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Credit Photo:Bajanfuhlife Blog
Credit Photo:Bajanfuhlife Blog

Everywhere Barbadians on the Rock turn we are being bombarded by talking heads on the economy economists included. Many have forgotten it is the economists who are mainly responsible for the economic policies which have helped to wreck our economies.

After about six years of a stalled economy Barbadians are being warned to brace for more hardship to be delivered in the ‘Budget’ promised in a few weeks. We are told an IMF document has been circulated to stakeholders for comment, a process anchored by a 3-man committee headed by retired Permanent Secretary William Layne.  One important stakeholder, the public, is left to speculate the full content of the IMF document. We have become so use to NOT being embraced in the process by our government, it provokes little or no response by the majority of citizens.

BU’s position is consistent. If there is no confidence shown by key stakeholders in the economic policies of government we will go nowhere fast. A further point: all the focus is being placed on tweaking fiscal and monetary policy to reposition Ship Barbados but nothing about  a change in the conspicuous consumption behaviour of Barbadians.  Nothing about aggressively incenting export led projects. After the ‘pretty’ talk the Barbados economy is driven by consumption behaviour which soaks up scarce forex. It makes good sense to improve efficiencies how we do things in country to benefit from the cost savings but we have to earn foreign exchange to pay our bills if we want to maintain a reasonable lifestyle.

According to Minister Sinckler the plan is to widen the tax base. The Barbados Revenue Authority (BRA) was established to improve tax collection; a work in progress. The NIS does not fall under the ambit of the BRA but is known to be a state entity owed millions by a cross section of Barbadian individuals and businesses. So far the government seems comfortable squeezing a contracting tax base and and leaving the hatch open for tax defaulters.

The gurus appear to be fixated on a program of Internal Devaluation (ID) to protect the fixed peg. All the tell tale characteristics are present, cut public expenditure comingled with other austerity measures. An ID strategy is useful if  it translates to Barbados becoming more competitive and generating GROWTH!

What concerns BU is the lack of a fiscal strategy which is driven by a philosophy by the policymakers. Our policies appear to be anchored solely to reduce the deficit the consequence of which are negative externalities. There is rising crime and lawlessness, volatile industrial relations climate, lack of confidence by key stakeholders in society, a deterioration in health care to name a few.

An acceptance of the IMF recommendations will continue the pillage of the middle income Barbados, the result, reduced aggregate spend.  A significant number of Barbadians are mortgaged to the hilt and with disposal income being targeted will have to sustain current lifestyle by drawing down on savings or utilizing credit. There is the commonsense option to change consumption behaviour but how does a generation intoxicated by the 80s boom make the adjustment?

This week the region received the news Scotiabank will be shrinking operations in the region, a good indicator of the uncertainty at play. BU has not forgotten the pessimistic view delivered by Governor of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank in Barbados a few weeks ago. Our leaders, our people appear to lack the innovativeness (there is that word again) to kickstart our social and economic engines required to build a ‘prosperous’ society in a world which has changed in the last 10 years.


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67 responses to “Barbados Economy in Neutral”

  1. John Hanson 1781-1782 Avatar
    John Hanson 1781-1782

    THE government will not talk its self, The land taxes will never be fixed , To many Minister own things that are not being taxed, Many of the people whom to taxes are due get to side set the system and the lower class the burden of the taxes fall on them over and over again,
    Big companies who dont want to pay taxes were told to say , that we are not making and loosing , pay now taxes and reopen under anther name doing the same thing, As they then sell there housing for millions,


  2. Very interesting comments by Jeremy Stephen today. What baffles me is this. If everyone is in agreement that Barbados desperately needs to earn forex, why is there a sense that stumbling blocks are being placed in the way of certain players ?….How is it so easy for certain people to get access to the EGF multiple times while others must literally beg ? Were it not for public outcry would B’s Recycling still be waiting to help ?

  3. Lincoln Carrington Harper Avatar
    Lincoln Carrington Harper

    @ David

    ” We are told an IMF document has been circulated to stakeholders for comment, a process anchored by a 3-man committee headed by retired Permanent Secretary William Layne. One important stakeholder, the public, is left to speculate the full content of the IMF document. We have become so use to NOT being embraced in the process by our government, it provokes little or no response by the majority of citizens. …
    The gurus appear to be fixated on a program of Internal Devaluation (ID) to protect the fixed peg. All the tell tale characteristics are present, cut public expenditure comingled with other austerity measures. An ID strategy is useful if it translates to Barbados becoming more competitive and generating GROWTH!”

                  ###################################
    

    David, it is easy to blame the economists for messing up the Barbados economy, but they could not have done so if ordinary people, as well as the policy makers had not listened to them. In this regard I am reminded of Keynes” words about the influence of economists.

    As for the usefulness of an internal devaluation strategy, in terms of improving competitiveness and generating growth, does this not also apply to a currency devaluation strategy, or a fiscal devaluation strategy? It should be evident by now that the search for growth is an elusive quest, which is not to be illuminated by the tired methods of the recent past, and that there can be no gain without pain, whether IMF inspired, or native.

    Incidentally, my first quoted line of your tirade suggests that you, like me have not yet been able to put your hands on a copy of a report that is clearly in the hands of the more-favoured Press. Incidentally, on Monday (2014-11-03) I heard David Ellis say on Brass Tacks that he was going to have his copy posted on line. I thought that to be a public service of some value, but I am still waiting …


  4. @LCH

    No BU is not a member of the favoured and this is a status we wear as a badge of honour.

    You must have noted the comment by Ellis yesterday that the Barbados Economic Society was not included on the distribution list to get the IMF document either. If the late David Thompson were alive he saw the value in using social media, not this lot. And the MoF is no fan of BU.


  5. @LCH

    You of all people should appreciate the confidence issue associated with a currency devaluation and entering an IMF program. We have never done it and we never will is the refrain.


  6. Some strange developments in the telecommunications world. First we had Karib given permission to operate in Barbados BEFORE a general election, then it was snapped up by COLUMBUS and now this news, C&W  ‘huffs’ COLUMBUS. What will the Fair Trading have say about concentration of ownership in the market? We know they do not care, just see the SOL deal.

    C&W Communications buys Columbus Int’l for USD 1.85 bln

    Thursday 6 November 2014 | 09:38 CET | News

    Share on twitter Share on facebook Share on linkedin Share on google_plusone_share More Sharing Services0

    C&W Communications said it has agreed to acquire Columbus International, a privately-owned fibre services provider in the Caribbean, Central America and Andean region, for USD 1.85 billion. To help fund the acquisition, C&W is planning a share placement of 9.99 percent of its outstanding share capital.

    C&W said the acquisition will be earnings neutral in the first year after completion but materially enhance earnings thereafter. With Columbus on board, the group is now expected to achieve recurring annualised pre-tax cost synergies of around USD 85 million, delivered in full in the 2017-2018 financial year, and one-time capital expenditure synergies of USD 145 million in the first three financial years following completion, with additional revenue benefits. C&W added that it will, for the moment, maintain its existing dividend policy of 4 cents per CWC share.

    C&W said the deal is in line with the strategy it unveiled in May, where it said it wanted mobile leadership, improved fixed-mobile convergence, better TV offerings, and a strong B2B/B2G offering. The deal will also strengthen the management team.

    Based in Barbados, Columbus counts 700,000 residential customers in the regions where it operates. The company provides triple-play cable TV and broadband services as well as backhaul connectivity to 42 countries in the region, capacity and IT services.


  7. Economics is the most discbackward, most unscientific, and most untruthful of all the social studies disciplines in existence in this


  8. Economics is the most backward, most discredited, most unscientific and most untruthful of all the social studies disciplines practiced any where in this Caribbean region.

    So-called economists are among the most regressive, most uneducated, most unstudied and most deceitful of all the paper pushing, type writing professions in existence in this Caribbean region.

    Economics and so-called economists are contributing terribly to the entire social political material financial degradation and dedevelopment taking place in Barbados and the wider Caribbean.

    Economics and so-called economists everywhere in this Caribbean region must not only be railed against but must also be ideologically politically fought against – as wretched modern day bile alchemy alchemists – until they substantially vanish from our social psychological political landscapes.

    PDC


  9. “According to Minister Sinckler the plan is to widen the tax base. The Barbados Revenue Authority (BRA) was established to improve tax collection; a work in progress.”

    A widening of the tax based should have been a priority undertaken long ago.

    There are many owners of small businesses [operating legally and illegally] in Barbados who do not file income tax returns, pay income tax or NIS contributions.
    Yet, they benefit from the social services the same as those who have income tax deducted from their salaries/wages and comply with the law. They use the hospital and polyclinics, and utilize public goods such as the police, fire department and street lighting, while their children are the recipients of free secondary education and travel free on Transport Board buses.

    Legislation should be formulated making it mandatory for ALL businesses to register with the BRA. Entrepreneurs in the process of registering new businesses with Corporate Affairs should also be mandated to register with the BRA before receiving their business registration certificate. Hence, the BRA would have a list of all businesses in Barbados and would be able to identify those who filed income tax or pay VAT and those who are delinquent.

    The BRA should employ tax auditors who would have the responsibility of visiting non-compliant owners, conducting an audit to determine the amount of taxes payable, as well making random checks on compliant owners.


  10. @David
    “C&W COMMUNICATIONS BUYS COLUMBUS INT’L FOR USD 1.85 BLN”

    That is really very disappointing news and extremely disheartening for Columbus customers. I actively try to avoid the incumbent and their poor service where ever I can.
    As you said, it will be interesting to see how the FTC “spins” this. Then again we all know how it will play out…

  11. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    The BRA has created more problems than it has fixed, but then again it has not fixed anything. BRA is a product of a misdiagnosis of the problems with revenue collection. After the taxes have been levied several persons defied the law by not paying and also in the case of VAT, the taxes were stolen by those responsible for collection. Instead of the BRA in its present disjunctional form, Government needed a bailiff to collect from defaulters.


  12. It seems to me we have 3 major issues. First, we have a currency pegged to the US$. We have seen the US$ significantly grow in value pulling the Barbados dollar along with it which it turn has meant cheaper imports and a more expensive tourist product. Many of our competitors have a floating currency and have been able to position their tourists offerings to take advantage of our situation. Secondly, we continue to spend more than we earn so that there is a continuous leak of foreign exchange. Thirdly, capital investment driven by FX income is scarce. Until there is a monetary policy that creates economic soundness and builds FX, there will continue to be great financial stress and a lack of confidence in the ability of the island to sustain itself.


  13. “Who will bell the cat”should have been asked umpteenth years ago. The “not me” mentality has finally driven a stake in the body and soul of this economy, what was falsely mistaken (for) what can be put off for tomrrow had finally caught up with all today.

  14. Lincoln Carrington Harper Avatar
    Lincoln Carrington Harper

    @David | November 6, 2014 at 3:50 AM |
    @LCH

    “You of all people should appreciate the confidence issue associated with a currency devaluation and entering an IMF program. We have never done it and we never will is the refrain.”

    David, that is a very low blow, and seems to contravene the code of the Blog Master not to draw inferences from internet signatures. After all, my computer may be in the public domain, which is clearly not the case with the referenced IMF authored report. Make no mistake, I have no intention of commenting on the said report until I have read it in its entirety – a location where both of us are tenants. But as to entering an IMF program, I am sure that my doppelganger will have something to say about that in due course.

    Incidentally, I share your concern about Columbus being caught in the cables of the octopus that is strangling our land line users, and I fear that it will be beyond the capabilities of the FTC to untangle us. As our Fifteenth Century navigator discovered, we may have to go further West to find our brave new world.


  15. The global recession presented the perfect opportunity for Barbados and the other members of CARICOM to restructure their economies in the context of csmE. Instead we are like crabs in a bucket spending what we can’t afford to sell the same product for example.


  16. We continue to get the impression that most people still seem to be of a view that this is not going to get worse, much worse. That a bit of tinkering here and there could make a difference. That a BLP administration could make a difference. That if we gave more scare resources to Bizzy, COW and Butch that somehow more people who have less and less money will come to a country which has little to offer viz a viz other destinations.

    Indeed, the world is starting to measure a 25 year ordeal. But the MOF does not want to know that. This is an emerging consensus amongst the people who can tell Barbados what to do, or what we have to do. Still, a short-termism by government continues to give Bajans false hope. We guess they must be thinking that this jaded story will become true sooner or later. And they will be able to say how right they were. But they are wrong!

    The unchallenged maximum leader of the BLP seems to have embarked on a self-imposed oath of silence. Of course this could be a powerful weapon, for introspection, or it could be a recognition that she has no answers for us either. If that is so she should let the people know that both the BLP and the DLP are in no position to help us. They at least owe us that. Cud dear man, they surely can’t be criminal enough to preside over such a great calamity in silence. For such behavior is at least treasonous. Treason carries certain obligations.

    How much longer are we, as a nation, to be like driftwood. Captured by a regime which lacks the conscious to tell the people this one important truth. We wonder if our government lacks the ability to measure the depth of this Great Depression and is so consumed by an illusive of growth how can we have a strategic plan for survival? For such a plan can only be built on reality not the fiction of short term improvement!

  17. Cryus the Virus Avatar

    Well if the FLOW issue got wunna in a tailspin wait until year end when C&W announce they have concluded the buy-out of DIGICEL. The Caribbean will always be a prime place to rape people.


  18. “Who will bell the cat”should have been asked umpteenth years ago. The “not me” mentality has finally driven a stake in the body and soul of this economy, what was falsely mistaken (for) what can be put off for tomrrow has finally caught up with all today.


  19. We have to find inventive ways to EARN forex and at the same time modify attitudes fashioned at the altar of conspicuous consumption.


  20. What can Barbados do in the next 12 months to earn an additional $200 million in forex?

    If it can’t be done you all have to face the music. Higher taxes and more people sent home.

    Word to the wise. Spend on needs not on wants and be kind to those less fortunate than you.


  21. David wrote “We have to find inventive ways to EARN forex”

    That is a long term solution.

    The short term is to make Barbados the cleanest Island in the Caribbean and make that one of the focal points in Tourism marketing.


  22. @ David
    That maybe true in the short term but all international currencies are under pressure. Pressure equivalent to what the country is experiencing. So there has to be a longer term plan, several short term plans. A dependence of fiat currencies in this environment is fraught with dangers.

    If we had out way half the reserves would have been in precious metals (physical), 15 years ago.


  23. The governing BLP inspired a confidence which resonated with investment gurus local and international.The current governing DLP inspires a confidence among its cabal,none of which could care less of tomorrow and the likelihood of statial collapse.It can be construed that the late David Thompson may have inspired a confidence which might have put the country on a growth path by this time if not before.


  24. Hants. What is your take regarding Scotiabank massive restructuring cuts. Is it really cuts or Scotiabank plans in closing non performing banks due to economic problems in certain jurisdiction and shifting them to countries liked Trinidad


  25. It is absolutely reprehensible and abhorrent the news on the 8.30 amVOB this morning, that Cable and Wireless is seeking to acquire telecommunication company Colombus Communications – the operators of FLOW – and its operations here in many parts of this region.

    Many of those persons in Barbados who would have terminated the services of LIME as a result of LIME’s poor, awful customer and other services – and who would have gone on to install the services of FLOW, must be now of the position that FLOW is about to betray them.

    What a disastrous sickening state of affairs!!

    PDC


  26. In a larger economy the Fair Trading Commission would block this monopoly situation.Barbados too small to make a difference and that is why we should be part of the OECS for a start.


  27. Bajan brassbowls will help to repay this debt.
    “CWC said in a statement that it will also assume US$1.17 billion of Columbus debt,”

    @ Tell me Why,

    ScotiaBank is satisfying the demands of shareholders. The Caribbean is no longer a profit centre as in years gone by.

  28. Lincoln Carrington Harper Avatar
    Lincoln Carrington Harper

    @ David:

    “We have to find inventive ways to EARN forex and at the same time modify attitudes fashioned at the altar of conspicuous consumption.”

    There may be a connection between earning forex and using durex, if you fornicate conspicuously, as Jamaica discovered in promoting its hedonistic tourism offer.

    Incidentally, I hope that by now you have downloaded your copy of the IMF report on the reform of the Barbados taxation system. Some badges are just not worth wearing!


  29. We need a General Election now &, let the TRUTH be told, & no buying of votes this time around. Let an international team come in & overseer the voting, that’s the only way we will get an election that is fair, truthful, & honest.


  30. Govt and barbadians in general need to remove “that”proverbial line in the sand barring on shore casino gambling.outside of restructing the tourist industry other measures must to added as incentives to atrract and stimulate


  31. @ ac

    Govt and barbadians in general need to remove “that”proverbial line in the sand barring on shore casino gambling.outside of restructing the tourist industry other measures must to added as incentives to atrract and stimulate

    I agree 100% it will bring in much more needed forex and create more job opportunities.


  32. In this year 2014 Telephone is an essential service. 911

    Will the government legislate that Lime offers a basic service at an affordable rate?

    Lime is a de facto monopoly with its land line service in Barbados


  33. Hants everthing u read u must not ingest or digest..unless u have unearthed the reasons. planted underneath.just some food for thought


  34. Speaking of on shore Casino gambling,Aruba was able to turnaround its failing economy when its reliance upon oil refining went south and it was on the brink of collapse.The introduction of CG and of an airline Air Aruba to ferry its bounty hunters combined to rescue that country from bankruptcy.
    Divi there was into CG and sought to bring a facility here.Were it not for the untimely passing of the then PM JMGM,Barbados might have long ago joined the band which cater to this lucrative part of the leisure market.
    There are over 15 Caribbean countries operatingl casinos of varying sizes including Aruba,St Martin,Trinidad,Martinique,Guadeloupe,Antigua,St Kitts,Puerto Rico,Dominican Republic,and of course the biggest player the Bahamas.The Atlantis on Paradise Island a 100,000 sq ft casino resort
    is listed as employing 6500 staff!


  35. @ Gabriel

    Excellent case studies.


  36. Barbadians in general are long term pessimist , altlantic city nJ was on its way to oblivion but had not for casino gambling it would (have ) just like detroit simply left to die, yes the gobal economic melt down dealt the big players a losing hand however( mostly) finding major investors unprepared so hence the backlash.. recently billionaire investor Glenn Straub has renewed an interest by vowing to invest in some of the casino properties that went belly up and the govt has not given up on the industry but is already spending millions of dollars in a major diversification program which will be attractive to all ends of the tourist spectrum,

    http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/breaking/is-glenn-straub-still-interested-in-atlantic-city-oh-hell/article_f11dea90-651b-11e4-9dcf-5b47507505c2.html.

    they are always investors who are willing to take risk especially on virgin soil, barbados does not have any thing to lose ,as it is now there are about to lose everything by standing still.
    the time has long come and gone for barbados to stop being eternal straddlers


  37. here is where and how govt can find money despite noy unlike NJ who had find itself in a financial bullet NJ bite the bullet and took a chance “a winning chance in saving its depressed economy,
    taxes collected helped and saved furthering an expansion of the tax base on homeowners and other govt based entity which people relied on

    http://www.nj.gov/oag/ge/docs/Financials/CRFTF/CRFTFSourceReport.pdf


  38. So…you think it’s a good thing to bring in a Casino? It’s like having to prostitute to make a dollar. Casinos also bring crime. No vision means one has to resort to such choices….


  39. @caribcanadian

    Maybe the argument is that if the competition has casino gambling and we have placed our eggs in the one basket then we have no choice but to offer if we want to be considered by the potential tourist.


  40. @ caribcanadian

    Have you been to St. Maarten on the Dutch side.

    This is an Caribbean island half the size of Barbados, one half French the other Dutch.

    They have 40,000 residents and over 1 million tourist.

    On the Dutch side there are at least 13 casinos on Front Street.

    There is no major crime problem and the island is a very clean place to live.

    Barbados should pattern itself after St. Maarten.


  41. caribbean canadian.what are your alternatives,? have you read the IMF proposals.. that is the hand that every bajan is being dealt, unlike the IMF proposal, casino would helped to unload some of the deluge of high debt and slow growth that will confront barbados for a long time,


  42. look investors always follow the money, investors like to take risks in areas that can produce so far casino gambling has proven to be a winning ticket for “big wheel” investors , as well as “low end ” and high end tourist, there is no trick or coercing just an attraction that gives both investor ! govt! and tourist a quick return on their investment
    Barbados with plenty sand sea and sun is a tourism paradise and should take these components to a different level using a strategy which would compliment and expose the diversification of the island and if it means taking high risk at spinning the wheel to do so in the end it would all be worth it, ,

  43. John Hanson 1781-1782 Avatar
    John Hanson 1781-1782

    WHAT IS THE ROAD MAP FROM FRAUD? BARBADOS KNOWS AND THE PAIN IS SO GREAT THEY MAKING PEOPLE LOOK THE OTHER WAY, BUT THE PAIN IS NOW BECOMING UNBEARABLE .

    LAND REFORM BY LAW AND TITLE , NO TAX BASE , NOW THE PEOPLE MUST BE OVER TAXED AS THE RICH MAKE JOKES AND FUN OF THE NIGGERS IN CHARGE,

    PRIME MINISTER DOWN TO MOF AND TODD AND LOWE IS A CROOK ,


  44. With the simplified version of a imf tax reform one which will affect barbadians this is an opportune time for govt to wherby a window of opportunity has been opened ,an almost once in a lifetime opportuinty for govt to placed before the people an alternative path by way of casinodto help stop the financial bleeding of the country.the other alternative of privatisaton which the blp had offered and which was rejected last time around would indeed seem to be the lesser of the two evils between paying high taxes and one which the people would endorse ( if) the govt does not pursue an avenue to lessem the pain.

  45. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ ac | November 7, 2014 at 1:56 PM |
    “the other alternative of privatisaton which the blp had offered and which was rejected last time around would indeed seem to be the lesser of the two evils between paying high taxes and one which the people would endorse ( if) the govt does not pursue an avenue to lessem the pain”

    What are you trying to tell us here, ac? Are you saying that the dreaded “P” word is good for the fiscal health of Barbados? After all, you DLP guys are past masters at privatization as far back as 1991-92. Privatization is not a “BLP thing”. It’s more a DLP thing forced upon you guys through fiscal imprudence and economic mismanagement.
    Could you please, (for Dompey’s sake) ‘expatiate’ on your sudden love of privatization?
    BTW, ac, how does it feel to be boiling in the “No Layoffs, No Privatization” pot of lies and deceit?


  46. miller where is your understanding! to clarify ,the Privatisation program which was proposed and rejected by bajans in my mind is still not a viable option, what i am saying is that (if) govt is not willing to pursue any other alternative for e, g, casinos, . the people might pick the lesser of the two evils between the imf proposals and privatization ,with privation getting the nod by the people,
    now i am for casinos as i have seen prove that it has helped bailed out depressed economies, the only trick is that govt has to be innovative and have the vision and the foresight moving forward in forming policies that are inclusive in determining how and where what ever financials gains acquired from gaming would be spent in the further diversification of the tourist sector and which should be of the benefit for country and people,

  47. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ ac | November 7, 2014 at 8:05 PM |
    “miller where is your understanding! to clarify ,the Privatisation program which was proposed and rejected by bajans in my mind is still not a viable option,
    what i am saying is that (if) govt is not willing to pursue any other alternative for e, g, casinos, . the people might pick the lesser of the two evils between the imf proposals and privatization ,with privation getting the nod by the people..”

    Since the people rejected the privatization option last time around has the current political administration put the privatization option to the people again? Why is the BNTCL being privatized without the people’s agreement?
    Are you calling the PM bold-faced liar and deceiver of the public’s trust since he made it abundantly clear Privatization is not part and parcel of his administration’s approach to the management of the country’s economy?

    You can forget about casinos being the life saver for the Bajan economy. You are 20 years too late. The world of gambling has changed tremendously since then.

    Which investor would take up millions to set up a fully-fledged casino operations in the Barbados of today?
    Barbados has a dying tourism industry which is daily becoming more unattractive to a younger generation of travelers.
    Do you really feel you guys can compete with the casinos on Antigua, St. Kitts and St. Maarten? What about the cruise ships with their ‘all-inclusive’ fare of full-fledged gambling and all?

    All you guys can ask for is a little gaming room in any refurbished hotel to keep the few tourists amused instead of risking their health and safety walking the streets or visiting the Oistins Bay Garden to be exposed to all the garbage filth and sewage Barbados is proud to be producing and constantly putting on display.

    PS: But most of all, my silly friend, the growth in gambling activities is not through casinos but via the ‘WWW’. Online gambling and TV poker are the new growth area; not the pulling one-arm bandits or sitting around a black jack or poker table or roulette wheel in some flashy environmentally off-putting setting stalked by petty criminals, drug pushers and prostitutes.

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