← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by Beresford
 Mia Mottley, Opposition Leader
Mia Mottley, Opposition Leader

Barbados is now in its most absurd position, of having to pay a much greater price for the garbage out of the mouth of its Prime Minister and DLP government than dealing with the literal garbage that is a plague on the nation.

At the bullseye of the economic disaster everyone and his mother has warned about with yet another downgrade, the words of Stuart, Sinckler, the Governor of the Central Bank and the apologists for incompetence and financial mismanagement on a level unimaginable are particularly haunting.

Recall the words of Stuart in June 2014, when Moody’s issued a three-notch downgrade from Ba3 to B3.

In what is now the media’s favourite phrase, in “rubbishing” the stunning lack of confidence in the DLP’s economic management, Stuart declared: “What they say is only relevant if we want to embark on an orgy of foreign borrowing in which people should know how much we should have to borrow, how much our money should cost.

“But if we are not intending in the short or medium term to go to the capital markets to borrow money, what they say has as much value as what you see in any garbage dump collected by the Sanitation Services Authority.”

Incidentally, the funny thing was that at the same time as the Moody’s announcement, Government was about to debate an amendment raising borrowing limit from Bds$1.5 billion to 2.5 billion.

The six plus downgrades from Moody’s, Standard and Poor’s and CARChris has moved Barbados from solid B in 2009 to now Caa1.

With each downgrade, the DLP’s posturing is exposed. Spiralling debt, Central Bank borrowings and the gap between DLP promises and reality are consistently referenced with comments such as “economic fundamentals weak,” “structural shortcomings” “lack of competitiveness” and economic performance “below expectations” and “low growth, high debt, and large fiscal deficit.”

With each, Barbados falls further down the greasy pole in terms of attracting investments while paying higher costs for borrowings and making it much more difficult to borrow internationally. The already excessive terms of the Credit Suisse loan will now attract higher interest payments.

With each, the spectre looms of the dreaded Ds – default and devaluation.

The time bomb is the Government’s behaviour in all of this. Like a spoilt and petulant child who believes it is always right, regardless of the evidence to the contrary, and blames everything and everyone for its illogical actions, including the circumstances of its birth, the DLP steadfastly refuses to accept the facts of fundamental flaws in its mishandling of Barbados.

Previously, we have been treated in this theatre of the bizarre to comments in response from Sinckler et al such as “highly negative conclusions,” “unfair,” “illogical”  “drastic.”

From the matchless Stuart, after the 2014 S&P downgrade and a threat from Sagicor to move its headquarters as its rating and borrowing costs were being affected by Barbados’ downgrades, a declaration of such a move as “not a loss of confidence.”

And this gem, after a warning about possible devaluation in the face of continuing high debt which he dismissed, “this will serve neither as a deterrent nor a discouragement to that small coterie of alarmists who continue to believe in economic witchcraft and are therefore preoccupied with, and intrigued by, this brand of necromancy.”

Of note, too, the latest downgrade, like others before it, comes right after the DLP indulges in one of its regular parades of fantasy – this time after the Estimates.

In that debate, Sinckler, supported by all, maintained the fallacy that the economy is getting better, that projects are on their way, that the reserves are well and the rest of the figments of his fertile imagination.

Clearly, the more in denial of reality the DLP becomes entrench, and the more arrogant its response to the announcements of downgrades, as they rubbish Moody’s and S&P, the more the economic garbage piles up, the more rancid it becomes, the less the DLP’s willingness – not ability, that boat sailed long ago – to deal with it.

There is no covering up the junk of 0.5 per cent growth. In reality, no growth. The fall in the reserves to $500 million despite borrowings and especially lower foreign exchange spending as a result of the lowest oil prices in years. The lack of economic traction despite a rise in tourism arrivals. The 180 per cent to GDP debt ratio. The non-stop printing of money and borrowing from the NIS. No investment to speak of. You must know you have a problem when, for the first time, real estate prices are falling.

Even at this stage, the denials and lashing out continues. Charlie Skeete did say we are not behaving like adults. There has been no squeak from Stuart or Sinckler or Worrell about the latest downgrade. But out trots some faceless DLP yardfowl “official” to speak more rubbish.

Once more, the downgrade is “illogical”. And the only balance sheet the DLP is interested in is “the social balance sheet.”

The social balance sheet that under the DLP is littered with frightening rising poverty. Escalating crime. Rising unemployment. Hopeless youth, the majority of whom have ‘done the right thing’ and left forgotten with one, two and three degrees and many other qualifications. A QEH and health service that is a mess.

The so-called DLP “official” operative resorts to calling our candidate for Christ Church East Central, Ryan Straughn, a “Junior Opposition Spokesman.”

We take the compliment. For the “junior” is a highly respected economist who makes his living on the strength of his performance as a private practitioner and not as a failure merely appointed to a position without qualifications and getting a fat salary; and more pointedly, whose comments now and over the years are in line with Barbados’ reality and not failed projections.

The BLP will take Straughn any day over Sinckler, Jepter Ince, Central Bank Governor Worrell. In fact, over all of the DLP put together.

As for the “typical criticize everything disease plaguing the Opposition” the BLP will remain steadfast in its role to hold the DLP to account for its myriad foolishness and to alert the public to its arrogance and shenanigans.

We are reaffirmed by the gains our resolve have brought to Barbadians whether the abandonment of the solid waste tax or the exposure of Cahill. Most of all, the BLP will remain informed by the harsh, unfortunate reality of Barbados and the truth of our actions.

The failure of another plasma gasification plant may luckily put paid to the rubbish that is Cahill.

Time will also put paid to the rubbish emanating from the mouths of the DLP. Hopefully, Barbados will be more than just junk.

HAPPENING THIS SUNDAY, APRIL  10, 2016

The St Michael Central branch of the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) will meet on Sunday, April 10, 2016 to nominate its candidate for the next general election.

Opposition Leader Hon Mia Amor Mottley will be the main speaker at the meeting which starts at 4.30 p.m at the George Lamming Primary School, Flint Hall, St Michael.
UPCOMING BLP EVENTS
⊙     The  Annual Founders’ Day Service will be held on Sunday, April 17, 2016,  at the St Patrick’s Roman Catholic Cathedral,  Jemmotts Lane, Bridgetown at 11.00 a.m.
⊙   Founders’ Day Luncheon at BLP Headquarters on Sunday, April 17, 2016 at 1.00 p.m.  Tickets on sale at $50.00 from BLP Headquarters.
⊙        The BLP’s annual Family Day & Picnic will be held on National Heroes Day, Thursday, April 28, 2016 at Barclays Park, Ermie Bourne Highway, (East Coast Road) St Andrew.   

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

151 responses to “The Cost to the Country of DLP Garbage”


  1. Oil exporting countries hit by downgrades

    Saudi Arabia and Brazil lead list of petrostates suffering credit rating cuts
    Rising concerns over the fiscal and economic health of petrostates has led Standard & Poor’s to slash the credit ratings of a slew of oil exporting countries, including a two-point drop for Saudi Arabia.
    The credit rating agency also pushed down Bahrain’s credit level citing the slide in oil prices, now into its 20 month, and further lowered the ratings for Brazil, Kazakhstan and Oman.
    The collapse in the oil price has hammered the finances of the Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest crude producer, sparking worries over its economy and fuelling speculation that it will have to depeg its riyal currency from the dollar.
    The Gulf kingdom had used crude exports to build sizeable foreign reserves, but surpluses have dwindled and become gaping budget deficits, which the country is plugging by drawing down savings and borrowing money.
    Given the bleak outlook for oil prices, S&P on Wednesday said it had decided to lower Saudi Arabia’s rating by two notches from a relatively solid A+ to A-, which is just four rungs above non-investment grade territory, often called “junk”.
    The rating agency lowered its ratings on Bahrain by two notches to BB with a stable outlook, citing the impact that falling oil prices have had on the island kingdom’s public finances. Oman and Kazakhstan’s ratings were relegated to BBB-, the lowest investment grade rung.
    S&P affirmed its ratings on Qatar and Russia, but Brazil’s credit rating was also lowered further in the latest evidence of the stresses facing Latin America’s largest economy. S&P cut Brazil’s rating to BB from BB+, as it warned that the country remains at risk of further erosion of its creditworthiness.


  2. S&P warns of more downgrades for country ratings in 2016
    Global rating agency Standard & Poor’s (S&P) on Thursday warned that there could be more sovereign downgrades than upgrades globally in 2016 amid growing concerns over economic growth.


  3. Now if the BLP can match their attacks and criticism of the nations economy equally and eloquently with solutions then they would have the nations voice of confidence and most likely win the election in 2018
    Until then everything the BLP says is warmed over soup

  4. Due Diligence Avatar

    Isn’t that great.

    Your leaders are leading the way to the bottom.

  5. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Speaking about goldfish and their attention spans.

    What will happen if Barbados is downgraded any further.


  6. The truth of the matter that those nations mentioned as having downgrades have depended on revenue generated through supply and demand as in the case of oil rich countries tied internally to one main source.a similarity in comparison to small nations who have depend heavily on Tourism
    The sceanario although seemingly alike speaks to the aggressive external actions that can trigger and put large or small economies at severe risk when the main sources of revenue becomes weakened in a global economy


  7. AC vs. Beresford, on BU tonight , not on VOB last Sunday , this is fun

  8. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Yeah…but what will happen if Barbados is downgraded any further.


  9. Another downgrade will be costly to the nation mostly psychologically because it can erodes confidence in the nations economy and also putting the nations economy to high interest rates if or when it has to borrow. However another downgrade can be avoided but the risk are high
    Now it takes plenty of maneuvering in bringing the nation to a point that there are measures which must be taken in avoidance
    However govt can generate growth through wise investment another risk which might entail spending but which however can ignite the creation of jobs which will eventually translate into govt to revenue
    The blp over the years has used a strategy of “giving back which has now proven not to be beneficial in a long term strategy of sustaining economies when having insurmountable large debt and slow growth
    Also most note worthy a strategy which the blp has not made mentioned of recently and must have abandoned and have preferred to stay the course of being mummified but bombast on criticisms


  10. We ask the question, again, has the minister of finance or prime minister publicly responded to the Moody’s downgrade announcement? It is standard fare for a government to assure its citizens when such announcements are made. Some may say it is required in the Barbados context given the several downgrades levied on Barbados in the last 7 years. What we have is a nation suffering from a battered psyche with no treatment being on over. Where will it lead?


  11. well i guess if both the PM or MOF had replied it would have been given media attention, but may i ask is there a time period in which a response should be given?
    Yes the nation is being handed psychological body blows regarding the downgrading of its high debt but the up side is that barbados pain is not exclusive but along with other nations large and small are suffering at the heavy hands of rating agencies but with patience and resiliency this too should past
    As predictable the mouthings and mutterings of doom and gloom will be heard by the opposition// but for what it is worth the island has not descended into a cesspool of social and economic decay having riots in the street because of the downgrades


  12. @ David
    We ask the question, again, has the minister of finance or prime minister publicly responded to the Moody’s downgrade announcement?
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Respond and say what Boss?
    Sorry?

    This was as inevitable as night follows day. These people have NO IDEA what they are about. They actually seem to think that leadership was about getting a big pick with a fat salary and an easy pension.

    The only genuine response from these two now, would be for them to fall on their swords or in their cases, ‘lenses’ … literally. …..But given the lack of competence we have come to expect from them, they would probably just slip and stab AC ….who always seem to be pimping around under their coat tails…


  13. @ac

    Your party needs to stand up and face the music. Take responsibility, and reassure the country what their answer to the downgrade is. Instead they put the blame on Moody’s, and the IMF. There not running the country. There a reporting agency, and watchdog for investors.

    You can’t compare Saudi Arabia, and Barbados! Your heads in the sand, along with your party. When has Stuart ever given a state of the economy speech, or had a press conference.

  14. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ David April 9, 2016 at 5:32 AM
    “What we have is a nation suffering from a battered psyche with no treatment being on over. Where will it lead?”

    To a morally, socially and financially ‘DEVALUED’ Nation.

    Bajans were warned time and time again about the incompetence displayed and lies promulgated by the current administration: from the Guv of the CBB to the MoF; from the rusting Four Seasons disaster to the mysteriously ‘missing’ $300 million in forex still to be explained by the gnome.

    These warnings not only came from the local so-called prophets of doom and gloom who were labeled here on BU as BLP yard-fowls of the political soothsayer variety but also from the international lending agencies and IMF who could see things through unfettered and unbiased lenses and whose clarion calls on the ruling administration to take another course to avoid the long spotted financial iceberg up ahead were punished with fits of haughty laughter and thrown aside as garbage on Bay Street.

    We prophets of doom and gloom will weep for poor Bajans in the coming months when the forex eventually runs out and there is an obvious flight of capital as pertained with Jamaica and Guyana with the onset of devaluation.

    As a fish starts to rot from its head so too does a government. What Barbados needs most at this stage is not only a financial lifeline to deal with the debt problem but also a strong dose of Confidence in its government’s ability to manage effectively the affairs of State. Let the Letter “F” not only stand for ‘Failure” but also for “FIRED”!

    Only the strong survive.
    We shall soon see if the billions invested in education were worth it after all. EWB, RIP!


  15. @AC

    you done all you could have done for the DLP, take the much needed vacation


  16. Interesting to hear a bank being so quizzical in this kind of a situation.

    CIBC confused by downgrade

  17. Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass.

    There will be no economic recovery under Fumble’s Fools.

    It was obvious to anyone trying to deal with these clowns five years ago when I first typed this. They are a crowd of baby jackasses running around in circles trying to find their way out of the paddock.

    There are only so many developers within and without this island willing to pay bribes, everyone else has left. Without FDI there is no hope for Bim, we produce nothing here but hospitality.

    The retarded pontificate at the head of the table (nearly typed ‘in charge’) can’t even meet the obligations he made to his shining star foreign investment project Sandals, expansion stuck in civil service BS and frustrating mounting with Butch, who isn’t accustomed to suffering for facilitation like Bajan business people do.

    We will not make it to the end of this year without catastrophe.


  18. No frustrsted. . They will be no castrophy due to economic turmoil or due to wreckless mouthings of the blp antagonist
    Sufficient to say that the socio.economic enviroment has been stablize which is and has been a priority for govt.most in part due to fiscal measures taken in the past
    What the antagonist refuses to admit is that a society is more than an economy and the engine that drives the deficit is not necessarily the same engine that drives the social enviroment
    Therefore a particular caution must be taken which cannot be overlook one of social stabilization in order to prevent social turmoil and decay one that carries a high defecit and many years of repair after the damage is done


  19. The problems are manifold. Here are some:

    low productivity: Take a supermarket. Three employees discuss how to store some boxes best. In other countries the task is assigned to 1 employee. Generally you can erase 75 % of all staff in the supermarkets and generally in the service sector.

    Neglecting reality like a drug addict: Look how the officials here in Bim react to the downgrade. Look at AC. The majority talks about another Credit Suisse loan. A crime against the nation with 15-20 % interest per year. More interest in 6 months than for North America or Europe in in 10 years. A renaissance of slavery?

    Social background of local politicians and other “leaders”. Do you really expect that somebody from a family with ZERO assets 30 years ago (some even just before seizing power in 2008), somebody without any financial prudence can govern a country? Not me.

    Any proper solutions by the local establishment in power? Zero. Look at this (source: CIBC confused by downgrade ….): “These include access to concessionary multilateral financing, request of funds in the context of an official International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme, expensive short- to medium-term financing similar to the 2013 Credit Suisse facility, and additional fiscal contraction to curtail domestic demand for imports”. Their solutions are: 1) IMF (you know what I wrote on Greece before), 2) another Credit suisse loan, 3) “fiscal contraction”, that are, higher taxes and another deep recession.

    To sum up: Negative outlook until 2018 at least. If this goes on, I predict massive emigration. Not only the capital will escape, but also those citizens who have the money for a container and the prospect of a job in North America and Europe. Before 2018 only the Lord can save Barbados.


  20. The prime minister revealed in the Estimates of 2016 that on an occasion he bumped into former Governor of the Central Bank of Barbados Courtney Blackman who advised him the priority of the government is to stabilize the economy. He confirmed Blackman’s advice accorded with his. Since Blackman has not denied Stuart’s statement we have to believe it is the truth. We are therefore left to draw a few conclusions.

    >


  21. @ac you sit in your lofty towers and continue to enjoy the lean cuts of the fatted calf and this allows you to come here and talk a whole heap of shite everytime. The opposition does not owe it to the Government to give any ideas or even make suggestions espesially since this government is not only dunksy but but arrogant,strong headed and theifing. You guys have no interest in changing anything as you are all now pensionable and are prepared to just keep the country on auto pilot and hope for the best. In fact poor souls don’t know how to get nothing change.


  22. sir do not worry about where i sit enough to say i do not beg anyone for bread or water.
    at this point and time expecting The opposition to give viable solutions is between slim and none as evident that the blp have their own internal problems which the leader for the lack of good leadership has no solutions
    Question Explain how hollering about the deficit and having no solutions would result in dividends for the BLP
    Sir whether you wish to agree or not the people voice for change is a testimony for Solutions and unless the BLP can objectively say to the people what are the alternatives they will be doomed to with a gloomy forecast of in house fighting and degrading criticisms from internal as well as external forces while the DLP retains power , A word to the wise is sufficient
    The sympathy vote is alive and well and within it carries much metal


  23. Yes David in a stagnant economy the number one priority should be one of stabilizing the socio-economic enviroment. It makes good sense because when the social foundations has signs of weakness it becomes volitile and ripes for eruption .Therefore it is o uttermost importance and urgency that govt pays special attention to the social apparatus of the economy even when high defecits put them at a risk for downgrades The bottom line being that as the economy cools down and those factors that negatively impacted the economy are no longer in play a slow decline in the deficit would begin as in the case of Barbados
    However in the mean time govt must now pay more attentipn to fiscal prudence and spend only out of necessity expecially on projects to promote growth and job stability


  24. Imagine the ac is talking in the extract as if her party has not been the government for the last eight years! The web of lies the DLP planted has them so tangled they cannot think straight.


  25. That should be abstract…..oops

  26. LT.HORATIO CAINE Avatar
    LT.HORATIO CAINE

    Frustrated business man can you please out line the solutions to the myriad of problems that you see this country having and with your expertise in business sans the frustration then we might be able to get a better picture.


  27. attacks ! attacks! and criticisms are not solutions ///notice that Mia once again has mounted the ole wooden horse and calling for early election even though her party is short of candidates , What kind of a leader would send the army unequipped unprepared and short of soldiers on the battle field? Mia continues to expose her failures and weakness with bombast and self defeating attitudes


  28. @ac

    The DLP has had a full house for 8 yrs, and they still can’t get anything done but switch ministers. What kind of leader would let the country rot.

  29. FCIB at odds with Moody’s downgrade Avatar
    FCIB at odds with Moody’s downgrade

    FCIB at odds with Moody’s downgrade
    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/79927/fcib-odds-moody-downgrade

  30. Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether.

    Cane

    Civil servant consequences. In the real world people who do not perform lose their jobs. We should have a tribunal in place like the FTC where private sector complaints against the civil service can be heard and acted on.
    Public televised hearing and award of tenders in a parliament office on parliament TV
    De-politicizing of the senate. Senate seats should be given to institutions for candidates to be sent forward every year. BAR, BMA, COC, etc. No more lackies.
    Flushing of the court system and replacement with professionals from outside our jurisdiction. We have no justice in this country.
    Private sector competition with statutory corporations (see 2.). CBC would be closed if it had to meet the same requirements as private stations, as would NCC, NHC, etc.
    Privatization of the Bridgetown Port under the same scrutiny as BL&P.
    ALL purchases made in Forex should be VAT free. Let’s find all that Forex we need so badly.
    Guaranteed price for sugar 10% above BADMC’s cost. if we get back 30,000 tonnes of sugar we get back employment, ground provisions, land management, tourism appeal. This would cost roughly what CBC costs now but it wouldn’t matter, CBC would be closed or leased to the private sector.
    Privatisation of public transport with routes going out to tender for five years on a rotation basis. Unprofitable routes would go for a negative fee (gov’t pays the operator), profitable routes for a positive contract fee. One would pay for the other.
    Facilitation time limits. NO civil service facilitation function should take longer than 3 months. See previous points to understand how this would work.

    THE PURPOSE OF GOV’T IS TO LEGISLATE, REGULATE AND FACILITATE, NOT OPERATE. And much more importantly, gov’t shouldn’t be the employee of last resort.


  31. Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. April 9, 2016 at 11:47 AM #

    “They are a crowd of baby jackasses running around in circles trying to find their way out of the paddock.”

    @ Frustrated Businessman

    Perhaps you should have taken an example from “The Stuart Tales” (as he likes to quote Chaucer and men of that ilk) and apply a more befitting description to these incompetent ministers “as a crowd of baby jackasses running around in” a “DARK ROOM LOOKING FOR A BLACK CAT.”


  32. @Frustrated Businessman

    Two issues affecting the public service which have been railed against repeatedly on BU, the politicisation of the public service in recent decades and disparate systems and anachronistic systems.


  33. The BLP has a vested interested in barbados receiving downgrades all in the name of political propagandizing with hopes of winning an election which is not going to happen,,THe govt has already delivered a well thought out plan which will push the blp back against a grinding wall of confused analogy and remove the nefarious and tempestuous urgency of every so often sipping and having to dip from the poisonous well of discontent ,a well which the blp has used over the years and apparently has ran dry ,However the blp now believes that there an once in a life time chance for political survival has arrived and is quick to grab hold of a so called opportunity dipping from the well of the Moodys twisted grab bag and confusing analysis of the barbados economy… Beresford please say it aint so and btw please remind the leader that barbadians are looking for solutions and not political grab bag hat tricks


  34. if the govt/s as employer continues to be met with a hostile wave of discontent with unconventional methods used by trade union to meet resolution the policies of Tatcherism would slowly but surely arrived on barbados shores,

  35. Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether.

    employer of last resort.


  36. Jackasses without the requisite knowledge of economics or finance are suggesting the reason for Barbados’ high debt is that this INCOMPETENT DLP administration has been borrowing money every month to pay off debt incurred by the previous BLP administration, ignoring ANY or ALL debt incurred prior to September 15, 1994.

  37. LT.HORATIO CAINE Avatar
    LT.HORATIO CAINE

    Now that’s the thing AC,all Mottley has been doing is from her installment as opposition leader is creating blunder after blunder for herself ,from rubbing shoulders,to the ever popular no confidence motions,i remember one day she called to Brasstacks and Tricia Watson was the moderator and she was being critical of somethings that the government were doing and having made her submissions Miss Watson then said to her as some one who is looking to lead this country outline to us what you would do different and offer us some solutions ,Mottley was apparently at a loss for words,and countered by saying something to the effect,that it was not for her to offer any solutions at the particular time,which seemed to be a cop out, so i am asking again what and who can be a viable alternative as the opposition don’t seem to ever have any viable solutions to the myriad of problems facing this country,should we therefore seriously look at a new party?


  38. Why do we debate such nonsense? Barbados debt profile has been gradually increasing post the Barrow period. In the boom and bust years we had the capacity because the greater size of our GDP which masked the problem. The incumbent government has continued the policy of borrowing and spending. We really need to leave the politics out of the discussion.

    On 10 April 2016 at 12:27, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >

  39. Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether.

    I should also have said, it is now too late to implement my or anyone else’s forward-thinking ideas eight years into the worst administration in the history of our country. What we will soon experiences are ill-conceived and desperate acts of a confused and overwhelmed cabinet.

  40. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ ac April 10, 2016 at 8:11 AM
    “However the blp now believes that there an once in a life time chance for political survival has arrived and is quick to grab hold of a so called opportunity dipping from the well of the Moodys twisted grab bag and confusing analysis of the barbados economy… Beresford please say it aint so and btw please remind the leader that barbadians are looking for solutions and not political grab bag hat tricks.”

    What kind of political nymphomaniac are you, ac? You are virtually ‘unsatisfiable’.
    You keep asking for more and more “solutions” to deal with the economic mess created by your preferred party for a lover.

    Now here is a list of possible solutions presented by a really “Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether” @ April 10, 2016 at 7:57. And what do you do in return to his ‘advances’? Just turn him down?

    Why not look at those proposed solutions from the Businessman some of which have been promulgated here on BU and echoed by the same exhausted BLP which contributed largely to their last electoral loss. Remember the paro economic ads targeted at OSA and the “No Privatization” slogans with the ‘exploited’ old lady on the bus?

    Now go and read the frustrated Businessman contribution and tell us if any of them make sense especially the privatization of the CBC and the Port.

    What are you waiting for?
    The loss of the GAIA to foreign interests looking to launder money behind the façade of helping Barbados with its debt restructuring programme and shoring up the foreign reserves?

  41. Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman at the end of his tether.

    There will also be no consultation with anyone who can help because any meeting a cabinet member attends he does so as a failure. They will man their bastions will lackies and yes-men. Obviously anywhere Fumble opens his mouth to preach immediately evacuates the room of sensible dialogue.

    There will be no economic recovery under Fumble’s Fools.


  42. please stop propagating this nonsense of borrowing and spending by the govt which is a misguided political tool activated to influence those who are unaware why and how the money is being used
    The Blp propaganda machine should be aware that world is smaller and any information is accessible at the click of a mouse
    The govt borrowing was out of necessity to meet debt and protect barbados interest and invest in projects for the barbados economy
    this knee jerk reaction propagated once again by the blp of privatization at the drop of at hat is pie in the sky dream and a pied pipers nightmare


  43. LOL ….it seems that AC has been dispatched to solicit some ‘solutions’ for the desperate DLP to try…. like drowning men clutching…
    But…providing ‘solutions’ to jackasses may be even worse that tossing pearls to swine… These clowns have demonstrated the uncanny ability to take, even the most viable and logical project, and convert them into chaos and financial despair.

    So AC …the simple answer to your desperate plea for ‘ideas’ on how to improve the situation for Barbados is for the DLP jokers to concede incompetence …and for Bajans to choose talented citizens to occupy leadership positions within a new practical political framework.

    @ Frustrated Businessman
    You err in your position that Government has no business in ‘operating’, and should stick to legislating, regulating and facilitating.
    While most of our businessmen may not be such complete imbeciles as we currently see among our politicians, they ALSO have their failings….and you seem to forget that it was because of the havoc caused by the Planter class in Barbados that the ‘political class’ was created in the first place.

    The politicians are crooked and incompetent
    The Businessmen are crooked and competent
    …which do you feel will be worse for the masses…?

    The VERY BEST political model that can address our needs is the co-operative model.


  44. Frustrated Businessman allows emotion to get in the way and blinds his vision to facts and reality .. He needs a reality check what he needs to do is to provide critical thinking presenting in his analysis the long term social effects to this society after all is said and done and govt no longer have the urgency through budgetary consideration of providing to this privatized entities if and when they begin to fail under global pressure


  45. The following link is a good one to inform the discussion instead of the vacuous yardfolw content we have had to endure so far.

    Barbados National Debt
    Share Facebook Twitter Share google+
    ‹ Bangladesh National Debt
    Belarus National Debt ›

    NATIONAL PUBLIC DEBT Barbados 2014
    The national debt increased in Barbados

    In 2014 Barbados public debt was 4,408 million dollars, has increased 285 million since 2013.

    This amount means that the debt in 2014 reached 100.73% of Barbados GDP, a 4.83 percentage point rise from 2013, when it was 95.90% of GDP.

    If we check the tables we can see the evolution of Barbados debt. It has risen since 2004 in global debt terms, when it was 1,721 million dollars and also in terms of GDP percentage, when it amounted to 47.65%.

    According to the last data point published, Barbados per capita debt in 2014 was 15,479 dollars per inhabitant. In 2013 it was 14,533 dollars, afterwards rising by 946 dollars, and if we again check 2004 we can see that then the debt per person was 6,140 dollars .

    The position of Barbados, as compared with the rest of the world, has worsened in 2014 in terms of GDP percentage. Currently it is country number 170 in the list of debt to GDP and 155 in debt per capita, out of the 183 we publish.

    In this page we show you the progression of the public debt in Barbados.

    http://countryeconomy.com/national-debt/barbados


  46. Through your mind back to when the global melt down impacted negatively on small nations Does any one believe that govt entities if had been privatized under past administrations that they would have survived the harsh reality of the global downturn without failure resulting in heavy penalties with massive lay offs and possibilities of law suits brought against govt by these privatized corporations . OF Course then the usual questions of merry go round the mulberry bush would have been asked by the same mouths who are now quick and looking for easy answers . let just not be so quick to jump on what is profitable and easy but what is best and sustainable for the whole of society which usually entails hard work and a communal spirit towards the better.
    Yes the idea of Privatization can be very tempting but in countries with limited resources the govt must weigh the long term effects against short term benefits
    Solutions are not meant to be ban aids but those which can remove the cause of the problems replacing with remedies that eventually heal and cure.
    Our debt took years of accumulating which might take years of undoing undertaking with stridency and efficiency by govts hopefully not to make the same mistakes again ,


  47. opps Through ///throw !


  48. Recall after the Cabinet reshuffle of October 2010, Dr. David Estwick held a press conference to more or less express his disappointment at being “demoted” from Minister of Economic Affairs, Empowerment, Innovation, Trade, Industry and Commerce to Minister of Agriculture, Food, Fisheries, Industry and Small Business.

    The following are excerpts from the statement he read to the public on October 1, 2010:

    “I suggested that we INTRODUCE a DEBT RESTRUCTURING program to take ADVANTAGE of the VERY LOW INTERNATIONAL INTEREST RATES being offered on Country to Country loans and Private Sector Loans.”

    “The proposal from Economic Affairs highlighted that we could realize a savings of $541 million dollars per year for 25 years if my recommendation is followed by interest rate savings as well as principle savings. This Strategy would achieve the targets in the MTFS by 2012 and show a HEALTHY SURPLUS on the fiscal balance by 2014 and reduce the Debt/GDP ratio to 66% of GDP by 2014.”

    “I would like to wish my colleague Minister Sinckler, all that is good, and that he in his new capacity of Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs, ADOPT the MEASURES which I have PRESENTED to CABINET…for these measures I am sure WOULD RESTORE Barbados’ ECONOMIC BALANCE and REESTABLISH Barbados’ INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT GRADE to A INSTEAD of a NEGATIVE OUTLOOK.”

    As at April 10, 2016, there isn’t any EVIDENCE which would SUGGEST that Sinckler ever took Estwick’s RECOMMENDATIONS into CONSIDERATION.

    Also recall that, on January 29, 2014 while speaking to journalist, Dr. Estwick told Barbadians that the DLP’s ECONOMIC POLICIES were FLAWED and the country is on the WRONG PATH. Estwick is reported as saying that he can no “longer sit silent” on whether the island’s present economic path is the right or wrong one or the path to be pursued.

    He also said: “this is NOT the TIME to be PIG HEADED or this is not the time to CLOSE off ALL options. This is the TIME for INNOVATION, this is the time for CREATIVITY and this is the time that EVERY SINGLE OPTION must be EVALUATED clinically and surgically in the INTEREST of Barbados.” He said he could also not sit by “when this debate is raging on and when the outcome of any action may seriously undermine the stability of this country”.

    We all know that Estwick experienced great difficulty in seeking an audience with PM Stuart and by extension the Cabinet, when he sought to present his alternative economic policies. He was eventually given an audience to make his presentation; unfortunately for him, almost two years after, Estwick’s administration did not consider any of his policies were IMPORTANT ENOUGH to NECESSITATE IMPLEMENTATION.

    Pray tell me WHY SHOULD ANYONE, including the BLP, OFFER SOLUTIONS to this incompetent DLP administration, especially against the background that their own Dr. David Estwick’s ALTERNATIVE SOLUTIONS were UNCEREMONIOUSLY REJECTED.


  49. The DEMS are so SENSITIVE when it comes to matters like these, and are always READY to ATTACK the MESSENGER rather than ADDRESSING the ISSUES.

    Irish/international economist, David McWilliams, noted that Barbados’ national debt has been placed by the IMF at 132%, making the island among the most highly indebted in the region in relation to GDP. McWilliams suggested/recommended that, in an effort to reduce the debt, Barbados would eventually have to restructure its debt, since “The stronger Barbados dollar will eventually need to be rebalanced because if your balance sheet has too much debt, it will have to be reduced.”

    RBC Financial (Caribbean) Limited’s group economist, Marla Dukharan, who, in September 2015 and as recent as March 2016, ALSO urged Barbados to implement a domestic DEBT RESTRUCTURING programme or risk passing more “pain” on to domestic lenders.

    In response to suggestions by McWilliams and Dukharan, Sinckler said there is not any justification for Barbados to undertake debt restructuring with its creditors, since, in his opinion, Barbados has “never defaulted” on any of its external or local loans and “so it will remain.”

    We recall Sinckler “CANTANKEROUSLY” responding to Dukharan, when he told her: “Don’t come ‘round here talking rubbish,” “don’t come ‘bout here every year creating contempt and confusion in this economy…….Put up or shut up.”

    Could you imagine that Chris Sinckler is shiite bucket who is not an economist, but a shiite hound minister of finance that blatantly rejected a recommendation from David McWilliams, and economist who has been RANKED AMONG Europe’s TOP TEN economic thinkers?

The blogmaster invites you to join and add value to the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading