Walter Blackman - Actuary and Social Commentator
Walter Blackman – Actuary and Social Commentator

As a result of the perilous state of the Barbados economy, accentuated by a recent 3 notch downgrade by Moody’s and a follow up visit in June by the IMF after a worrying Article IV Consultation in December 2013, the conversation about devaluation and management of government debt has become a topic of national interest. In the public’s interest BU highlights Walter Blackman’s perspective on the two issues which he shared on another blog.

 

Hants – Currently $1 Canadian = $1.84 bds. Cheffette all chicken roti cost $5.50 Canadian. So after a 5 to 1 devaluation the roti will still cost $5.50 Canadian but $60 Barbados. Please correct me if I am wrong.

Walter Blackman – Hants please allow me to reconstruct your question correctly. A Cheffette roti currently costs BDS$10.12. Since Canadian $1 = BDS$1.84, it would take Can$5.50 to purchase the roti. If the exchange rate were changed to Canadian $1 = BDS$5, the same roti that sells for BDS$10.12 would now cost only Canadian$2.02. In short, a devaluation would cause a product manufactured or produced in Barbados to become cheaper to Canadians. The economic argument usually made is that this cheaper roti price would induce Canadians to buy so much more rotis that Barbados would ultimately earn more FOREX selling the roti at $CAN 2.02 rather than at $CAN$5.50.

Hants – So a roti could still sell for $10.25 bds but a box of Kellogg’s cornflakes

Walter Blackman – Yes. The roti that cost BDS$10.25 before the valuation, would continue to cost BDS$10.25..using the ceteris paribus (all things being equal) assumption.

Let us assume that a box of Kellogg’s corn flakes was produced in Canada and sold for CAN$24. When the exchange rate was $1 Canadian = $1.84 bds, the box would have cost BDS$44.16. If the exchange rate were changed to CAN$1 = BDS$5, the price of that same box of Kellogg’s corn flakes would skyrocket from BDS$44.16 to BDS$120.

The economic argument is that the devaluation would make Canadian products more expensive for Barbadians and would have a dampening effect on Canadian exports to Barbados. In other words, Barbadians would import less Canadian goods, and this would reduce our national usage of Canadian FOREX. The economic argument, of course is highly theoretical. The social problems generated by a devaluation, on the other hand, are very real. if almost everything you use and eat came from overseas, and a policy was implemented to choke off this external supply, what do you think would happen?

Lawson – Walter how does that effect real estate, should I wait to buy , will I need to join the Kendal shooting club and buy a glock to get my corn flakes home. Riots, starvation, diseases, crimes?

Walter Blackman – As long as you are sure that a devaluation is inevitable, and you have foreign currency, you should wait. If you have Canadian dollars, a devaluation of the $BDS relative to the CAN$ will make everything in Barbados, including real estate, cheaper. In fact, if the devaluation is deep enough, a multinational corporation might be able to offer an attractive price to purchase the whole island!

On a more serious note, you are on the right track when you started talking about the need to protect yourself and your assets from the social fallout of a

Bush Tea – Hants has a point.devaluation. How long do you think Cheffette will keep the BDS $10.25 price? Practically EVERYTHING in that roti is imported or contains high percentage of imported inputs…

Walter Blackman – Bush Tea, Your point is well taken. Similar to Einstein’s equations and his law of relativity that broke down in the face of a black hole, economic arguments for a devaluation would break down in the face of a small, open, fragile, corrupt, mismanaged country like Barbados. Economic theory will quickly give way to social chaos. Immense pain and suffering will result.

Let me give you an example.

Pretend for one moment that Barbados did not have one cent of FOREX, so no roti ingredients could be imported. Your local cows and your local chickens will suddenly loom large in value, and as the current practice suggests, they will be stolen and sold without any questions being asked by the buyer. The thieves would be quite willing to kill you, the owner, to defend their cows and chickens which they did not raise.

This situation would in turn drive you to the point where you and many others in your predicament would decide to purchase one of the many thousands of guns on the island, with a view to maiming or killing your Barbadian brothers and sisters. A downward social spiral would be set in motion.

Added to the social chaos would be an economic double whammy that would develop to bite you in your backside. Because of the devaluation, you would now have an excessive amount of Barbados dollars chasing few locally produced goods – the classic definition of inflation. Add high unemployment into the mix, and you have a stagflation nightmare. It would take us years and years to wake.

Barbados Underground – So Walter to follow your explanation, will the printing of money ultimately have the same effect?”up from such an awful dream.

Walter Blackman – The printing of money creates its own problems, and if it continues unabated, it can trigger a devaluation. I suspect that many Barbadians have heard about “printing money” but they don’t quite grasp the concept and its inherent dangers. Please allow me the opportunity to get the concept of printing money across by using a simplified example.

Let us assume that there are 300,000 Barbadians, and each Barbadian must purchase a can of food every day to survive. The only product sold in Barbados is this canned food and there are only 300,000 cans on this particular day. For convenience, let us also assume that our total money supply amounts to $3 million, and the price of a can of food is $10.

Suddenly, the government decides that it wants its friends and members of the political class to have , not one can of today , but an additional hundred thousand cans. The additional 100,000 cans of food of course cost $1 million at current prices. Government doesn’t have the money, so it orders the Central Bank to make the money available now, and promises to repay the Central Bank later.

The government has now imposed a new monetary policy on the Central Bank. In this simple example, The Governor of the Central Bank is forced to increase the money supply of Barbados from $3 million to $4 million. Note carefully that no more cans of food have been produced, so we now have $4 million dollars chasing $3 million worth of goods. Prices will rise and inflation will set in before this new situation settles on an ultimate price for a can of food.

In the real world, the resulting inflation will wreak economic havoc. Businesses will have to spend more on operating costs, and will have less to save or invest. Interest rates will rise. There is an inverse relationship between interest rates and bond prices. So people who are holding government bonds (which are now paying relatively low returns) would now receive low prices if they try to sell the bonds. Investors would not be interested in lending their money to the government, or even investing in the country. More than half of the extra million dollars put into the economy by the Central Bank would be used to purchase foreign goods, and this will put a tremendous strain on our FOREX. The country would eventually come face to face with the threat of a devaluation.

135 responses to “Walter Blackman’s Perspective on Devaluation and ‘Printing Money’”


  1. Bim should send an immediate urgent message that we are ALL about Business–Tax incentives, Forex incentives, ask the big hotel chains to come in eg Hyatt, Sheraton, Best Western. Sell the former Blue Horizon at Rockley to some big chain , Govt should NOT be in the hotel or any operating business anyway.

    Go ask those Arabs that had Billions to invest to come back. Allegedly they had said they were willing to invest $10BN. That would help much right now!
    Approach the Trinis who are not big in Bim to come in. Remember we need Forex. Plead with Bajans overseas to speed up their plans to retire in Bim, give an incentive for immediate action eg build on your land now and SAVE on import duties of materials. Bring in $100,000+ worth of Forex and receive an incentive!

    CASHFLOW is the lifeblood of any Nation or Business!


  2. ” ask the big hotel chains to come in eg Hyatt, Sheraton, Best Western.

    That would certainly see a big turn around, why would Fruendel refuse a billionaire investment.


  3. Get out of Caricom, today!
    If we run Bim correctly we wont need the negatives of Caricom!
    We dont want anymore Ms Myrie! Bim must conduct business for Bajan’s benefit.


  4. Barbados cannot operate as a stand alone island, it’s too small.


  5. Part of the reason Devaluation wont work is that we are a small open economy that must import much of our goods, food etc. The major reason we have a higher standard of living is that unlike JA, TNT etc we have avoided devaluation.


  6. Besides, Barbados is a majority black country, they cannot practice isolationism, separatism from other black majority islands, a bajan is just a black Caribbean person, or West Indian with a few bajan whites and other minorities thrown into the mix

  7. Due Diligence Avatar

    Walter

    Thanks for your Devaluation 101 piece

    Explain to me the implications of this scenario.

    I go to the website of a well known provider of all-inclusive resorts and book a week for two including air-fare at its new Barbados property, which will open for customers in January 2015.

    I pay the rate quoted on its website for its least expensive room, including air fare, US$5,536.74, on my VISA card. (For the purpose of this exercise I have not included the retail sales tax in the amount I pay for the package).

    Oh, and by the way that price is, according to the website, is a 50% discount (to something).

    Out of the US$5,536.74, the resort owner has to pay the airline for two economy class seats, say US$1,100.00, leaving it with US$4,436.74 in its Miami or New bank account.

    From its US bank account the resort owner pays for the food and beverages, cleaning supplies etc. and promotion in US Dollars to its US suppliers – which also are the suppliers to its other Caribbean resort properties.

    The resort owner, of course, has some expenses (say wages) to pay in the local Barbados currency, which is currently valued (?) at US$.50.
    Assume that out of the $4,436.t4 the resort owner receives for our one-week package he has to send to Barbados from his US bank account, $1,000.00 local Barbados currency (US$500.00) to pay wages, maintenance, and other local expenses and taxes and duties (if any are payable) incurred for our one-week stay.

    So what happens if the local Barbados currency is devalued to a rate of US$0.33.

    Does the US resort owner continue to send US$500.00 (now worth $1,500.00 in local currency) to Barbados, and increase the wages of the Barbados employees and other local expenses?

    Or does the resort owner send US$333.00 (now worth $1,000.00 local Barbados currency) to pay wages, maintenance, and other local expenses incurred for our one-week stay, and pocket the US$167.00 difference.

    Oh yes, since our all-inclusive package is “everything included”, we won’t have to go out and spend any local Barbados currency.

    How is that good for Barbados’ other businesses?

    Finally, this may be beyond your actuarial acumen; but I am going to ask it anyway.

    Why would all the guests shown in the photos in the resort owner’s website be white folk, and all the waiters, maids and othe helpers be black folk, with the exception of the odd Asian chef?


  8. @WW
    We both know the DLP will not give up BUT that is why I calling them out!
    Dem mashing up SO I recommended they call the Calvary!

    Bim is a Black country BUT TNT and Guyana are NOT! Race should not play a part. If Whiteys or Arabs want to come in loaded with CASH, please do! Beg some big Reinsurance Corps to come here we have loads of talent even plenty Actuaries!

    BIM—OPEN for BUSINESS!


  9. Money…….I am with you on that, but again, Barbados cannot practice separatism, Trinidad does not do it, Guyana does it domestically to it their own detriment, look at the mess there………i have no color problem with investors, money is mufti-colored, but as soon as Barbados starts acting like they do not need other Caribbean people, that creates another problem, as long as you can get around that, all will be good…….check out Suriname and see their mulch-cultural dynamics.

    We know the DLP will not give up, but if they do give up what are the people faced with, right now the Transport Board is at great risk, i give the DLP hell, but if the BLP were to make it in, it would just be more of the same or worse since Mia Mottley and Peter Harris are thisclose…….so in essence you are just exchanging one group of devils for the next group of devils, what i love about this situation is that they wanted the government at all cost, now they have it and all the misery it carries, leaves them scratching their heads AND asses…..lol


  10. @Due D
    In the case of Bim, I sure hope that the hotel workers are mostly black.
    Are we going to import Phillipinos for that like Aruba? Agreed that all the tourists shown should not be white.
    It would not be long before the workers would strike for higher pay to quell the inflation effect.


  11. excuse me……should be multi-colored and multi-cultural

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

    Curious Non-Economist;
    By far the best post on this topic!

    I wonder if the BU family has a grasp on what even a 4 to1 devaluation will do to individuals and families on this Island. The experiences with the initial spate of devaluations in the other Islands suggests that most workers (even those getting good salaries pre-devaluation) will quickly descend to a subsistence level, unknown to Barbados since the 1930’s or thereabouts. Very few will have any kind of disposable income. The devalued wages will be only able to buy local foods even while rents might be forced down. New imported consumer durables will become a thing of the past for the vast majority of the people. Forget about new cars or even late model young cars. Even keeping what you now have properly maintained will be a daunting task for practically all. In many of the other Islands when hit with the initial devaluations most public servants had to get 2 or 3 jobs to make ends meet. For sale signs on properties become a part of the general landscape. People left their house and car keys at their banks and disappeared to the metropoles to subsist on menial jobs. The police force saw their work escalating with petty and other robberies and acts of violence.

    But it will be a fairly good time for farmers and those who have access to cultivable land; For bakers; For supermarkets and even small shops; For small entrepreneurs selling necessities; For speculators; For those professionals who have a captive clientele and can vary their fees to suit; For those with low end rental properties; For motor mechanics; For those with dual citizenship; For those who can maintain their offshore jobs or businesses, For the rasta brethren living off the land; etc.

    Devaluation ain’t pretty. Every effort should be made to avoid it, even distasteful, across the board, salary cuts.


  13. Money……..I believe Due Diligence is saying that there should at least be some bajan white maids, bartenders, gardeners, busboys, waiters etc, in the hotels in Barbados, balance things out a bit, make it seem more multi-cultural, i see it all the time in Europe and North America, what is with the minorities in Barbados, they think they too good to work in hotels.


  14. @WW
    If Whiteys take black peeps jobs then somebody will gripe about that!
    Most people pun here want jobs for black Bajans.

    Who cares if whitey eats or not?


  15. @ David

    Yes it is purely theoretical, but that is the genesis of all policy and is not different to the 10-point plan laid out by the writer, which is all THEORY.


  16. Baa!baaa! Baa ! baa! Baa!
    Any more bright ideas Sheeples??

    Its a CORPSE boys; a CORPSE!!
    No amount of tinkerin gonna raise this one.
    ITS TOTALLY diseased.
    Collapsed .
    Defunct!
    Got to go out with the rest of the garbage.

    READ MY LIPS P L E A S E !!!!!!
    TACKLE THE ROOT CAUSE.

    N; you guys will go On and On and ON.
    Raise the dead and you will have a Frankenstine hybrid.
    A blighted country run by whores and prostitutes.
    Instead of all these genius “Instant remedies” why try a little old “COMMON SENSE”.
    TACKLE THE ROOT CAUSE!

    You dont know HOW!
    Thats the answer.
    So you balls around with idiocies,feeling like school boys “saving the day” .

    There must be a dozen lawyers among you,.
    Where are your balls.
    A little pro bono PLEASE.
    Are you telling me among you BIG MEN there is not one BIG enough to find a legal and constitutional way to remove these people that are destroying our country.
    Is the Queen not still head of our country?? Can we not petition Her Majesty??
    Where there is a WILL there is a WAY!!
    Bloody well find it!
    Consult the statutes.
    Maybe speak their langauge,.take a collection and pay one of the Thieves to desert Alibaba.( But then after “the Devil” you have the “deep blue sea”) So get together form a NEW PARTY.

    ROOT CAUSE BOYS.FOCUS YOUR GENIUS ON THE ROOT CAUSE.

    I think NONE of you are serious.
    This is a way you save getting bored.


  17. David I was going to post on the Diaspora blog but nobody posts there.

    It is election night in Ontario.

    One of the nastiest campaigns ever. Hope we don’t get another coalition government.


  18. At some point the JAs we have in Barbados AND the yardfowls will realise getting out of this mess calls for working TOGETHER!

    Will S&P be another spoke in the wheel?

    Added by Barbados Today on June 12, 2014.

    Saved under Editorial

    First came Moody’s; now we are hearing that Standard & Poor’s could be next in line to issue a Barbados downgrade. Is there no end to the current trend in negative news? Ask we.

    Little wonder that our key tourism players and investors seem so jittery these days.

    As the immediate past president of the Barbados Hotel & Tourism Association (BHTA), Patricia Affonso-Dass, pointed out just yesterday, the last two years have been challenging at best for the country’s bread and butter sector, that continues to register declines in arrivals. Latest figures provided by the BHTA suggest a 0.5 per cent decline in long-stay arrivals up to April and a 0.1 per cent decline up to May, compared to the corresponding period in 2013 –– as well as a drop in visitor spend.

    On top of that there has been worry over the closure of several local hotels since 2012 –– the most notable being the Almond Beach hotel chain –– and ongoing challenges with some of our major source markets.

    Barbados and the rest of the Caribbean also face fierce competition from other warm weather destinations, both in terms of product quality and pricing.

    On the positive side, cruise arrivals are said to be up; so too airlift; and there is reported noticeable growth in the villa market as hoteliers look to Government to meet its promise of increased concessions.

    But just when the industry was hoping to breathe a sigh of relief, up stepped Moody’s with its triple notch downgrade, putting another spoke in our vital tourism wheel.

    To say this is unwelcomed news for the sector is an understatement.

    All it has done is to add to the current economic uncertainty, which has mostly been left unanswered by local authorities.

    As she demitted office yesterday as president of the BHTA after two years, Affonso-Dass used the occasion to issue a not so unfamiliar call for a “clear, well articulated plan by the country’s leadership”.

    Her fear is that the current void remains unchecked, it will only serve to “give legs to the issue and predicate the outcome”.

    Now, more than ever, she stressed, there was need for clear, decisive leadership in all sectors and a strong collaborative approach. She pointed out that there had been many good recent examples of the tremendous positive results that could ensue from a strong public/private sector partnership, a willingness to work together and recognition of each other’s strengths.

    “We must not be afraid to face the realities, as difficult or scary as they may appear to be. Those charged with the responsibility of leadership should make it a priority to provide the public with the facts regularly, in as transparent a manner as possible, and maintain an open dialogue that is free from political agendas and bias, so that all feel comfortable to take part,” the tourism official said.

    “My firm belief is that getting out of the crisis that we are in will take nothing less than an aggressive collective effort to which all contribute, in which all recognize how much we have to lose, are all willing to give more than is generally expected. Now, more than ever, there is a need for a strong, united Social Partnership.”

    Well said, Mrs Affonso-Dass! Now we wait and see if anyone will take heed.

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

    Dr. Love; I think you are right on target. No self respecting country should be in the position we find ourselves in especially since the writing was on the wall for years. Perhaps some people from the Diaspora could use some of their spare US or Canadian dollars or British pounds to carry out the plan you outlined. A new snap election seems like the best first step. Marches and demonstrations here might also help to focus the minds of the incumbent political Class.


  20. Wunna should be able to RECALL these DLP via their non implementation of the proposed and very necessary INTEGRITY Legislation! They promised itso—!


  21. David the vast majority of Bajans are workers. They have very little disposable income to invest and build wealth so they work.

    Barbadians have been conditioned to work and enticed to spend their money on imports so the Importers,distributors and retailers got rich.

    This viscous cycle is secured by 30,000 captive civil servants who typically buy a house a car and send their children to school.

    What we need now are LEADERS from among the RICH to step up and invest in SAVING BARBADOS.

    Instead of investing in campaign donations Invest in and mentor young entrepreneurs.
    It is time for the rich to give back to Barbados.

    The DLP and BLP must now prepare for a new political reality. It is called the age of information where you will not be able to hide your assets from public scrutiny.

    Look for a whole lot of ” WICKED LEAKS”


  22. @Hants

    Rich Barbadians will invest in saving Barbados if they see a return on their investment, it is how they are wired. They will not do it out of any sense of being patriotic.

    On 13 June 2014 02:54, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  23. @ David,

    Rich Barbadians will not be insulated if Bajans start rioting so they should either leave or step up and save their country.


  24. For all the time I have been on Barbados blogs it has been 90% politics with very little discussion of the role of the Private Sector in the stagnation of the economy.

    I would like to know if ordinary Bajans could be persuaded to do two things.

    BUY LOCAL and refrain from buying non essential imported items for a year or two.
    Restrict the amount of driving they do so as to use less imported gasoline.

    David you can play a leadership role by encouraging Bajans to do what is right for Barbados.


  25. @Hants

    Yes but they will continue to work the system until it dies because of the lure of honey. An analogy are those Whites who ran from Zimbabwe and those who remained even though a blind man could have foreseen what would happen.


  26. @Hants

    The system of government and governance is rotten and this is where the fix needs to be made.

  27. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    Due Diligence | June 12, 2014 at 7:12 PM |
    Walter

    Thanks for your Devaluation 101 piece

    Explain to me the implications of this scenario.

    I go to the website of a well known provider of all-inclusive resorts and book a week for two including air-fare at its new Barbados property, which will open for customers in January 2015.

    I pay the rate quoted on its website for its least expensive room, including air fare, US$5,536.74, on my VISA card. (For the purpose of this exercise I have not included the retail sales tax in the amount I pay for the package).

    Oh, and by the way that price is, according to the website, is a 50% discount (to something).

    Out of the US$5,536.74, the resort owner has to pay the airline for two economy class seats, say US$1,100.00, leaving it with US$4,436.74 in its Miami or New bank account.

    From its US bank account the resort owner pays for the food and beverages, cleaning supplies etc. and promotion in US Dollars to its US suppliers – which also are the suppliers to its other Caribbean resort properties.

    The resort owner, of course, has some expenses (say wages) to pay in the local Barbados currency, which is currently valued (?) at US$.50.
    Assume that out of the $4,436.t4 the resort owner receives for our one-week package he has to send to Barbados from his US bank account, $1,000.00 local Barbados currency (US$500.00) to pay wages, maintenance, and other local expenses and taxes and duties (if any are payable) incurred for our one-week stay.

    So what happens if the local Barbados currency is devalued to a rate of US$0.33.

    Does the US resort owner continue to send US$500.00 (now worth $1,500.00 in local currency) to Barbados, and increase the wages of the Barbados employees and other local expenses?

    Or does the resort owner send US$333.00 (now worth $1,000.00 local Barbados currency) to pay wages, maintenance, and other local expenses incurred for our one-week stay, and pocket the US$167.00 difference.

    Due Diligence,
    Let us assume that the resort owner is shrewd and has negotiated a contract to pay the Barbadian worker his wages at the rate of $1000 per week. Note that everything coming into the hotel has already been paid for with US dollars so there is no FOREX pressure on that front. To all intents and purposes we can treat the provision of Barbadian labor in this case as an export item.
    At an exchange rate of $US1= BDS$2, the resort owner uses US$500 to pay his wage bill for the week. Barbados as a country earns $500, and the worker earns BDS$1000.
    If a devaluation occurs and the exchange rate is now US$1 = $BDS3, then the resort owner can now send US$333 and pocket the difference if he chose to (an option identified and correctly calculated by you). Believe it or not, a devaluation can create winners and losers so let us attempt to trace the economic developments that can arise from this scenario.
    The local hotelier would pay his local worker $1000 per week as usual, but the price of everything he imports from the USA would now automatically cost at least 50% more as a result of the devaluation. This increase in cost might be enough to destroy his hotel’s profitability and wipe him out if he cannot source locally produced materials at a competitive price.
    The local hotelier’s loss will now be the foreign resort owner’s gain. The foreign resort owner can now increase his profits by expanding his operations and hiring another worker. He used to pay US$500 for one worker, but he now pays $666 for two workers. The resort owner has now provided additional employment for 1 person, and has provided US$666 in FOREX after the devaluation, compared with US$500 before.

    A rather insightful scenario for players in our tourism industry to think about.

  28. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    John | June 12, 2014 at 8:56 AM |
    “A Chefette Roti is made with ingredients most of which are imported.
    Imagine if $1.00 US were $5.00 Bds.

    Any product manufactured in Barbados and sold overseas for $1.00US would bring its producer a 2.5 fold increase in revenue.”

    John,
    I am just being naughty.
    You produce US$1 million worth of products and the country earns US$1 million in FOREX as a result. The government of Barbados is starved for FOREX and does not want to default on its foreign debt. So it uses up your US$1 million.
    You receive BDS$2.5 million for your products. What are you going to buy with it?


  29. Seems the IMF is on the warpath. and has anyone noticed that Iraq is in a “civil war”.

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/imf-warns-on-house-prices-in-canada-and-elsewhere-1.2673122

  30. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    millertheanunnaki | June 12, 2014 at 10:17 AM |
    @ Walter Blackman
    In a related thread you made the following comment:
    “The lesson to be learnt here is that responsible governments tackle their debt problems by using debt restructuring techniques. Irresponsible, unenlightened governments print money instead.”

    Would you be prepared to say a similar situation exists in Barbados and could you please comment on the role of the Central Bank in the perpetration of this irresponsible act?
    Would you agree that such monetary recklessness will inevitably lead to an adjustment in the trading value of the currency and very little to do with the bogey international recession.

    Millertheanunnaki,
    Yes, a similar situation exists in Barbados. The government of Barbados has been running structural fiscal deficits and the Central Bank has been assisting it by printing money. The IMF has seen this situation many times before so it knows full well that this unsustainable practice by the Central Bank will create economic problems that will persist long after the short-sighted politicians have been removed from office. The current retrenchment program is one of many ways in which the IMF can cut the Central Bank out of the picture and try to impose accountability and responsibility on the shoulders of our government.
    Make no mistake about it, the global recession hit Caribbean economies really hard. However, thanks to the forensic audit carried out by Deloitte, we now know that in 2008, when our Prime Minister and Minister of Finance David Thompson should have been focusing attention on solving our national economic problems, he was busy colluding with other crooks and criminals to steal CLICO’s policyholders’ money, and to rob his own government of VAT revenue. David Thompson was not our first corrupt Prime Minister. Was he our last?
    Prolonged, widespread, organized corruption has done more damage to our social, political, and economic fabric than 100 global recessions ever could.
    I honestly believe that if the government is offered a choice, there will be no devaluation. However, if the situation ever reaches the point where a devaluation is inevitable, then may the Lord have mercy on the soul of our dearly departed country.

  31. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    Wily Coyote | June 12, 2014 at 11:52 AM |
    @ Walter Blackman
    you stated…“The lesson to be learnt here is that responsible governments tackle their debt problems by using debt restructuring techniques. Irresponsible, unenlightened governments print money instead.”
    Debt restructuring works if the DEBT is held by an offshore entity, unfortunately the majority of Barbados DEBT is held locally by a few unsuspecting Bajans, local insurance companies and most by the NIS. Debt restructuring is this instance would be ineffective, it would just pass the government debt responsibility to local entities.

    Wily Coyote,
    Are you talking specifically about a situation in which government is faced with a foreign exchange problem and might be forced to default on its foreign debt? If so, then I take your point.


  32. “theory again. Real world shows they do. Electricity, transport food etc, WILL increase, and therefore salaries will have to increase.”

    @Steve greenidge, you are right if no steps are taken to control local inflation. Devaluation can only succeed as an economic policy tool if government takes steps to prevent a corresponding increase in local prices. This would require both the political will and the ability to impose price/income policies in the knowledge that they would result in a further reduction in the standard of living of Barbadians. Not an attractive scenario but we are where we are.


  33. David | June 12, 2014 at 9:59 PM |

    At some point the JAs we have in Barbados AND the yardfowls will realise getting out of this mess calls for working TOGETHER!

    ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

    maybe if u david would post articles that are balanced instead of the repetitive diatribe which are reflective of the slanted opinions,,then both yardfowls and JA will get it,,the responsibility is yours,,,the comments are in line with the sentiments of your articles,,, never have i seen any posted articles that call for responsibility from the private sectors,,it is usually the same cock and bull.then u have the mitigated gall to expect structured and cohesive responses,, ,garbage in garbage out,,that is my fair and balanced response,,,


  34. @Walter Blacklman “The foreign resort owner can now increase his profits by expanding his operations and hiring another worker. He used to pay US$500 for one worker, but he now pays $666 for two workers. The resort owner has now provided additional employment for 1 person, and has provided US$666 in FOREX after the devaluation, compared with US$500 before.”

    But the real, real question is will the worker take this devaluation of her salary?

    Perhaps yes.

    Perhaps no.

    Perhaps she will take home some of her employers things in order to make up for the devaluation of her real wages.

    Perhaps she will do as little work as possible.

    Perhaps she will take more sick leave.

    Perhaps she will go to New York to “visit her aunt for three weeks” and not come back for 35 years (I’ve know plenty plenty of people who have done that. They don’t even come back for their mother’s funerals).

    Perhaps the employer will have to hire other workers who are not as productive.

    Ordinary workers make economic decisions to (even though they have not studied at the London School of Economics.)

    Ordinary workers are capitalists too.

    Ordinary workers almost always make decisions in their own best interest.

    And NOT in the employers best interest.

    When I was just a ltlte thing, and I am old and grey now, my mother told me a story about a can cutter who sold his wife’s two nice upright mahogany chairs (the wife had pretensions of middle classness, and a dining room is the very essence of this pretentiousness). Anyway the old boy (who wasn’t so old then) sold the chairs one day when his wife was not at home and he bought an *ottoman instead.

    When the wife came home she was vexed and quarrelled.

    Her husband told her “I sold what I had and I bought what I wanted” Note that this is one of the principal rules of economics. Note also that neither this man nor his wife had even a minute of formal education. But yet on his own he had discovered one of the principal rules of economics.

    Tek dat John Kenneth Galbraith. The man of course was an adult long before Galbraith was born.

    *Please note that an ottoman in this case is an old fashioned plain wooden day bed about 6 feet long and about 2 feet wide. Labourers kept one in the back house. A place where they could rest thier tired bodies after a brutal day of labour in the cane fields.

    So yes. Workers make economic decisions too.

    Workers are not just victims.


  35. Perhaps she will move to Canada and work in a hotel there. Perhaps she will become a citizen after a few years. Perhaps she will never, never come back.

    Workers make economic decisions too.


  36. Employers shoud always, always remember that.


  37. Dr LOVE..I am falling in love wid you but first tell me if you is the same Dr Love who believe that we wimmen should be at home tekking care of de house and should neva get an education? If dat is you den all de love gone from me. If dat ent you den we could get cosy. Please doan let de Bushman hear bout wee.


  38. Island:
    I saw that post!!


  39. Results in Antigua indicate that the trend of voting out Governing parties in the Caribbean at this time is the way to go.

    Barbadians were “ignorant” to have voted back in the DLP Government. The DLP did not deserve a second term and now we know, which validates the point that Bajans were ignorant to have voted Dem back in. One Term was too much but then two terms??? Oh no !!!

    Serve all yuh right !!!
    Live with it ~~!!!!


  40. Le Mule you are like a Bamsee!

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

    Walter;

    Could you explain what happens with Credit Cards in the event of a significant devaluation. take this scenario:

    I normally pay off my small total credit card balances at the end of each month from my pension cheque. But, circumstances have forced me to now have a credit card balance of, let’s say $1,000, which I can normally easily pay off over 3 months period. Let’s say devaluation hits over a weekend. When the Banks reopen after that weekend there is chaos. I can’t access my meagre savings accounts. Is it likely that the bank will add significant charges to the interest on my credit card balance or do other creative things to ensure that credit card holders will immediately have to pay significantly more to pay off their credit cards?

    What is the regional experience with credit card and other bank charges after a devaluation? Would it be wise to pay off all credit card balances before a devaluation if you can do so, or is it wiser for the consumer to max out credit cards and pay back after the devaluation with the devalued currency?

    How are consumers protected from the typically rapacious overseas controlled Banks? Is it time for the Government to support Credit Unions and empower them to take up the slack from the non-indigenous banks?

    I suspect I am not the only one interested in having this question rigorously explored and answered.


  42. most would agree that devaluation is the worst nightmare sceanario possible except for a few who think that a quick fix is a long term solution to structural policies..however what would work would be private investors living here and how have benefitted over the years..those who could afford invest in capital projects which govt have proposed to be necessary to providegrowth .tackle. unemployment and stimulate. the economy and further reduce govt debt..the energy project is one that should be major concern..one can argue the point that after years where govt has been liberal with policies of assisting the. private sectorthe least they can do is step up without. a need of coericion

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

    ….. and Walter;
    How about formal loans from credit institutions? Can the institution insist on a restructuring of their loans to recoup the original real value of the loan in devalued money, even if the agreements made no mention of devaluation?


  44. are-we-there-yet? wrote “I suspect I am not the only one interested in having this question rigorously explored and answered.”

    No you are not the only one. I too am concerned and trying to “understand” and make decisions.


  45. There are no such things as revaluations of currencies – downwards or upwards, or appreciations or depreciations of the same currencies. NONE WHATSOEVER!

    The Barbados 1$, 2$, 5$, 10$, 20$, 50$, 100$ dollars that are made up of paper and whatever else and that carry various images (in terms of the dollar bills – and shapings in terms of the dollar coin) and symbols representing the particular denominations 1$, 2$, 5$, 10$, 20$, 50$, 100$, CAN NEVER be revalued or appreciated or depreciated, as that, each of them ( Barbados 1$, 2$, 5$, 10$, 20$, 50$, 100$) will remain what they are.

    The same thing applies to Barbados 1 cents, 5 cents, 10 cents and 25 cents.

    That is common sensical and logical.

    What ever the national currency, the principle is the same so long as the way of counting is identical to how we use digits in Barbados to count the cents and dollars.

    So in this sense, all currencies are equal, even when the colour schemes, the sizes, the designs of them and other physical dimensions of them are different.

    Therefore, it becomes a very bogus destructive set of inverted political ideologies philosophies and psychologies that are uncritically learned and practiced by many hundreds of people in Barbados that are principally responsible for going against the grain of such logical numerical fundamentals, and that are principally responsible for such distortive and warped untruths in the minds of the practitioners themselves, sufficient that not only are there these different so-called parities emerging out of them, but there are also these false fictitious idiotic notions of a currency being stronger than another, one being weaker than another, etc. a currency being devalued, depreciated appreciated, etc. spewed out of them too.

    And the truth is that this set of primarily bogus pernicious inverted political ideologies, philosophies and psychologies are the very unscientific untruthful discredited discipline called economics.

    Imagine that under this thread there are these references by these persons on their computers to this fictitious false notion of devaluation yet there is no pointing by them to the objective criteria governing what they so falsely believe in.

    PDC


  46. Walter

    Thanks for your comments on the foreign resort owner scenario.

    “The foreign resort owner can now increase his profits by expanding his operations and hiring another worker”

    And of course the foreign resort owner could use the extra money he pockets to expand his operations in St. Lucia, Antiqua, Grenada or even Jamaica.

    SS

    Thanks for your additional insight.

    You are not so SIMPLE after all


  47. the call for good goverance is now..a call for all to make sacrifice ..to be made by all .not one of having half of society pulling the heavy load whie others benefits..but this kind of devaluation which serves as pride and a sincerty in healing and recovery of a nation.


  48. MoneyBrain | June 12, 2014 at 7:42 PM |

    @WW
    If Whiteys take black peeps jobs then somebody will gripe about that!
    Most people pun here want jobs for black Bajans.

    Who cares if whitey eats or not?

    Money….lol that is madness, there are less than 10,000 bajan whites in Bim, they will not be taking anyone’s job, so in your infinite wisdom can you tell me how they are surviving now? since they do not seem to be working in the hotel industry, you barely see them on the road, they do not sweep the streets, work at sanitation, they do none of the menial jobs blacks do, so how are they surviving?

    By the way Money, the BLP cannot institute Integrity Legislation either, they have taken too many bribes over the years and Mia herself is beholden to too many minorities and business people on the island, it’s a slippery slope for both political parties.


  49. @WW
    The answer is that the PEOPLE must not be SHEEPLE, they MUST INSIST that we have the best brains for MPs who are well paid but face serious PRISON TIME if they theef the peeps $$$$! Bim must find away to standout as we did when we were ahead of the pack! At Independence Bim was one of the least corrupt Nations on Earth. now we have joined the “lowly” and guess what, the results are that we are now LOWLY!

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