Hal Austin
Hal Austin

Introduction:
Barbadians are now getting some external scrutiny of the economic mess the nation is in and shining a torch in those cobwebbed corners is not a happy site. According to the recent IMF report, government has finally committed itself to a number of key proposals, but these still remain opaque and unarticulated, even if they had to be dragged kicking and screaming to admit there are in a deep economic hole. However they may manoeuvre, it is clear the offer of redundancies and a few cutbacks in spending are not the answers the economy needs at this time nor, indeed, do the growing army of un(and under)employ young people want.

The report itself admits this in its introduction, pointing that in December 2011 a previous IMF delegation had stressed that the widening fiscal deficit and debt were the key areas of concern and proposed a “credible fiscal consolidation plan” to resolve the issue. But, the DLP government asked for a postponement because of the general election, which, as we know, the DLP won. So, it is clear, that political chicanery won the day and the DLP deliberately misled the Barbadian electorate during the February 2013 campaign, especially its promise that there would not be any redundancies.

The reports also makes it clear that there is no available full information on financial performance of public enterprises, not only revealing the opacity of government, but, I suggest, not only hiding one of the key sources of heavy leaking of taxpayers’ money, but of gross managerial incompetence. The real problem with the Barbados economy, however, is structural, and deeply so: a public sector which is lacking in up-to-date technology, a working force that believes that taxpayers have a duty to keep them in jobs, a political culture that mistakes the ruling political party as the state, and a portfolio of small businesses and land that the state should not own but should dispose, if only to rebalance its finances. The only real reason for this ever-expanding portfolio of state-owned assets is the control it gives politicians, in terms of jobs for their supporters and a sense of personal social status.

Analysis:
With the ‘great’ IMF now delivering its sermon from on high, a bit Washington Consensus light, all froth but not substance, the DLP Government has still not made clear what its strategy for recovery is. As I write, the nation is yet to know how many people will be made redundant from the public sector, although the IMF states 13 per cent. Given the absence of accuracy numbers, it is very difficult to enter any serious debate or carryout a legitimate analysis of government policy. So, let us assume that there are about 30000 people on the public sector pay roll, 13 per cent of those will about 3900; so far government has said it will be sending home 3000 workers by the end of March. But this is not the end of the matter, since that will impact in a number of ways. Government tax take will diminish, however slightly, a matter that has so far not been raised, not even in parliament; most, if not all of these people will at some point be eligible for state benefits and there will be a drop in national insurance contributions. Consumer spending will also be down, leading to pressure on some parts of the private sector, which may lead to redundancies or at least wage cuts.

As the report states: “Central government gross debt has risen sharply since 2009. The debt-to-GDP ratio has climbed from under 60 per cent in 2009 to 94 per cent at end-September; including government securities held by the national insurance scheme (NIS), it rose from about 80 per cent to 128 per cent. “The gross financing requirement in 2013/14 is 15.4 per cent of GDP including the rollover of short-term debt. The deficit has been financed increasingly with short-term funds from domestic sources. “In the first six months of 2013/14, domestic financial institutions and the central bank provided the bulk of the financing in the form of T-bills, while the NIS provided about 11 per cent in the form (of) longer term debentures. “NIS holdings of government paper are estimated at about 67 per cent of its portfolio, above the guideline recommended in the 13th actuarial review to limit holdings in government securities to no more than 57 per cent.” It warns: “Going forward, the capacity of the NIS to absorb new government debt will be limited by balance sheet constraints as the operating surplus has declined to near balance.” The report does not make clear that the main reason why government has to depend on domestic credit is because with its record borrowing in the international markets will be prohibitive.

For the last five years the main developed markets – the US, Japan and UK – have had central bank interest rates of below one per cent. Had the Barbados economy not been in such trouble, it would have been relatively easy borrowing in the international markets at under six per cent, rather than a domestic market that is charging up to 15 per cent. Further, the report’s condemnation of the mis-use of NIS funds does not take in to consideration the contradiction of conventional investment strategies, especial for a fund with long-term liabilities.
We know very little about how the NIS is run, whether it uses passive or active managers, its asset allocation policies, who undertakes its research, the diversification of its portfolio, all this is kept carefully hidden from public view. Even investing 57 per cent of the NIS fund in government gilts, as the IMF reveals, is a bad strategy since market efficiency should dictate that the fund’s investment universe should be global, and it should have a proportionate percentage invested in accumulation (equities, to grow the fund), fixed income (gilts and corporate bonds to meet near-time liabilities), property, small amounts in cash and a similar amount in high-risk alternative investments. I suspect a lot of the lending is to do with political pressure and ignorance on the part of senior executives and the board of the NIS, a number of whom have no real professional experience in fund management although some may have academic familiarity with the process.

The report continues, and I quote because there have been points raised by myself and a number of other observant people on numerous occasions which are very similar. In paragraph 7, under the sub-headline: Monetary policy has not been consistent with the fixed exchange rate framework, the report continues: “A new interest rate policy was instituted in 2013 that made the three-month Treasury Bill rate the benchmark rate and directed the central bank to intervene in the auction market. “Under this policy, the CBB (central bank) absorbed about 44 per cent of T-bills issued in the first 11 months of 2013 and short term interest rates fell by about 50 basis points. Credit to the private, which had been contracting since 2011, nonetheless continued to fall.” Again, it is basic macroeconomics: the refusal of the foreign-owned banks to lend to small and medium enterprises, the key driver of the economy, was the main obstacle to financial intermediation. The central bank could have used its purchasing power of government gilts not to buy freshly minted short-term bonds, but to buy gilts off the banks on condition that the additional liquidity would have been used to lend to small and medium enterprises. Further, government, either through ignorance or stubbornness, has in fact refused to substitute that lack of bank funding with shadow banking or a strategically planned quantitative easing (on par with Obama’s funding of the Detroit car industry, which is now back on its feet) – the cheapest and most effective way of which was the creation of a post office bank (with a 17-strong established distribution network) or by introducing legislation to create a trade union/credit union/cooperative retail bank. So, there is a vacuum where an effective, well capitalised, well supervised and regulated banking system and monetary policy ought to be.

The other failing is that the government, like previous governments before it, has depended too much on the national insurance scheme as a piggy bank, which it can dip in to as it likes, and a mountain of commercial credit to pay for their programmes. This credit-based growth, as Lord (Adair) Turner, the former chairman of the UK’s Financial Services Authority and one of the most authoritative public intellectual economists in Britain, has led to rising leverage and debt overhang, a natural outcome of this credit-intensive growth. It is a policy based on a total disregard of the investment strategies and actuarial assumptions behind a hybrid contributory and pay-as-you-go pension scheme and ignores completely the scheme’s future liabilities. Part of the inept management of public accounts is reflected in the increase in the growing current account deficit, which the report could have said more about. Explained in simple terms, if the government gets Bds$100 in revenue during the tax year, but its expenditure is Bds$101, it is living beyond its means. This principle applies to households as it does to governments. The basic principle is for government to forensically audit its outgoings and cut back where necessary. This is true in principle, even if a government differs from a household in that it also invests for future generations. But that a government, fully aware of the global economic crisis, can still continue to spend taxpayers’ money as if it was going out of fashion borders on the fraudulent.

The other mantra which has captured the thought processes of most Barbadians is the redundant one of accumulating foreign reserves, presumably in preparation for an external shock of some kind. It is an obsession that has no basis in modern macroeconomics, the mantra of an evangelising old guard tat is convinced that financial economics has not moved on since the 1960s and 70s. This obsession with foreign reserves only serves to obscure the real shortcomings of the central bank’s reluctance to enter the futures and derivatives markets and its overall bad management of the nation’s finances. By entering the futures and derivatives markets the central bank will free-up much needed cash that can be invested in other more urgent and pressing assets. (Without overburdening this analysis, see: Joshua Aizenman, et al : “International Reserves and Swap Lines: Substitute s or Complements”, National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 15804). Continuing to stockpile foreign reserves, in the vain expectation of some severe externality, is voodoo. By definition, we do not know what the external shock would be, but the last real shock the Barbados economy faced was on September 22, 1955, Hurricane Janet, and two years later the nation had entered a contract with the construction engineers Costain to embark on the biggest capital project in its history. Huge reserves will not be of any real use if the external shock is a new strain of bird flu from China, or some terrorist attack on Grantley Adams International Airport. The foreign reserves mantra is preached mainly by worn out economists who did their studying in the 1960s and early 70s and have not really freshened up their knowledge of macroeconomic theory since graduation. Some of them probably even continue to teach from their old undergraduate notes.

Global Economy:
But the world in 2014 is a different place to that in 2007/8. We have already seen China’s economy, for most of the last 14 years the most dynamic in the world, has recently returned growth figures of 7.7 per cent, most impressive for the majority of developed economies, but a wake-up call to what was the fastest-growing and largest emerging market in the world. As Jay Bryson of Wells Fargo has pointed out, at the end of 2012, developing nations accounted for 49.6 per cent of global GDP, and although 2013 figures have not yet been confirmed, it looks as if this figure will rise to over 50 per cent. This growth confirms what Pascal Lamy, the former director-general of the WTO called the Geneva Consensus, the increasingly central role that developing nations now play in global trade. These developments, the new normal, play on the blind side of the people who manage the Barbados economy and are responsible for monetary and fiscal policy. None of this figures in their analyses or debates on economic policy, what little discussion they have narrow-focuses on foreign reserves. It is like asking someone on the eve of the discovery of the internal combustion engine what mode of transport would he prefer, knowing full well most people would ask for a faster breed of horse. There is a paradigm shift, and has been with a vengeance since the early 1990s, in the way we manage national accounts and currencies, and the stockpiling and warehousing of foreign reserves is not it; even at a household level we no longer stash our money in a savings account, we invest, make it work for us. It has gone further than this. In the old days of the 1980s, when we talked about a developing economy we often meant one based on the development economic theories of Sir Arthur Lewis, Gerard M. Meier, Joseph Stiglitz and others. Modern developing economies are increasingly consumption driven, rather than just producing the raw material for a commodity-hungry developed world. We now live in a global economy in which 35 per cent of exports from developed countries now go to developing economies, up from 20 per cent in 2000, and that trajectory is going further north and faster. But a lot of this growth is based on debt, about US$8trn, an increase from US$5.7trn in 1997, as Lord Turner has pointed out. The world has changed and policymakers and academics who fail to keep up will be left behind.

Conclusion:
The DLP government is learning the hard way that we now live in a globalised world and governments and their advisers can no longer operate in an opaque and deceptive way. Further, all economies, no matter how small, are now globally inter-connected, and a high wind one part of the world can lead to crashing waves the other side. It is relevant therefore to remember how the Asian crisis of the late 1990s occurred. All the key nations were linked to the dollar, all had huge current account deficits and falling foreign reserves. This cocktail of macroeconomic imbalances came tumbling down like a deck of cards once the Thai government decided to devalue the baht in July 1997. The Stuart government has not yet learned this simple fact of global economics and is still operating as if it is the repository of all wisdom when it comes to the financial economic government of the nation. Even though the IMF report should act as a wake-up call, it does not deal with the offloading of non-core assets, such as the state-owned Transport Board, a portfolio of under-performing hotels, a massive land bank, massive shares in LIAT, post offices, the inability to auction a television licence, an inability to collect VAT and national insurance. The decision to establish a revenue authority is not the same thing as collecting outstanding revenue. This is made worse when one considers that VAT is a tax paid at the point of business with the private sector acting as collectors for the state. All civil servants have to do is to collect the money, failing which the guilty party will be prosecuted and barred from running a business. It is organisational competence, not creating a new organisation, that is the real solution.

Equally, the lack of up-to-date and accurate information on the financial performance of public sector enterprises, including statutory bodies, is not a coincidence, but a deliberate attempt to mislead the IMF and the general public.
Any competent organisation would have produced annual reports, giving details of the business, future plans and its profits and losses, if only for internal use. The report’s authors also make a mistake of assuming that the financial sector is well capitalised, but has produced no evidence for this, apart presumably from central bank assurance.

But there is another way of looking at the banking sector (since there is no substantial shadow banking or non-banking sectors, apart from insurance), and that is to assume that the regulatory and supervisory systems are weak and that the banks manipulate a local light-touch regulatory regime lacking in expertise. How does the central bank carry out its stress tests? By examining capital adequacy and depending on the inadequate Basel III requirements? It is common knowledge that banks have one of the most flawed business model in modern capitalism, with some major international banks at the dawn of the global crisis having an asset to liability ratio of six per cent. Even local businesses have a minimum average ratio of 30:70. If any small business person had such a ridiculous asset to liability ratio and went to a bank to borrow money s/he would be chased out of the building. Banks are allowed to get away with this because of the discrepancies in their accounting practices. Banks do not have to explain in their annual reporting their liabilities in a way that any other ordinary business will have to. In this way they avoid runs, the main concern of governments, especially if the central bank is lender of last resort and will have to rescue troubled institutions.

But this is not the case in Barbados. It is almost certain that banks do not explain to supervisors or regulators their lending assumptions, therefore their capital adequacy is not properly explained; and, even if they were, they will tell the central bank that their foreign parent banks will cover any short falls. And they will get away with it, be they subsidiaries or branches because the banking regulatory and supervisory systems operate by deference.  The report’s authors have at times taken the self-confirming myths of central bank and civil service staff too much to heart, such as that Barbados is highly competitive. Although this is qualified, by pointing out that that is when compared with other Caribbean nations, it is really still disingenuous.

Its claim that ‘domestic’ banks appear to be well capitalised, lacks a clear definition since domestic is a mute point, given it also makes clear that the foreign-owned banks – with the parent companies of three are domiciled in Canada, two in Trinidad and Tobago and one in the US, with the assets of the Canadian-owned banks accounting for 75 per cent of total banking assets. This raises further serious regulatory issues since it is not clear who regulates local banks and, if the central bank, as is the legal position, who the real regulator is. To be competitive, an island 166 square miles and in which most official business is concentrated in the space between the City, Bay Street, Whitepark and Warrens, it should not take longer than five working days for an entrepreneur to register a new business. Where there is a cash purchase for a property, the entire process should not take longer than two working days for the sale and purchase of that property. Of course, all this is not the civil servants’ fault, although they are responsible for a large part of it. The bulk of it is caused by lazy, and in many cases, dishonest lawyers who tend to operate like a Mafia.

Good government would break up this professional monopoly by separating out advocates, those with permission to appear before the high courts and the Caribbean Court of Justice, and legal consultants, those permitted to give advice in their chambers but not to appear in court. Government should also introduce licences for conveyancing, labour law specialists, health law specialists and others, people who on qualifying would have the right to appear in the high courts representing clients on those specific subjects. Of course the lawyers and their supporters will scream, but this is one way of introducing a new professional competitiveness in the economy. We also need transparency in governance, with politicians and senior civil servants who appear to be living above their official incomes explaining the source of their wealth or having it seized and face criminal prosecution for abuse of public office. In real terms, Barbados has had nearly five decades of under-performance, years of lost productivity, which are now creeping up on us like disease in old age. We know our knees are not what they used to be, but we hardly remember when as teenagers we were kicking hard breadfruits around the playing field. Those days off from work, and when at work talking more than working, taking the children to school and then arriving at work just before lunchtime, not answering the telephone and leaving work early, all these and more will eventually come back to haunt us – and they have. One black hole that is not talked about by unions, policymakers or politicians is the massive cost to the taxpayer of absenteeism, but again the IMF appeared to have overlooked this. It would be worth while if the government commissioned a report on this from the university.

As Dilaka Lathapipat and Thitima Chucherd, writing about the Thai economy reminded us of developing economies: “In addition to building up a highly-educated and well-trained workforce, having a well-functioning labour market is crucial for a country to enhance its economic efficiency and competitiveness.” The authors also remind us of the definition of labour market efficiency: flexibility, controls on wage fluctuations, easy re-allocation of workers. We only have to look at the public sector trade unions, like the 10 per cent pay claim put in by the National Union of Public Workers, just months before a massive redundancy programme.

Of course,, most of these approaches are outside the IMF remit and are rightly the concerns of the ruling party, but it is basic macroeconomics that unless there is an improvement in productivity there will be very little or no growth.
It is also important to note that poor productivity in Barbados, in particular the public sector, is not just cyclical; it is rooted in deep structural flaws and in a post-independence culture that the state will provide. Making a few people redundant without fixing the fundamental problem is just pushing the can down the road. The machine of state is grinding to a halt because it is out of oil and it needs fixing.

In the final analysis we urgently need a new national mind-set, which places things such as fashion, cruises, whisky, four-by-four petrol guzzlers, foreign holidays, home improvements, and other materialistic trivia come second to securing one’s financial future.  We have to get real as a people and as a society.

  • Reading: Rene M. Stulz: “Should We Fear Derivatives”, NBER Working Paper 10574, 2004;
  • Neil Irwin, The Alchemists: Inside the Secret World of Central Bankers

172 responses to “Notes From a Native Son: The IMF has got Sinckler and Stuart Cornered with Nowhere to Run (Part 1)”


  1. @ SITH
    I can’t fault your reasoning and listing of the negatives that come with the 2-1 peg, but there must be an equal if not stronger set of reasons and lists of positives that has enable every minister of finance, and every governor of the central bank since 1975, to convince the majority of Barbadians that revaluing the dollars would be an unpardonable sin.


  2. @Bajan in NY
    Politicians don’t have the balls to be frank and forward thinking in telling the masses the truth. The 5 year election cycle is about winning elections and telling the masses what they want to hear.


  3. That’s why no one would trust to do any investigations in Barbados or through bajan journalists anymore, the whole profession has been comprised and is now like a dog and pony show.


  4. @ Well Well
    the whole profession has been comprised and is now like a dog and pony show.

    dog and pony?!? ….more like mule and jackass…


  5. @bajean in NY

    1n 1975 we did not have to borrow money to pay the import bill and we had a relatively upbeat tourist sector and a strong balance of FX funds being generated. Today we have to borrow money to pay for the imports. I know you must be aware that we had no takers a few months back for a borrowing offer we put out into the open market. So we cant borrow money under normal market terms and we lost $100 million in FX last month alone. So the issue is we are not getting enough FX in and tourists are going other places such as Cuba, DR, Costa Rica and one of the main reasons for that is cost. $2500 for a week in Barbados are $800 for a week in Cuba or Costa Rica or Dominican. They are getting our FX and we have not yet cut back on our expenditures. So we gotta get more money coming in and less going out. It is quite simple…we are in do do because we are spending opm (other peoples money). What are the positives? Do you have a few you can share with us.


  6. @david
    “In the world of FIAT what alternative currency or basket can guarantee flatline stability of currency rate”

    Guarantee of flatline stability is what we think we have now. The whole ideal of a pegged currency is you must have a greater degree of FX inflows than you do outflows along with the ability to trade dollars on a market.
    As long as that is the case then all things are wonderful and no adjustments of any type are required. But our system of a pegged currency also has FX controls that eliminate the normal market action of valuation. There is no place to sell Barbados dollars. So nobody outside of the country wants them Hope we discover oil real soon then we will be like the middle east countries most of who have a pegged exchange rate to the US$.


  7. @ SITH
    First of all, let me repeat, I think your arguments make sense and I was only trying to find out if as someone so well versed in the matter, you had heard the arguments of the pro 2-1 peg folks who make the decisions.
    I’ll tell you this, I have a Jamaican 1 dollar note which was signed by the members of an opposing Jamaican team in the early 70s. At that time the exchange rate was Bds$ 2.36 = Jam$ 1, which was more than the exchange rate for a U.S. dollars. As you know, the Jamaican dollars suffered numerous devaluations over the last 3 decades and at present the exchange rate is approx Jam$107 = US$1. I believe authorities in Barbados are afraid of something similar happening over a period of time if a decision is made to devalue the Barbados dollars.
    It is obvious imports would become more expensive if the Bds dollars is devalued, but that maybe a blessing, since the island would most likely only import what it can afford to pay for.


  8. Bajans had a choice either the IMF or the Guyanese and they chose the IMF.

  9. DLP (formerly CBC) TV Avatar
    DLP (formerly CBC) TV

    Reading the Friday paper (14-02-2014) on Estwick’s presentation to the Cabinet, it beggars the serious questions: who is advising the DLP gov’t on economic matters????? But looking at how the economy is being “run” the REAL QUESTION would be, is Fumble and Stinkliar even taking ANY advice on the running of this economy????? Looking at how the economy has “progressed” from 2008 to 2014 and comparing it to Estwick’s analysis it is CLEAR that this DLP govt is only running this economy in such a way AS to fortify their position in this country, doing it in a recession and to the dangerous DETRIMENT to the economy. THE DEMOCRATIC LABOUR PARTY MUST UNDERSTAND THAT WHEN IT ASSUMES GOVT THEY ARE THE GOVT OF ALL BARBADOS AND NOT OF DLP SUPPORTERS ONLY!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Mr Estwick’s presentation, in my opinion, is not one that any experienced economist couldn’t have made so it is telling me that Stinkliar and by extension Fumble, not being trained economists, MUST have been largely ignoring the advice from their “advisors”. That is INCREDIBLE, PREPOSTEROUS and DOWNRIGHT RIDICULOUS but at the same time it is not surprising!!!!!!!. I remember Dr Frank Alleyne a (former?) economic advisor to this gov’t on Brass Tacks basically impling that this govt is ignoring him. It is almost painful to think that our economy is being run this way!!!!!!!!
    Further actions, since assuming govt in 2008 and even with their own admission that the world is going through a recession, tells me that the gov’t is run by LUNATICS!!!!!!! Their first budget in 2008 had me asking “ARE THEY SERIOUS??. Then Fumble and his mindless declaration that no one will be sent home in (2013 elections) even after knowing that the NIS was being used to pay public workers salaries . Then there is the rumour that they hired >2000 people into the public service just before the election is an act of pure unadulterated LUNACY in itself!!!!!!!!
    The $3000 question would be what next for Fumble and Stinkliar. If Fumble does not heed Estwick’s “advice” it only confirms as I stated earlier that this economy is only run to benefit the DLP’s “image”. if this is so then Freundel Stuart MUST BE REMOVED AS PRIME MINISTER for bringing the economy to ruins and not doing what is required to save it. If , however, Freundel follows Estwick’s advice then what of Sinckler then!!!!!!!!!!. Fumble then by inference and contrary to earlier statements would have lost confidence in Sinckler!!!!!!!!!


  10. @ SITH
    As you have outlined, this situation is as simple as they come.
    We are spending more money than we are making. To cover the difference, we have been borrowing money from others.
    Meanwhile, we have been fooling ourselves with shiite talk about “first world status”, and we actually seem to now believe that we are ENTITLED to this standard of living…..on OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY….

    Wuh OBVIOUSLY lenders will demand their repayment…
    ..and obviously new lenders will be REAL FOOLISH to give us more money….so now we will have to use the already INSUFFICIENT income to maintain our lifestyle – AS WELL AS to repay the debts we built up over the last 30 years….. In short, our ass is grass.

    In the news today the joker from the NUPW was complaining that “nowhere had the IMF’s intervention resulted in a better life for the citizens”…. LOL… He is an idiot?
    The IMF is a reality check.
    .. Its job is to remind brass bowls that champagne taste cannot be sustained on mauby pockets.


  11. @bajean in new York

    There is no need to devalue if the products we are exporting (tourism) generate enough money to cover the imports. That apparently is no longer the case. So what has to be done to generate more FX? That is what needs to be solved and when near on 50% of the workforce is employed in one industry being tourism, it had better be very very competitive. Well, it isn’t. We are no longer competitive. The world is not going to continue to give us money to spend unless 1) we earn it and 2) we can repay it. If we cant figure out how to do that then what is going to happen? We don’t have to worry about correcting the value of our currency if we are generating FX surpluses, but we are not and that is the big problem. There is a reason why the Barbados dollar is rated in the same category as junk bonds. It is because nobody we trade with wants them. And they don’t want them because you cant spend them anywhere except in Barbados. Try taking your Barbados dollars to a bank in New York and see if you can get US$ for them. That is what the government recently did by putting an offering to finance on the table for a bunch of hundreds of millions of dollars. The result was thanks, but no thanks. There is where we are at.


  12. @ Sith
    I have said on a number of occasions. Uncouple from the Greenback, fix against a basket of a basket of currencies and commodities and float against the others.
    There are now other reserve currencies, the most important of which is the renimbi, which is now the main trading currency in Asia. The euro will also bounce back and the Greenback and freal will battle for influence in Latin America.
    When you consider that China has a middle class the sie of the entire US and the eurozone is 500m strong and trades mainly internally, the days sof the Greenback are numbered.

  13. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2014 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2014 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad

    Well Well | February 15, 2014 at 6:20 PM |

    That’s why no one would trust to do any investigations in Barbados or through bajan journalists anymore, the whole profession has been comprised and is now like a dog and pony show.@

    WellWell. YOU ARE SO RIGHT . ITS MORE LIKE A JACK AND ASS SHOW.long ass talk that goes no where.it can make you sick fast, some people now use lnternet only

  14. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    I am not sure, that with the abysmal state of economic affairs in Barbados, that any political party is equipped with the mindset to solve the problems facing Barbados in the short term. What is required from the political establishment, is working across both political aisles, and the allowance for political vulnerabilities on both sides. This current crop of politicians show no propensity to merge their ideas for the betterment of Barbados. Clearly evident is that the ship of state is fastly running to a state of “Dry Dock” and politicians yelling across the aisle, has manifested itself into only useless diatribe. The folks who have all contributed here on this blog, seem to be more in touch with the truth about Barbados’ economic affairs, than the people elected seem to be. Mr. Sinckler and the Prime Minister are now in survival mode, and appear to be, hoping for the miracle, that does not seem to be coming. On the other side of the aisle, the opposition BLP can now point to sytemic failures, as well they should, but can they solve Barbados’ economic woes?. If the opposition BLP can, then my question to Ms Mottley is why then for the good of the country, are you not attempting to walk across the aisle, and offer the services of the opposition to the Stuart administration? Maybe I’m living in a fantasy world, but at this stage of facing an economic crisis, anything possible should be tried. These politicians have to reach across the parliamentary aisle, face this dilemma head on, and allow themselves to admit to the people of Barbados, that serious economis miscalculations have occurred, while both parties controlled the instruments of government. There’s enough blame to go around, it’s time to get busy, and produce solutions to bring Barbados back, from the brink of economic ruination. I want to see from the government and the opposition in Barbados, what I see and read here on this blog, a comittment to working and merging for the good of the bajan people. All politics are local, but the call now should be for national unity.


  15. @Hal

    You are aware the Chinese manipulate their currency rate and no one has been able to make them stop?

  16. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Victor R Callender | February 16, 2014 at 6:13 AM |
    “Maybe I’m living in a fantasy world, but at this stage of facing an economic crisis, anything possible should be tried.”

    But you are living in fantasy land!
    This is precisely what we have been trying to get over to jokers like you. But what did we get in return other than a barrage of invectives which made people think you and the miller were “friends”.

    To whom are you directing your call to arms? The politicians or Bushie’s brass bowl John Citizen? Who is listening to the critics; certainly not the Chief?
    Do you really understand what is happening to your sweet “Bubadus”? The current administration has been told on numerous occasions ad nauseam the fiscal path it was following was the wrong one that would only lead to where you are now, in serious crisis.
    But what did the so-called prophets of doom and gloom got other than what you did to the miller?

    The present administration listens to no one; not even their own ‘in-house’ critics.
    Ryan Straughn gave constructive advice for many months for government to rein in its fiscal profligacy but what did he get in return other than what you are engaging in? Even now he, Ryan, is not being taken seriously when he suggests the government goes to the IMF for assistance before it is forced into a one-sided arrangement that would bring tremendous grief to ordinary innocent citizens by way of a sharp adjustment of the local currency. To use Bushie’s words, an IMF designed reality check is what the brass bowls are about to experience.

    Another classic example of the intransigence of the current administration is the one of privatization. Here we are pushing for an early programme that could facilitate the much desired goal of black economic enfranchisement even if executed according to Bushie’s “Cooperative” model.

    However, the current administration is bent on ensuring the State owned assets remain under the control of politicians to exercise the principles of the fatted calf economics and fiscal management.
    Eventually, the IMF will sell off the assets at knockdown prices, not to black Bajans but to people with loads of foreign money including the Trickidadians whom Bushie and his ilk loathe so much.

    PS: Victor, unless you are one of the “eminent persons” don’t expect your suggestions to be entertained far less ever see the light of day.
    Your sweet country is ready to be towed into “Dry Dock” minus an incompetent clueless captain who wrecked the ship everybody knew was in bad shape prior to 2008.


  17. @ Miller
    Look chief!
    You are right about the intransigence of Stuart. But are you suggesting that Mia or Arthur would be any different?
    Mia was the first person bout here publicly talking bout shutting down the social media…and limiting free speech…remember?
    Mia was behind the World Cup inspired wire tapping for political reasons scam….remember?
    …she burn down Glendairy too….but that is another story….

    …and don’t talk bout Arthur,….even if a fellow disagreed with him privately, he would get drunk and call you at 3a.m. Bwussing and carrying on….that sort of thing is intimidating to an ordinary citizen…(but he CAN’T bwuse like a bushman 🙂 )

    This is what Victor is saying….both political parties are IMPOTENT in the current crisis.
    SO THEN WHAT IS YOUR SOLUTION?

    On privatization…if things get tight with your family – do you rush to sell the family house to Bushie?
    Of course the bushman will let you rent it…but in 5 years you will have paid the full cost to Bushie ….and your youngest daughter would have paid up even more…
    NORMAL people would sacrifice, cut back meals, do odd jobs and negotiate other deals…in order to maintain the family home and assets.

    Bushie thought it was only people like Peter Wickham who were willing to sell their birthrights for a pot of porridge…..
    ….you ain’t Peter nuh? LOL Ha. Ha

  18. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    @millertheanunnaki, Is there anything that’s good that you hope for us? Everyday you intellectualize the gloom and doom of Barbados and bajans. I don’t have the answers, and I will concede that I’m not the smartest person on this blog, but I’m willing to listen, even to you. Why are you so angry with everybody. Don’t you think that you could channel that anger into some positivity. You seem to be a very well read and competent person, a person from whom I could learn. But rather than build up,you tear down, you demoralize, and at the end of the day, I am left gasping for air. Please offer us some solutions, I beg you. I am not eminent, far from it, but I am Barbadian. I come here with no pretense, only with a relatively pure heart. You sir, are my countryman, not my enemy. I apologize if I have offended you. I offer you an olive branch, so that we can reconcile our differences and pray for and search out the truth, for our beloved Barbados. Many will be affected by poor planning and lack of austerity measures, are you willing to lend your voice to help with solutions that will be a national call to action, against this government, and all politicians. The governed are the employers of the government. We have a right to be heard, and to demand truth and honesty from those who are governing. Help me understand sir, how to frame a conversation, that has impact for change. Thank you, sir. If the government is talking and no one is listening, and they have been tuned out by the masses, then it’s time for a no confidence vote.

  19. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    @millertheanunnaki But you are living in fantasy land!
    This is precisely what we have been trying to get over to jokers like you. But what did we get in return other than a barrage of invectives which made people think you and the miller were “friends”. You will find out sir, how much the other side, I’m talking about the BLP is lacking. You will find out that Ms Mottley, does not garner the suppot of most of those in her own party, let alone the entire country. Did you know that the BLP kept bringing Mr Arthur back, primarily because Ms Mottley’s leadership was questionable. Are you prepared for a caretaker BLP administration. Who stands out in the BLP with strong fiscally responsible skills, ready to take on the challenges of Barbados’ economic future. Many are ready to fire salvos across the bow of a disabled ship, there are those ready for the mutiny, but who will captain our Island home out of the perilous waters. Tell me, what ministry did Ms Mottley run sucessfully? Did Owen S Arthur follow the advice of the IMF. Both Athur and Mascoll who are trained economist have offered what solutions to fix the current economic crisis. If I am drowning sir, I don’t care who saves me, I just want to be saved.


  20. one would never get the truth from miller ,,for five years he huffed and puffed that the govt should get rid of the bloated civil service,which he pissed allover ,,,with the most demeaning names,,now the time have arrived govt dismiss civil servants guess what he hollers and throw all kinds of sissy fits about govt being cruel,,,his solutions what ever they may be cannot be taken seriously as his rabid political discourse is soely intertwined with one of selfishness and not one for country,,hence one will always him rant and rave about the “Selling barbados to the highest bidder to pay the debt down…

  21. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    Mr Miller, it was your party,who with George Payne and the other co-conspirators that resurrected Owen S Arthur. They did that because, it is said they found Ms Mottley’s personal lifestyle objectionable. Now, do you think that Ms Mottley has forgotten that? Where can she lead Barbados, if she can’t muster the troops in her own party. What awaits Barbados under Ms Mottley,will be constant strife, and bickering Mr Miller, and guess what, Barbadians will continue to suffer. Please remember, her own party members begged Owen Arthur, who was basically done, as a party leader, to retake the political reigns. Besides an article written by Mr Mascoll recently, and a few comments in the Nation by Mr Arthur, what economic strategy has the BLP offered at anytime relative to this crisis. I show you how inept the BLP political methodology is, they stood on political platforms with the country in crisis, ranted and raved with two genius economist in their party, and never saw the economic fiasco that awaited the Barbadian people. Please Mr Miller, and you are asking us what? to criminalize the current administration? Mr Bush Tea is fair and willing to look at all sides, but you Mr Miller, you can’t see the forest for the trees. Two trained economist failed to see the economis alerts, that foretold Barbados’ economic future, and all they had to do was show the Barbadian people the convincing evidence that they should have had, and political change would have been a certainty. Mr Miller no disrespect, Mia Mottley can’t do it. If the BLP is returned to power, remember this, Barbados will be in a dire economic condition, probably worse that it is now. I am not taking any particular side, I am not taking any side, I am looking at the big picture. I am still waiting for Ms Mottley’s economic solution. She accuses Mr Stuart of being quiet, she hasn’t been to talkative about the current state of economis affairs in Barbados, with any specificity. All of Ms Mottley’s conversations, have been generalities, aimed at appeasing the population.

  22. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Bush Tea | February 16, 2014 at 8:31 AM |

    Bushie as you were told before the miller knows very little of which you rant and rave other than by your gossip and rumour-mongering about the past sins of some BLP administration. An administration that has been exonerated and officially forgiven by the same “intransigent Stuart”.

    But how would your strategy of continuing blaming the past administration deal with the challenges facing the current one?
    Are you going to blame the past administration (including your favourite character “Wuk-fuh-Wuk”) for sending home 3,000 public sector workers, ignoring the IMF recommendations of 2011, manipulating for narrow partisan electoral ends economic and fiscal data for which the Central Bank should be the independent custodian and presenter and, most of all moving, the national indebtedness from $ 4.7 billion to $10.9 billion in less than 6 years?

    We know for sure your contrite admission of an IMF reality check will not be by way of a cruise missile but by a series of depth charges to fatally raise the DLP submarine that has torpedoed the Bajan economy.
    It’s always better to sell your family house to locals looking for a deal (and make a surplus to liquidate your other debts) when things get tough than to wait until the mortgagee repossesses and kick your entire family out when the house goes on the auction block that your “Trickidadians” loaded friends will snap up for a song.

    Don’t you think it’s time you stop with your “looking-back” series and deal with the present and future?
    We notice your total lack of your ‘opinionated contributions regarding the Estwick plan and his propensity to ‘destabilise’ your preferred administration hanging on to dear life by a ‘twine of time’.
    What’s up Bushie the black bald pooch cat got your uncontrollable tongue?

    One thing rational thinking people on BU know for sure your BUP or PUP (or is it the BBE) organization will never get off the ground to save Barbados as long as Dictator Bushie is around. Even Caswell has given up on you!


  23. LOL @ Miller…
    Victor here pelting licks in your ass and you fixated with Bushie? ….hmmmmm passing strange….!!

    Bushie must have touched a nerve…. Ha Ha …oh Shiite!!!

    Boss man, if you are so asinine to sell your family home and expose your children to the whims and fancies of Bushie ….well sell um yuh idiot!!! …..thank God you don’t have any real children….

    That is obviously a LAST RESORT ACTION, only taken when the alternative is death and total surrender…. But as Victor has laid out for everyone to see….that appears to be your (and the collective politicians’ – both B & D) mentality.

    Steupssss…. You could really start back blogging under your real name do…..

  24. are-we-there-yet? Avatar

    Victor R Callender re. your post of February 16, 2014 at 8:56 AM;

    What is your solution to the problem. Leave FS and his merrie band to continue wrecking the economy? Freundel has clearly demonstrated that he cannot pilot the ship successfully to calmer waters and the various Ministers have also demonstrated that they were complicit in the ruining of the economy between 2008 and now. They can’t successfully lead the recovery. But at least there are some in the BLP who have track records of good management of significant sectors in good and not so good times. No one in the current DLP has a track record of doing anything substantively and successfully for the advancement of the country. Rather, they have essentially destroyed our economy as is clear from the IMF reports.

    IMHO, any solution that leads to FS demitting his high office and perhaps CS leaving the Finance Ministry, will stand the country in good stead.

    It is not a Hobson’s choice at this stage. I think that the Estwick imbroglio could offer a possibility of a path to a change that could lead to better political leadership and management of this country and a possibility of transitioning to economic growth sometime in the future . Too bad the seemingly purblind leader and his band are not likely to take it.


  25. @ David – BU

    What do you make of the Nation’s report of Sir Roy Trotman replacing Amb. Joe Goddard at the U.N. coming out at this time?


  26. The Bushman……………..it’s really sad.


  27. @ David
    China is a communist state, nothing happens without the approval of the state. The valuations on their companies are always dodgy, that is why so many have withdrawn from the New York stock exchange.
    In China, what you see is not what you get.


  28. Plantation……………I remember one journalist in Barbados back in the 70s and 80s, Timothy Slinger, who was never afraid to investigate any issue that was relevant to human interest, now no human interest is taken seriously in Barbados, It’s frightening.


  29. @Hal

    How can you suggest we look at the Chinese currency as an alternative to US peg?

  30. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    @are-we-there-yet? What is your solution to the problem. Leave FS and his merrie band to continue wrecking the economy? Freundel has clearly demonstrated that he cannot pilot the ship successfully to calmer waters and the various Ministers have also demonstrated that they were complicit in the ruining of the economy between 2008 and now. I will never maintain that the current administration, handled the current fiscal crisis competently. But let us not pretend that the opposition BLP was free and clear of all of this, either. Bad decisions about Barbados’ fiscal health were started under Mr Arthur, who grew government to an inordinate, unsustainable size, and facilitated for outrageous spending, at a time when Barbados needed to have begun to look at reducing high interest rates and placing a cap on borrowing. Barbados had at its helm a trained economist in Arthur, who allowed Barbadians to borrow without fiscal restraint, and initiated a fiscal free for all with the IMF. It is now fashionable to place the blame on Mr Stuart, though he has been acquiescent in his ability to measurably deal with this fiscal casm, it must be said that both parties are to blame. Ms Mottley sat as Mr. Arthur’s most noted lieutenant during these days of fiscal mismanagement, and unheralded bungling of many projects, started and not properly finished by the BLP over the fifteen years of Mr Arthurs administration. Hind sight being 50/50 I don’t understand why many will not look inside the mistakes made by the trained economist, both in Mr Arthur’s administration and at his central bank. In Mr Arthur’s last stand he was able to secure the services of Mr. Mascoll who came over from the DLP, I’ll spare you the details, yet with two very learned economist, and a trusted deputy prime minister, the BLP was unable to do right by Barbados. History has a way of repeating itself, and those who ignore history will eventually find themselve paying homage to the mistakes of the past. I would concede to you, that mismanagement and inept leadership on the part of this current administration, should be met with severe penalties at the polls, if this admininstration cannot turn around the current fiscal dilemma. However, we should all be mindful, that across the aisle political discourse, offered with efficiency and constructiveness, may lend itself to solving the malfeasance of poltical culture, that now exist in Barbados. There’s a saying in the USA whose motto is hailed from the show me State of Missouri, and that is “Show me.” The long serving BLP who had control of the instruments of power, dropped the ball, and now they want it back. Perhaps the solution to the problems of Barbados, is to go back to the place where it all started, under the watching eyes of Owen, Mia, Clyde and the rest of them, and then come forward to Mr, Stuart and Mr Sinckler.


  31. @BushTea

    Talk about ignominy!! You are all over the place with your argument, but that is expected from the dangerous. The discussion is about economic management and you resorted to an argument based on OSA “bwussing” people.

    @ VCallender

    I am not one to give much credence to arguments that are based on emotion/belief rather than FACTS., unless you are clairvoyant.

  32. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ Victor R Callender | February 16, 2014 at 9:21 AM |
    “I am still waiting for Ms Mottley’s economic solution. She accuses Mr Stuart of being quiet, she hasn’t been to talkative about the current state of economis affairs in Barbados, with any specificity. All of Ms Mottley’s conversations, have been generalities, aimed at appeasing the population.”

    The more than yellow tail monkey climbs the more he shows his true-blue colours.

    Can you understand that Ms Mottley is NOT the PM? It is not her responsibility to act or implement. Her party was not given the mandate to govern, only to oppose (in general) the incumbent administration when its policies and programmes are viewed as anathema to the interest o f the general populace.
    Even if the Opposition were to offer specific alternative solutions are you aware that the current administration is not even prepared to listen far less implement? Ask Estwick if you doubt that!

    Lying to the IMF will cost the country dearly in the coming months. So here is a specific and easily implementable solution to a very ‘taxing’ problem involving the integrity and reliability of the economic and financial data used for decision-making.
    The Opposition calls on the government to fire immediately the untrustworthy and unprofessional Guv of the CBB.
    What do you have to say about that Victor, since we can expect total silence other than invectives from BT?

    But shouldn’t both you and Bushie be dealing with the widening chasm between Dr. Estwick and the Stuart’s administration rather than wasting time attacking the foolish miller whom Bushie wants to eliminate.
    If Bushie is so sure the Mr. Miller is blogging under a pseudonym why is he following the jackass miller in blogging under the moniker B T (bare talk)?
    Let the BU people like Caswell see who is this messiah to save Barbados with his BBE inspired PUP.
    Now who would go to the voting both and cast an X against the name Bush Tea other than a blind idiot?

  33. are-we-there-yet? Avatar

    Victor C Callendar;

    I ask again, What is your solution? You appear to lean towards one which allows the current lot to continue since you do not appear to grasp the clear fact that they and they alone were responsible for the rapid decline in the economy over the past 3 to 5 years or so. The IMF and all the relevant data says so. Harping on the ills of the OSA administration without reference to gains made at that time is of little merit. The fact is that practically no government in this region started a serious effort of structural transformation during those times of relative plenty. Why would you expect the OSA administration to be different? It is what it is. Move on.

    I say that for us to progress upward from where we now are the current hapless leader and some of his team must go. Estwick offers a pathway to that part of the solution and perhaps other aspects of it as well. The remainder of the solution will follow, in whatever sensible political configuration fortune allows us.

    DLP minus FS; BLP; a new Coalition; or whatever.

    FS and the current configuration of the DLP cannot lead us up from the bottom of the economic cliff.


  34. Yet when DE puts an option on the table we easily dismiss it. Face it, political prisms are at play.


  35. @ Enuff
    Wait bozie…you want to tell Bushie how to argue now too…
    Wuh Looka Bushie crosses nuh!!! (You done know Bushie like to mash your corns…)

    Miller …stop getting on like a woman do!
    Bushie like pseudonyms. That way we can focus on ideas and not people. The POINT is that your slip is showing…..

    @ David
    What Dr Estwick idea what?!
    Clyde Mascoll had a great idea with hardwood too….and Owen had one about solar water heaters in Nigeria…. Great idea Bushie’s ass!
    It has to make sense.
    Bushie like Estwick, …but shiite is shiite…

    If your daughter comes home and tell you that Bushie offered to lend her $10,000 because ‘he likes her’ would you consider that to be a great idea? Steupsss… You ain’t know Bushie intentions…

    These doctors are all the same… (Watch GP let loose now 🙂 )
    …a patient has developed high blood pressure and diabetes and THEIR solution is some shiite medicine that allows you to continue for a while by masking the symptoms….pain killers and nuff expensive pills…

    Bushie’s solution is to CHANGE the DIET and HABITS that is the root cause of the illness in the first place….and you would see how fast and how lasting your recovery will be…..LOL…especially if you choose the natural ‘bush’ medicines…


  36. @ Are we there yet
    Why are you obsessed with dumping Fumble unless we KNOW that we have a workable alternative in place?
    The FACT of the matter is that the MAJORITY of Bajans voted for the current jokers. Are you joining with Bushie in deeming Bajans to be brass bowls whose judgement cannot be allowed to stand?

    Can we afford the drama and trauma of ejecting a legally and constitutionally elected government at a time when we are under such imminent threat…?
    …or should we join together to survive the assault….and THEN dump the jokers AND reform the system….?

    When you jump from one leaky boat to another rudderless one in the middle of a storm …what do you achieve?

    It is like in first aid….priorities priorities priorities…
    Breathing
    Bleeding
    Consciousness
    ..right now we need to get our breathing going again – before dealing with consciousness (sleepiness) 🙂


  37. @ BTea
    I don’t have corns, but have sussed you out…can’t fool me. Nuff ah wunna shame, so all of a sudden EVERYBODY inept, clueless etc even when the facts/track challenge that thesis. The Dems faack up, therefore the Bees would have also–that is the argument of your kind.


  38. @Bush Tea

    What Estwich has done is to provoke/generate the kind of discussion about how we should be managing our litttle economy in a way that has not been done before. He has departed from Westminster conventions which should give hope.


  39. Fenty | February 15, 2014 at 6:02 AM |

    “Thanks John. You have shed greater light on this economic mess, originated as you so clearly stated from Owen Arthur Administration. Obviously, some here have failed to realized that the past with its good and evil lives in the present.”

    Are you people just plain stupid, ashamed or playing devil’s advocate?
    If there was any doubt about who was responsible for our present economic predicament; your own Minister of Agriculture, Dr David Estwick, outstanding DLP parliamentarian put the issue to rest when he unequivocally declared for all to hear -except the sycophantic DLP apologists- that his administration was responsible for the present economic crisis.


  40. @ Enuff
    Bushie is not ashamed to confess that he is ASHAMED in truth….

    It never crossed the Bushman’s mind that a party could be worse that the Owen Arthur BLP of VECO / 3S/ Greenland / World Cup/ Dodds fame…..
    But the DLP has managed to achieve that…… Ah shame!

    What the hell you want Bushie to do now….step back from “worstest” to “worser” …..

    Bushie’s last hope for wunna is BUP….
    LOL…you mind the bushman…..BT done got he name mark on a lifeboat name BBE hear….


  41. @ David
    How is that?
    By borrowing money from a different source?

    That whole thing should have been an internal battle – and the winner should have been broadcasted as a DLP initiative…

    The public nature of the whole thing says that it is a power play – FULL STOP!
    Perhaps it is even well conceive. BUT it is no innovative solution.


  42. “Perhaps the solution to the problems of Barbados, is to go back to the place where it all started, under the watching eyes of Owen, Mia, Clyde and the rest of them, and then come forward to Mr, Stuart and Mr Sinckler.”

    I was trying to keep out the quagmire because I wouldn’t know where to turn if I start getting licks like Miller but to he credit he trying but licks coming too fast and furious and Prodigal like he keeping far too but seriously though what am I to believe, Mr Callender’s opinion/feeling or the revelation from someone who was in the thick of things as MInister of Agriculture, former Minister of Economic Affairs and former Chairman of the Cabinet Committee on Economic matters Mr David estwick. Is Mr Estwick blatantly lying on the organisation he loves and cannot leave irrespective of how he is treated and ignored. After all he is not totally hand-to-mout like the rest and his parliamentary pension is already secured.


  43. @ Bushie
    CARSICOT, Coverley, CLICO, Clico “contract” at the yet to finish houses at Constant that led to the eating of Marilyn Rice-Bowen, the venezuelan housing project, St.Joseph’s hospital and the $3.3m gratuity happened too.
    As for your BUP–STUUUUPSE same players.


  44. @ David

    We are compelled to generally agree with Bushie. At best DE is still trying to tinker. We have long assessed that the time for tinkering, even under the guise of reformation, has long past. That an empty vessel like DE could pretend to have something important to say while he imposes his nothingness on the GOB is telling.


  45. @ David
    Simple. Already on some measures the Chinese is sthe world’s dominant economy; the Asian economies, ASEAN members, the fastest growing developing economies are trading in the renimbi.
    In time, nations that go cap in hand to China will do part of their trading in the renimbi since the loans will be coming from China and they will be buying in Chinese products.
    In the meantime, decoupling will mean the dollar, stil the dominant currency, will be one of many – the renimbi and a strengthened euro.


  46. BUSHIE U right .i gone bosie to empty my topsy brass bowl cause it brimming ova wid BLP sh..it,,,,,,,,,,,,,,MIA ain’t got nuh answers ,,,and Now DE wid gimmick no 2 ,,,but i still like de ole pit bulll……


  47. What DE has done is to agitate and complicate….furthermore his proposals would put us in a holding pattern for sometime to come .sacrifice might be the only solution everybody hates medicine but the country can no longer wait for vodoo medicineto take effect

  48. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    “How does the Central Bank Governor go from telling the head of the IMF that the IMF gives “bad advice” to countries like Barbados and that the IMF’s model is “simply wrong” – to now saying that the DLP’s policies are in line with what the IMF is recommending?”

    The apologists for the beleaguered piss-poor DLP administration are always challenging the critics to put alternative solutions on the table.
    Well, here is a low-hanging fruit for easy picking.
    Fire the Governor of the Central Bank forthwith! His retention as governor is clearly untenable. Such a straightforward decision would be clearly in line with IMF policies and expectations.

    The garden gnome has lost all creditability and has set himself up as the first sacrificial lamb of the many casualties to follow in the coming months. The MoF ought to be next.

    Victor R. Callender, what is your view about this proposal placed on the table? Or do you still have your head buried in a national Geographic magazine with nubile Nubians displaying their breasts and ‘jacking off’?

  49. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ ac | February 16, 2014 at 4:55 PM |
    “sacrifice might be the only solution everybody hates medicine but the country can no longer wait for vodoo medicineto take effect”.

    Finally, you have come around to the kind of thinking you should have embarked upon 2 years ago by siding with the miller instead of cussing him like your arch-enemy Bushie and his new found sidekicks Oilslick and Victoria R.

    So ac, are you going to support the miller in his call for a programme of privatization and outsourcing or are you going to remain in that abusive relationship with Bushie and his two goons?

    The miller loves you honey. Just say the word and his foot will be in your mouth ‘until death do us part’.

    PS: The IMF has been asked to be best man at the wedding. Island gal and Onions are invited. But we don’t want Bushie to be in attendance with his garrulous mob.

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