX, the IMF will figure it out for us. You may not like their solution which likely would include a overhaul of the monetary system, but without a drastic cutback on the expenditure for imported goods there will be little choice left for the IMF to put forth. Buy only local goods and get your friends and relatives to visit Barbados and spend FX here.


  4. @ Balance

    Free movement puts pressure on jobs, schools, housing and wider social services.
    Also, since most migrants are younger people there are also demographic implications.,


  5. QE followed by tapering….successful….sarcasm?? All the Fed has succeeded at doing is blowing serial bubbles.Things now are even more dangerous that 2007-8. Banking sector is more levered than ever, stock market fundamentals are poorer than pre tech crash or 08 crash, housing has surpassed the last bubble’s prices. labour participation rate has not improved, cities and munis on the verge of bankruptcy…..seriously…QE is a debt default by monetization…the banks spend the money first get stink richer and the broader economy stagnates. It is a wealth redistribution exercise.

    If the last 5 years have not written the obiturary on the nonsense that is Keynesian economics the next 5 surely will. Value arises not from the monetary plane but from the human plane, which has physical, social, psychological dimensions…to name a few. People are the economy, a healthy populace must necessarily have a healthy economy.

    In 2013, we are, as a nation are: less disciplined, less polite, and ruled by slough, coarseness, expediency of id, amorality, immorality etc. With courage in short supply, we can’t even be honest with ourselves and admit how much we are responsible for this state of affairs. We have a government we cant afford, crony capitalism/ corporatism, democracy and a monetary system yoked to that of a nation with a similarly corrupt structure.

    In essence parasites voted for Goons who supported them in their parasitism. Eventually rulers emerged from said parasitic class with absolutely no idea how to be productive in real economic terms, having never been so in their entire lives. They soon blow through the accounts, raid the piggy banks, run up the nations credit card etc…..and create a debt crises.

    Lacking concise language, their thoughts are imprecise, incoherent, paradoxical and illogical. Such a situation however, remains politically sustainable for a time because the parasites they rule have the same mental weaknesses. As long as the parasites are satiated both materially and emotionally (mastery of political rhetoric is critical to sustaining such a state) conditions remain stable. Unfortunately attending to domestic political concerns in this 21st century, in this manner, does great damage to a governments credibility and the confidence external creditors place in it. Thus we are here today.

    Ultimately we cannot tinker our way out of this debt crises, we cannot cut our way out. Barbadians have to admit that we are failing, and decide that we can no longer accept this failure. Bold ideas like those expressed here are an invaluable start…we still have, as a nation enough intelligent, creative, pragmatic minds to arrest this decline. It will not be easy but is the duty of all patriotic Barbadians.


  6. “This once proud nation”

    Doesn’t pride come before a fall? But then did it ever really exist this pride? Was there ever really a golden age of pride?


  7. “A healthy populace must inevitably have a healthy economy”

    Do we, then, need more doctors or should I give up being rude to my mistress?
    As a matter of fact, for how long does an economy ever remain “healthy”? But yes, for now and as a start lets blame Owen Arthur’s “heroism” and free movement. That’s a good start.


  8. MAN GIVE A BREAK! What makes Barbados economic situation anymore different than the other economies in the world today? America have had to contend with the Great Depression in the 1930’s and two recessions during the Reagan as well as the Bush Administrations. Don’t even mention the 17.5 trillion dollars national debt President Obama acumulated trying to fixed the BIG MESS President George W. Bush Jr has gotten the U.S. into in his efforts to prosecuting his two illegal wars .
    So there isn’t any need for alarm, because I believe we’re going to be Okay. Look at the brightside though: at least the Barbados government has made a focused effort to addressed its current economic crisis. But, have you given any notice to the fact that the United States Congress is still toying with the idea as to how they’re going to reduce the 17.5 trillion dollar national debt?


  9. And it is rationally ignorant to speculate on the economic decisions the Barbados government taken; having not being able to judge objectively, whether or not their have taken root. And you can psychologized all you want, but that does not necessarily mean that you analysis is validate in any respect. Listen! We haven’t had the end result, so how are we to give a valid analysis of what haven’t taken place as of yet? lol…


  10. @Hal
    What impact has CSME had or is having on our population? What is Bdos’ growth rate? How does it compare to the rate in other Caricom members? You promote high density housing on one hand yet cry about “growing population” on the other, aren’t the two connected?
    What do you think the amendment to the tenantries act by Owen was intended to do if not promote property ownership? What of the IADB neighbourhood upgrading programme?Even the Dems, even if poorly executed, understood and understands the benefits of home ownership. Nuff hot air!


  11. And Hal Austin! I am progressively beginning to suspect that you’re not as impartail in your analysis as you ought to be Sir. Now, you can address my comment as wilfully ignorant if you so choose Sir. Oh Well!


  12. @Mark Fenty

    What nonsense do you speak? The fact that the IMF is involved is admission that the DLP policies have not taken root. The fact that 3000 people have been fingered by the government to go home is evidence that policies have not taken root. Some of us are not idiots please debate by giving us credit.


  13. @ Hal Austin and David

    Hal you said a lot in the article. You forced the blame on the rightful owners by insisting that 6 years into this administration they own these problems now and not OA. My concern is that you are doing way too much “Monday Morning Quaterbacking” to seek solutions to this pickle in which we have ended up. Good points but too little too late.

    Therefore, I will await David’s article to see if he has any better suggestions or medicine for the situation because no one or organization besides the IMF has come up with anything viable thus far.

    My favorite line has been and always will be that the economy needs a “game changer” and that needs to come from the 2 players currently at the wicket, MoF and the PM. Our main concern in your words not mine is that their ” net result is a cultural and intellectual deficit which expresses itself in the lack of innovative policies”. This sums it up so well.

    Unfortunately recent history tells a lot about these two, but mainly that we will have to wait the full 5 year term plus 90 days before the next election. This in my opinion is what really is at issue on the island right now. The waiting game. Over the last 6 years that “net intellectual deficit” got us to 1st base, which is a very long way from home plate. The next 4 years (plus 90 days) is going to be more of the same leading to greater catastrophe.

    To sum it up, in describing the slippery slope we are heading down, I will use one word, “insanity”. The technical definition of doing the same thing over and over but expecting a different result. These two, MoF and PM are indeed a stubborn but hopeless dual and unfortunately we have to put up with them for another 1550 days. (4 years plus 90 days). Imagine that.


  14. @ David – who asked Mark Fenty “what nonsense do you speak…”
    Duh David……The usual 🙂

    @ Hal
    Excellent article.
    Shiite man! Bushie in a critical mood this morning and you got the bushman stumped!

    @ Enuff
    CSME has been the single most stupid initiative that has EVER been conceived in the region (no easy feat) and OSA has been the champion – wasting MILLIONS in implementation, wasting human resources, wasting meetings that could have been focused of restructuring regional transport, tourism co-ordination policies, and multiple VITAL, but ignored developmental initiatives….

    The DLP however takes the cake, since – after being elected PRECISELY because of the shiite the BLP was doing, they spent 6 critical years playing the ass…..

    We are CURSED with two sets of political jackasses….and 270000 other brass bowls who cannot seem to be able to see past these two failures…

    …only one way this can end.


  15. David, are you saying that there ought be a set time limit upon which the policies of DLP Should start to take meaningful effect?-(boy)- This economic crisis surely did not happened overnight and I am Quite sure that it will take sometime before the Barbados economy regain some sort of sustainability. And finally, many seem to have forgotten that PAST with its GOOD and EVIL lives in the PRESENT.


  16. We ARE, Biblically, IN* the End-Time era of Almighty God’s LINEAR Time-table, for mankind on earth, with global events, CONVERGING exactly as Jesus summarized in Matt. 24.

    The ‘ELITE’ wicked, evil, One World ‘Order’ men, driven by a Satanic quest for a ‘ONE’ world government, through its agencies of the IMF, World Bank, et al branches of its sinister embrace, ARE planning a 30% devaluation of the US$ early next year!

    Just begin to imagine what such a devaluation of the US$ to which our BDS$ is pegged, will further DO to our economy!

    REPENT, ALL, and get your souls right with God, through THE LORD JESUS CHRIST, for the END is extremely near at hand!


  17. @bushie
    “We are CURSED with two sets of political jackasses….and 270000 other brass bowls”

    hear hear. But it’s really 269,999 brass bowls. Speak fa yaself :p

    Just Observing


  18. @ Observing
    LOL
    Adjustment already made and figure rounded off …. 🙂

  19. 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

    This is what the international press is saying today on Forbes.com about the Freundel Stuart administration. What the government has not said to the people of Barbados Today. “The other disturbing news from this tropical paradise is that #Barbados also now intends to borrow up to $225 million from Credit Suisse AG Cayman on an emergency basis, in order to shore up its reserves, maintain the sacrosanct 1:1 peg of the Bajan dollar to the $US, and continue funding various pet projects. The terms are usurious: $3 million in upfront fees for the bankers; IMF conditionality; a waiver of sovereign immunity; and variable interest rates up to 775 basis points over LIBOR,[vii] which Credit Suisse and other global banks have recently been accused of rigging.” See the terms of what can be considered LOAN SHARKING here – http://barbadosparliament.com/htmlarea/uploaded/File/Resolutions/2013/Resolution%20Credit%20Suisse%20AG%20Cayman%20Islands%20$225%20000%20000.pdf


  20. @ Bush Tea
    Looka muh crosses! You demonise CSME then turn around and exalt the need for the same policies that are embedded in and reliant on a CSME framework. Neither you nor Hal has answered my questions with facts. Anyone that claims to a be development specialist but proceeds to formulate policy based on feelings rather than evidence is a fraud. Like I said before, you are very dangerous.


  21. So now plantation what do expect the govt to do either more austerev policies Borrow! or just let the shiop drop quckly in the bottom of the ocean


  22. @Askquith

    BU’s position is unless you are in a position to review the ‘books’ we are all engaged in a level of speculation, it is why the IMF has us at an advantage.


  23. Zoe | December 20, 2013 at 9:05 AM |
    We ARE, Biblically, IN* the End-Time era of Almighty God’s LINEAR Time-table, for mankind on earth, with global events, CONVERGING exactly as Jesus summarized in Matt. 24.

    I CONCUR!


  24. Yes the IMF has an advantage and those from the outside looking in knows who will be disadvantage and therin lies the problem


  25. Fenty

    Though I have little time for the present Government, may I formally welcome you to the ‘Idiot’s Club’ – the Club that all bloggers join if they DARE say BOO rather than YES to David, this David who so recently proclaimed the democratic process. It’s fairly exclusive this Club and there are no family ties. You have filled in my aphoristic remark about the short-term health of economies but then I should caution you. David knows all about these things which is why he is running a blog.


  26. We might as well admit that fact that our Heyday as a island that once stood out in the Caribbean is over…. Our days of boasting is over people and we might as well get use to the idea, or else we’re going to be in for a rude awakening..


  27. Globalization has undermined Barbados chances for meaningful development. We ought to admit that some regions of the world proved better able to take advantage of the new global economy. And simply because of they superior climates, resources, and politicies. In just the same way, some parts of countries, particularly huge countries such as China as well as India, are today better able to take advantage of the new opportunities the global economy has to offer. What has Barbados to gain from this new global market economy? Probably, mass poverty, grotesque inequality, unbriddled corporate power, environmental degradation, human rights abuses and much more.


  28. Mark Fenty | December 20, 2013 at 1:02 PM |
    Globalization has undermined Barbados chances for meaningful development.
    ………………………………………………………………………..
    And we are still fooling ourselves talking about striving for the Singapore model !

  29. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Hal Austin
    When you hear the Sunny Sunshine Shine say that this piece your wrote is sweet believe this girl when I say that what you wrote is sweet. This is the first time I have read anything you wrote in its entirety because before that all you seem bent on doing is bashing, hashing and pelting down nuff criticisms. Now here is a very nice balance piece of writing that offers constructive criticism and providing some very meaningful suggestions that makes nuff nuff sense. analytically. economically. and socially. Very Good Points ma brudder….Now let us hope that the current government is reading what you wrote and will take some of the points into consideration. I really hope that the jackasses and their yardfowl puppets will stop the darn politics and take all the suggestion into light and try them for the purpose of economical resolve.


  30. Can,t blame globalisation aprocess by which all is welcomed .lest we forget we were punching above our weight using other peoples money .now the creditors have shown up asking for all and we have very little to show in assests but plenty liabilties in debt. What happen to saving for a rainy day……….as for david he is like the weather. …….


  31. From day one when banks and other business entities essentiAl and important to barbados commerce were being sold or partially sold . the alarm bells should have sounded that there was a “dead rat ” stinking the whole place up.But then againthe elite and highly favoured figured when things go south they head east and leave the cleaning up for the poor.


  32. I don’t pretend to understand economics. Like a former British PM, I prefer doing sums with matchsticks. But following Sunshine’s glowing remarks about H Austin’s piece I just had to read it. He seems to want Government to spend a lot of money it hasn’t got to create, eg, parks, houses and fun things for young professionals with 200% of the units going for social housing. I’m not sure how that’s possible but then, as I say, I rely on matchsticks. It all sounds Obama-esque to me, which is to say a disaster NOW. I thought that unbridled public expenditure was the way to ruin. Will one of the non-matchstick people tell me I’m wrong and if so how.


  33. ac | December 20, 2013 at 10:48 AM |
    So now plantation what do expect the govt to do either more austerev policies Borrow! or just let the shiop drop quckly in the bottom of the ocean
    __________________________

    ac….what are you worried about, is that not what your PM Stuart promised Bajans he will do, hold their hands while they DROWNED??
    ____________________________
    From experience and as far as I know this applies to Canada, but stores/businesses place are only allowed to import 10% of their products, the other 90% must be Canadian products offered for sale, a sure fire way to save forex, as usual the governments in Barbados have it ass backwards, they import a whopping 90% of what they consume, do they even produce 10% in Bim.


  34. Alvin….please correct me if i am wrong re the Canadian model of saving forex.

  35. 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

    ac | December 20, 2013 at 10:48 AM |

    So now plantation what do expect the govt to do either more austerev policies Borrow! or just let the shiop drop quckly in the bottom of the ocean@@@

    We Expect for the DBLP Unity Government to tell and say the Truth ,
    Telling the truth will cost the Nation Less money and cost the Title holders mush cash and pain , They rather give the pain to the People and to keep the lies going , They rather have new slavery masters and to face the people.

    We at PLANTATION DEED, VIOLET BECKLES , CAN SEE THAT YOU NOT GETTING THE NUMBERS , DEALING WITH THE MASSIVE LAND FRAUD

    If any of the so called , well educated UWI Sirs and Masters did the Math ,
    On the Land , FUNDS in the account of the Estate taken and do the NEXT,

    They will see this is more than a Trillion Worth of Fraud in todays Numbers
    Barkley”S Bank Numbers in Pounds up until the change over to BDS dollars ,Land sold and taxes , pay off buy offs , sell outs, off shore accounts and just keep going,

    All the DBLP had to do is to admit, turnover the His-Herstory of Barbados , Set the book right and set the Blame on MIA as AG and Owen As PM .

    We all can move from there and set things in place.The have shame or no shame to do these things,
    We reach more than !0 Ministers already and other members who admit this is true,
    And for some reason knowing to them they will not raise up or stand for Justice.
    They all falling now and some will fall DOWN , Then they can tell the people why they not speak up and fix this

    We are looking to help with the fix , for more and more money is needed to feed and cover up PONZI land fraud,
    MIA in office , the Ex AG who broke many laws, After the truth was giving to her and told to her by Caswell FINDINGS BACK IN 2002 , MORE INFORMATION GIVEN BY the Barbados Fraud Squad, More info given to the PM DAVID, given to EX AG who is now your PM fumbell, Also to your new AG Badwick,in 2009 and 2010 ,
    So you see people they had the names and the Information to move on to the fix and make arrest , The DPP , we dont seem to know their funtions either nor the role of the AG in Barbados.All dam crooks, liars , and scumbags,


  36. Tell her Plantation…LOL


  37. @RobertRoss
    Hal is a cut and paste artist with two fancy references to appear well researched. I have noticed that many a time Has ain’t have a clue wuh he talking bout e.g turning Nelson Street into a Garden City lmao.


  38. enuff

    LOL…………….really? Who’d have thought it.


  39. first of all most people can.t handle the then after truth be told the questionStill remains how are the bills going to be paid. so far not if any one is willing to make sacrifice. so go ahead tell ac.


  40. WTH!!
    @ Enuff
    what you mean you already said Bushie was “dangerous”..?
    you is one of those CID boys now…? LOL

    yuh got Bushie yuh…. the bushman IS dangerous in truth…
    …but could be more dangerous than a fellow who walk around trying to convince brass bowl bajans to take off their front doors and leave their windows all open “cause we and the neighborhood is all one” – and they should all be free to come and go as they wish….
    …bushie may be dangerous….but the bushman ain’t no shiite


  41. Bushie them ain’t neighbors there are part of your house just separate bedrooms lol


  42. Robert Ross Correction

    20 per cent social housing.


  43. “Hard work and good ethical behaviour has its rewards”

    Hal, you obviously have been watching too much brother…. Because hard work and good ethical behaviour gets you no way in our day and age Sir…. And I am not psychologizing in no way shape or form because I’ve continue to witness this phenomenon display on a regular basis. You know, it surely seems as though those persons who do the least are rewarded the most and the ghetto persona gets you more respect than the good guy image. It reminds me of the old adage which states that, ” Good guys comes in last.” And it surely seems like most people have a tendency equate your kindness for sure sign of weakness.


  44. I am told that the Don of Cave Hill once tried to convince his colleagues that his plan for massive capital expenditure on infrastructure with money he did not have would generate income in the long term. Is there a lesson to be learned here?


  45. H Austin

    Thankyou.

  46. 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

  47. @ Enuff
    Lol
    You may be “hard-up” for ‘family’…but not Bushie…
    There is a blood / spirit thing about family….not geography…


  48. Man Bush Tea the blood connection is known. Why are you trying so hard to rewrite history? Our late PM father isn’t Guyanese? Buff Bajans ain’t went Guyana and Trinidad years ago?


  49. Another downgrade for Barbados Added by Dawne Parris on December 20, 2013. Saved under Uncategorized

    Moody’s Investors Service on has downgraded Barbados’ government bond rating to Ba3 from Ba1, putting the country’s rating deeper into junk territory.

    It cited the country’s “continued anemic economic performance”; ongoing deterioration in the government’s financial strength, due to persistently large fiscal deficits and rising debt levels; the deterioration in the government’s debt profile as a result of the significant increase in domestic short-term borrowings over the past two years; and the fall in foreign exchange reserves by more than 30 percent during January-September to $505 million for its two-notch downgrade.

    Moody’s also said the country’s credit outlook remained negative.

    “The continued negative outlook on Barbados’s rating primarily incorporates Moody’s expectation that the government’s debt metrics are likely to continue to deteriorate. Additional factors driving the negative outlook are the rating agency’s expectation that (1) Barbados’s growth prospects will likely remain subdued; (2) the recently announced fiscal consolidation plan is unlikely to reverse current trends in government debt indicators; (3) the government is likely to face increasing financing costs; and (4) pressure on the exchange rate peg will continue to increase,” it said in a statement issued a short while ago.

    The ratings agency added that Barbados’s rating would face further downward pressure in the event that the government is unable to achieve its fiscal consolidation targets, or if growth continues to underperform the government’s expectations, and debt ratios continue to rise as a result.

    “Moody’s could downgrade the rating further if international reserves continue to decline and/or the government continues to rely heavily on short-term debt and Central Bank financing,” it said.

    “While an upgrade is unlikely given the negative outlook, Moody’s could stabilize the outlook if the fiscal consolidation plan leads to a stabilization of government debt ratios, the economy returns to growth, the government decreases its reliance on short-term debt and central bank financing, and international reserves rebound.”

    Moody’s also adjusted Barbados’s local-currency bond and deposit ceilings to Baa3, its long-term foreign-currency bond ceiling to Ba1, its short-term foreign-currency bond ceiling to Not-Prime, and its foreign-currency deposit ceiling to B1.

    This is the third downgrade for Barbados in exactly a month, following on the heels of Standard & Poor’s on November 20 and CariCRIS earlier this week.


  50. “Free movement puts pressure on jobs, schools, housing and wider social services.
    Also, since most migrants are younger people there are also demographic implications.,”
    Are you aware that prior to Independence there was more vigorous freedom of movement between the islands than such as take place now?
    and what do you make of Mr Arthur’s revelation that more non-caribbean nationals are freely allowed entry into Caribbean countries to live and work than nationals of the Caribbean.

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