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Dr. Warren Smith, President of CDB
Dr. Warren Smith, President of CDB

The Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) recently held its 44th Annual Meeting Board of Governors in Guyana. The closing statements of CDB meetings in recent years have all listed the concern about high debt ratios of Caribbean countries and 2014 is no different. The theme of the CDB conference this year, Unlocking Opportunities for Competitiveness and Growth, the Role of Energy. On cue the President of CDB Warren Smith quoted in the closing statement for 2014, “Our anaemic growth performance is further manifested in widening fiscal imbalances; high debt ratios; and declining levels of foreign exchange reserves”. Smith’s observation should not surprise because ALL Caribbean countries with the exception of Trinidad has accumulated significant debt in the last decade both domestic and foreign.

Chairman elect of the CDB Board of Governors Prime Minister, the Rt. Hon. Dr. Denzil Douglas of St. Kitts and Nevis in his closing statement urged the CDB to act as a greater catalyst for faster change and adaption in the Caribbean. One suggestion he made is for CDB to expand the use of policy based loans (PBLs). While this type of loan, by its design, is important for developing countries to access:  “fast disbursing loans to strengthen institutional and policy environments”. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck it is more debt Prime Minister Douglas has requested the CDB make available to regional governments. Given our high debt ratios acknowledged by the President of the CDB one wonders where do Caribbean countries make the jump to prosperity given the current state of regional economies.

At the household level there is an appreciation to what high debt does.  This appreciation should guide how politicians who manage households accrue public debt but corruption and inefficient use of public monies through the years have forced debt ratios in the region upwards.  At a seminar convened recently in Barbados Ron Salole, deputy chairman of the  International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) Board made the observation:

One of the key indicators of fiscal health is . . . net debt. Net debt is the money the Government is going to have to find in the future, and . . . if you look at all the Auditor General’s report, he makes a very clear statement that net debt is going up and has increased significantly.

So if you want to tackle [the fiscal deficit] you need to inform people about what the net debt is, how it’s increasing and how it needs to be managed. I sense that the Auditor General is getting frustrated because immediately after his report is issued it dies down and nobody then picks it up again. But he deals with it very, very well in his report and for my jurisdiction, which is Canada, that was one of the ways which we had to tackle our deficit.

Salole said what Barbados was doing was akin to “borrowing from your kids. You are going to give them some real difficulty around their necks for future generations” – Nation newspaper

Many commentators including BU have been highly critical about the lackadaisical approach to managing public debt over the years. Instead we allow the debate to be derailed by partisan political positions.   Sadly future generations will have to pay for our short sightedness but what do we care.

To compensate for the lack of  ‘fiscal space’ created by high debt profiles, regional government including Barbados have turned to grant financing. If we accept that grant funding means non repayable funds it begs the question – what are the conditions attached when grant funding is received from a country or other entity. Recently Minister of Foreign Affairs Maxine McClean at a function to remove visa requirement for Chinese entering Barbados identified 11 projects awaiting approval from China, we assume to access grant money. BU has no issue with building relationships with other countries to open avenues for mutual benefit,  we do it with the UK, USA, Canada why not China? The issue for BU is, if we are using grant financing as a compensating strategy because of bad fiscal management over the years, is this a sustainable approach and what is the price we have to pay China, eventually.

Should the citizenry be concerned by regional governments fraternizing with China? BU is unsure however we are aware that we should be wary of Greeks bearing gifts. It is ironic that we have a DLP government in office who is should be familiar with the foreign policy approach guided by “we are friends of all, satellites of none…

Thanks to BU family member Due Diligence for the research.

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65 responses to “High Debt BUT there is Grant Financing”


  1. @Lemuel

    The mistake we make when debating food security is that we have to be 100% self sufficient. Not so!

    A focus on food security will also guide a housing and land use policy which is being woefully implemented at this time.


  2. @Exclaimer

    Yes we have the people, the mass group but from within must come leadership in many forms. The challenge for the country is what is needed to inspire what is hoped to be latent leadership.


  3. @ David
    The challenge for the country is what is needed to inspire what is hoped to be latent leadership
    ++++++++++++++++
    Thus…….BUP!

    …study it.
    What do you want now David…..for Bushie to hold wunna hands and wipe wunna noses…..?

    The biggest challenge for BUP has already been solved by your creation of BU.
    The only requirement now is for Caswell and BAFFY to start the ball rolling….

    Shiite man….by the time Caswell get going we will just need “Three Sons” or Lyndhurst……..


  4. @Bushie

    Caswell’s ranks are swelling, no way he can be enticed now.


  5. Moody’s has downgraded government bonds 3 notches to B3. There is nothing left to be stated.


  6. David:
    I tend to agree with Bushie. I think we have done some much damage to agriculture that we would have to reclaim much of the land that is now sitting under concrete to build that model for self sufficiency. By the way, we shall not be able to produce everything that we need that is why the other Caribbean Nations must be in concert to supply where we fall short!!


  7. @ David
    Caswell’s ranks are swelling, no way he can be enticed now.
    ++++++++++++++++
    …well if he prefers to compete with Three Sons and Lyndhurst rather than with the BLP and DLP …..then that is OUR loss….
    That whole union shiite has run its course. Waste of damn time…..

    When the damn Titanic is sinking – what does it help for a resource like Caswell to be focusing on whether. the deck hands are being treated fairly….?

    Should his ass not be more concerned with deploying the lifeboats, coordinating evacuation and controlling the big-ups who are “falling into the lifeboats” and leaving Bushie, Pieceuhderock and the old .women behind…?

    Had he moved earlier (before the last elections) he may even have managed to save the damn boat from sinking – if he got all the available talent to coordinate their efforts….but…

    Since this last Moody’s downgrade, it look like it is every man for himself… Bushie could be tempted to push ac overboard 🙂


  8. The PDC has evolved fourteen (14) very fundamental principles so far concerning Money and its uses in Barbados.

    Here is the second one:

    Money CANNOT (be used to) make Money itself, NOR can it (be used to) cost Money itself.

    That notwithstanding it primarily means that the users of money in Barbados CANNOT use Money on ITS OWN in a commercial industrial system of Barbados, WITHOUT the use too of other commercial commodities and commercial services in the country.

    From such one can infer why the this loathsome core financial system in Barbados is continuing to help bring the country to its knees at this stage, vis-a-vis the wickedness of Interest Rates regimes and countless money debit (credit) transfers/ agreements involving core financial institutions and credit transferees of money/paper from the said institutions to them, or debit transferors of money from them to the said core financial institutions, the real actual cost of use of money, etc.

    PDC


  9. From our own reading of many political economic indicators related to the material production and distribution and financial performances of the relevant sectors in this country over the last two decades, it is so patently clear that Barbados – under these two vulgar backward DLP/BLP governments – has been set to have a change in the not too distant future in the current contrived artificial ratio that exists between the Barbados Dollar and the US Dollar.

    Such can only be overcome with the absolute removal of the DLP/BLP from the parliament of this country within less than four years, and their replacement with a well disciplined, nationalist, progressivist, people-centered coalitional regime of this country.

    PDC

  10. Due Diligence Avatar

    Peter Boos says:

    “The NIS funds own guidelines for asset diversification is in serious breach, with loans to government accounting for somewhere around 70 per cent of the investment portfolio. It is highly improbable in my view that government would be able to repay the debt on normal commercial terms. NIS debt restructuring is inevitable eventually,” he stressed.

    Boos also expressed grave concern that audited financial statements for the scheme has not been produced for many years, calling this simply unacceptable.

    “Had this occurred in a financial institution in the private sector, the consequences would be immediate and severe. They would withdraw license. This situation, plus the printing of money by the Barbados Central Bank, and buying up Government paper, and now the plan by Government to increase the debt ceiling to $4 billion, is very worrying. Where will this end?” he queried emphatically.

    The businessman added that government needed to pay its bills.

    “The government’s failure to settle its liabilities as they fall due and to continue to purchase goods and services knowing that they don’t have the money to pay promptly, is a serious failure of governance. In the commercial world such behavior would mean the immediate appointment of a receiver,” he continued.

    “These failures have serious implications for our brand reputation… good reputations are hard to earn, easy to lose and difficult to recover,”

    Minister of Labour, Social Security and Human Resource Development Senator Dr Esther Byer Suckoo says:
    “…..in spite of the country’s dire economic situation, the NIS was in a good position and Barbadians had no reason to panic.

    “It has been challenging . . . we have had to dip into the savings of the NIS but it is prepared to meet the demands of the people for the next several years, and since we do anticipate economic growth in a couple of years, we are not beginning to panic and I do not encourage you to panic either. We are still looking good,” she told the congregation celebrating the scheme’s 47th anniversary at the People’s Cathedral yesterday morning.”

    Who you gonna believe?

    …..we do anticipate economic growth in a couple of years?

    That is a real confidence builder.


  11. Due Diligence:
    Our current masters and lords having playing a poker game. They only need one card to make a straight or full house to win the game. The according to them all will be well. Sadly, that shall not be so.


  12. lemuel wrote ” I think we have done some much damage to agriculture that we would have to reclaim much of the land that is now sitting under concrete to build that model for self sufficiency.”

    Wrong lemuel. We have to focus on Greenhouse/Hydroponic and Aquaponics (on “rab” land) in addition to conventional agriculture.

    This will happen when there is no more forex or credit to import food and just before Canada and the USA have to fly in MREs.

  13. Due Diligence Avatar

    NOTED HOTELIER and businessman Bernie Weatherhead says :
    Barbados’ hotel industry is heavily in debt, and needs corrective action now to save it.

    He charged yesterday that at least 60 per cent of hotels were in serious financial trouble and continually rescheduling bank payments.

    Additionally, he said, he had been told that as much as 80 per cent of the commercial banks’ bad debt related to the hotel industry
    .
    “That tells you a million stories right there,” said Weatherhead, chairman of the SUN Group, which includes hotels, tour and vehicle rental companies and a regional insurance business.

    Weatherhead said tourism was supposed to be Barbados’ primary industry  and the one that was going to save the country, but if an effort was not made to fix it now then the country could look forward to even worse times.

    Executive Vice President of the Barbados Hotel and Tourism Association (BHTA), Sue Springer, says:

    says that in the face of the economic challenges this country’s tourism industry has “weathered the storm reasonably well”.

    “We’ve just had Gordon Seale become the owner of Amaryllis; we’ve had Butch Stewart say he actually wants to purchase Almond Beach Village; we’ve just had Four Seasons purchased – these are all positive moves, something I am extremely excited about,” she said.

    Who you gonna believe?

    BTW – we’ve just had Four Seasons purchased. Really? Name of purchaser please.


  14. If this is true we need to discuss.

    “80 per cent of the commercial banks’ bad debt related to the hotel industry”

    The reality is that they all gambled and loss.

  15. 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

    Pain , and more Pain . Barbados Ponzi and Fraud state, . long talkers holding on to a hot pot with no mittens and saying its not hot as their skin melt off their hands,
    Crooks just dont know what you do ,
    The DBLP Ministers and lawyers have a lot to answer for , even the ones that are covering for the crooks,
    Get on with the layoffs, so we can see more clear what mess you all up to

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