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Submitted by Dr. George C. Brathwaite
Chris Sinckler, Minister of Finance
Chris Sinckler, Minister of Finance

“The challenge lies rather in the idea of planning, of purposeful, intelligent control over economic affairs. This, it seems, we must accept as a guide to our economic life to replace the decadent notions of a laissez-faire philosophy.” – Rexford Tugwell and Howard Hill, ‘Our Economic Society and Its Problems’ (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1934), p. 527.

This 21st century Democratic Labour Party (DLP) administration has been the antithesis of its groundings in social democratic politics. Barbados has been tossed far away from the ideals and aspirations for which the pioneers of our development envisioned. Barbadian economic planners, under the direction of a DLP gone astray, have uncritically embraced the lull for the neo-liberalised version of laissez faire capitalism. This unflattering cuddle has derailed the socialist orientations which were instrumental in driving postcolonial Barbados and shaping the nation’s post-independent development.

In real and visible terms, Barbados has today gone off track. The macroeconomic planners and policymakers have shifted their developmental gaze away from people’s well-being and re-directed attention towards the attainment of multilateral approval. The technocrats of the IMF may be excellent singers of austerity but if the idea of effective economic planning continues to be ignored by the governing, it is very likely that the governed would voice their resistance to swelling hardship and social infelicities. History in Barbados, the Caribbean, and the developing world is replete with examples necessitating resistance and protest from the bottom.

Notwithstanding the financial and other macroeconomic variables that make economic planning difficult at best, the working class people of contemporary Barbados are drifting perilously towards ‘incivility’ while the economy, that up to a few years ago gave opportunity for an expanding middle-class, is being described in terms of ‘backwardness’. Furthermore, the Barbados economy is being characterised with ‘junk bond’ status by some of the very multilaterals to whom the country’s obedient policymakers genuflect while abandoning the strength of social consciousness.

Reluctant to admit it, Barbados’ political economy over the last five years, has been frustrated with countless but lame efforts at neoliberal economic recovery. The resultant failure to sufficiently spur economic growth by the current DLP administration has negated many of the social gains achieved in Barbados since 1966.

For instance, free education – as a vital investment in the logic of moving from underdevelopment to development – has suffered at the hands of economic slaughterers. Their main passions grew out of betrayal in order to appease accounting standards while thumping their chests and savouring their own successes of attaining political power. In fact, the then Prime Minister Errol Barrow on May Day 1987, exactly one month before his death had observed and warned us that:

“We are not going to achieve our common objectives of social justice if the workers are going to be there on the other side of the fence, having an antagonistic attitude towards the people who control the capital. We are only going to have harmonious relationships in this society if the people who now control the capital realise that the workers themselves are entitled to a share in the control of that capital, both in the managerial and ownership levels.”

Surely, the National Hero’s statement is a coronation of socialist principles within a context of the social democratic space that was opened at independence for Barbados. Equally, it is a foreboding that speaks to prioritising the worker over the dollar, although both are indisputably important. The quest for social and economic empowerment must remain in place so that Barbados can achieve its developmental objectives.

The fact is that in Barbados’ first 40 years of independence, despite whatever challenges emerged, our economic planners and leaders recognised the need for worker and business alliances. The public and private sectors grew together with the embellishment of a framework that was defined by prompt decision-making and a strong sense of certainty of purpose.

Paradoxically, the current Prime Minister and the Minister of Finance in Barbados stand out as localised points of instruction. The indecisive wavering that is closely situated in the customs of Stuart and Sinckler, also presents clear demonstrations of the dysfunctionality that has crept into the fabric of Barbadian society. What Stuart and Sinckler say and how they act have effectively become institutionalised setbacks. The pair has practically set the tone, not only for consumers and civil society in Barbados to baulk at positive reforms (e.g. BRA), but has incurred a lethargy in the investment climate. Investment classes – local and foreign – are reluctant to take calculated risks.

Barbados previously had a record of performing outstandingly well due to the factors of stability and certainty in our socio-economic space. Barbados has seen an about turn both in terms of governmental approach and in reciprocity. Prime Minister Stuart and his Cabinet colleagues have often demonstrated a naiveté with regards to inviting trust from the people. The chief Minister and economic planner have preferred to silence those who complain or object to the flawed macroeconomic management of the country.

Subsequently, working towards fixing the plethora of issues which surfaced under the DLP’s watch has proven to be extremely difficult and sluggishly prolonged. The overly cautious and procrastinating Stuart-led Cabinet has operated largely for the sake of political preservation while the opposition – viewed as an alternative government – wasted time and opportunities in seeming disarray if not outright internal disunity. Mounting evidence indicates that the indecision and wavering are constant factors in the DLP’s public policy and governance architecture.

The daunting clouds of uncertainty are prevalent under the DLP’s beleaguered administration. Uncertainty is perversely institutionalised so that local and international entrepreneurs and investors are watching and listening with apprehension to the nation’s decision-makers. It does not help us at home to hear the dangerous statements wherein culpability and responsibility for the nation’s affairs have become foreign to local Ministers of government (i.e. do not blame me). Nor, does it help those wanting to invest capital in the Barbados economy. The lingering questions arising on the ‘ease of doing business’ are still around, when in practice, little or nothing is done to change the situation.

Within this context of governance, ministerial escapism creates policy confusion and, mass uncertainty prevails in policy arenas. The Barbados government operates with unfathomable ambiguity on almost every set of public policies and regulatory pronouncements. While some economic planning does exists, the outcomes of taciturn practices have left the country adrift from obtaining optimal performances. The macroeconomic directions, for example, which repeatedly spoke of stabilising Barbados’ badly faltered economy since 2008, have largely failed due to the apparent disconnect between the real data and the whimsical analyses offered by tainted officials.

The unseemliness of many public policy decisions is often exposed in the ministerial contradictions. On public policy, government ministers ebb ‘to and fro’ among themselves (e.g. Ministers Sinckler and Inniss or Sinckler and Estwick). Professor Emeritus Ramesh Ramsaran in 2012 gave a protracted view of a fundamental concern facing Barbados and the region. Professor Ramsaran asserted that:

“Public policy exerts a crucial influence on the creation and distribution of wealth. But public policy is not confined to the discipline of economics or the management of resources. It straddles a broad area which covers issues of a political, social and economic nature. It speaks to the integrity and efficacy of governance institutions, the functioning of administrative structures and the balance between social costs and social benefits. It not only encompasses the factors that influence the real and financial sectors, but all the institutional elements that affect the functioning and well-being of society. It defines national social and economic objectives, and also provides strategies, direction and the framework of incentives for governance in response to changes in the internal and external environment. But consistency, coherence and effectiveness are often lacking in formulation and implementation.”

Since 2010, and after each Budget presentation, Barbados’ Minister of Finance has had to repeatedly remove the smoke-screens and hyperbole from his ‘levying’ pronouncements which either amount to good or bad public policy. Sadly, the demand for good public policy and the necessary implementation of such policies are of seemingly secondary importance to an irresponsible DLP Cabinet. PM Stuart’s Cabinets post-David Thompson, have largely failed to inspire national confidence although they have been quick to draw on self-congratulatory messages – written and posted by self.

Mounting frustration within Barbados’ political economy is typical of this grave uncertainty that has become exposed in other aspects of daily living in Barbados. Workers across Barbados are facing increased taxation, depressed wages, the rising incidence of serious crime, and plummeting living standards. People perceive of a political class that is less interested in service provision and more inclined to influencing the acceptance of parsimonious public relations wherein only the bare minimum of information ever reaches the public.

One wonders who in government hears the cries for water from the dislocated people living in several parishes across Barbados. The lack of urgency being exhibited by key state agents is indicative of the drought of ideas causing paralysis in the country. Indeed, Barbados’ economic activities are currently being fuelled by the need for survival and the necessity to push back against the last few years of stagnation and degradation.

Intuitively, the DLP government with all the goodwill in the world, will continue to struggle once there is jaundiced or inadequate planning at the apex of political and economic leadership. The wheels of the Barbados economy with its once socialist character will remain off track with the possibility of an impending crash which could be fatal. The Barbados fiscal and debt challenges are stubbornly acute, although in recent months, it is being suggested that some modicum of recovery is evident. One must still exercise prudence and forcefully say to Chris, it’s the lasting uncertainty that is dangerous for Barbados.

(Dr. George C. Brathwaite is a part-time lecturer in Political Science at the UWI-Cave Hill Campus, a researcher and political consultant, and up until recently, he was editor of Caribbean Times (Antigua). Email: brathwaitegc@gmail.com )


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77 responses to “The George Brathwaite Column – Chris, It’s the Lasting uncertainty!”

  1. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences
  2. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2016/09/21/sell-them-2/

    Let me see the lying slaves in parliament explaining away this one.


  3. “Face it though George. YOU ARE NOT READY for the task of filling the political void that has been created in Barbados by the idiocy of the last two decades”

    No Bushie not at all. Like everywhere else mistakes would have been made over the last two decades but Barbados was a regarded at the highest levels regionally and internationally as a well managed economy and was the envy of our regional brethren. Now we have our counterparts in the region who normally looked to us for guidance lamenting the deplorable state into which Barbados has fallen in the last eight years.

  4. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2016/09/20/no-rubbish/

    Inniss complains consistently how difficult it is to do business in Barbados, yet when it’s documented internationally. ..they all complain….dont they have any useful work to do, like deliverying water to the people, the bus service and a long list of doing nothing,


  5. You know better than that balance.
    When a fellow finds out that he has high blood pressure and diabetes and will likely die within ten years …was the ‘mistakes’ made after the ailments were discovered? …or were there also made during the years of living large, eating shiite, and ‘punching above his weight’?

    In our case, we did multiple shiite leading up to the diagnosis and then compounded this with even higher levels of jobby after the medical reports….

    You just trying to make Bushie sin his damn soul…


  6. @WWC on Barbados Today 21 September

    Barbados is already like a dead body where the brain still thinks you are alive. There is no turnaround since the high budget deficit will stay forever thanks to the fact, that the government omits a reform of public sector. The high interest for public credits (10 %) and the failing foreign investments are a clear sign that Barbados has become a no-go-area for investments.

    What we will see on 30 November is a big festivity where the establishment is telling us that we are best, that independence is the very best, that education has made everybody very bright, that republicanism is best and so on. In the background a massive capital fly and lots of people on food stamps.

    In fact the public services already collapsed: no water anymore for certain parishes, rubbish collected once or twice a month, meals in schools and hospitals like animal food, neglected roads and schools. In fact: What do we get for paying taxes? NOTHING of any value.

  7. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    “In the background a massive capital fly and lots of people on food stamps.”

    Tron…if Barbados had real foodstamps….the people will have to settle for thin air.

  8. millertheannunaki Avatar

    @ Hants September 21, 2016 at 8:40 AM

    There is nothing new about Dr. Smith’s recommendations. What he is proposing should have been undertaken since 2012 when the fiscal cancer was first diagnosed and could have been treated in its early stage.

    This option of privatization has been available to the current inept administration which is always asking for alternative solutions whenever it has been criticized for its piss-poor fiscal management.

    One wonders what the BU ac consortium would say about the Doc’s recommendations. Or would they resort to their usual xenophobic rant about ‘ingrunt’ Jamaicans having the gall to tell the Bajan government what to do.

    One suspects the current DLP administration knows the Bajan bullet has to be bitten but is playing for time.

    What will trigger the execution of the divestment programme as outlined by Warren is something rather unpalatable to the stupid pride of the Bajans living in an airy-fairy financial world of flights of fancy.

    But we all know the giant step needed to return to the real world is something that will not happen under the DLP watch which will certainly lead to political hari-kari and the burial of that once great party. Why not leave it to the incoming administration in early 2017.

    Meanwhile they will continue to eat-up, drink-up and fete for days until the 50th Independence bacchanalian dance is over and the currency fuel of conspicuous consumption in the foreign reserves tank runs out.

    It’s just a matter of time, mon ami!


  9. Dr. Brathwaite

    We are not unpersuaded that a level of convergence was achieved yesterday

    But on the matter of dealing with the IMF – World Bank there is much room for progress

    The notion that Barbados should be still going cap-in-hand to these institutions of re-colonization is anathema to the new dispensation outlined.

    Social scientists, and this is your area, have long known that countries with relationships with the IMF-World Bank continue to be underdeveloped by them. The countries in sub-Sahara Africa, the Caribbean etc

    On the other hand countries, in Asia for example, without a history of relationships with the IMF-World Bank were able to make quantum developmental leaps.

    The question for us therefore is why would we in 2016 still have the IMF-World Bank at the centre of the political-economy discourses in Barbados.

    Are we brassbowls, or what? Is there any room for a realignment of your thinking?

  10. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2016/09/22/brexit-blow/

    Only a dummy for minister of tourism would believe Brexit could not affect the island.

    Their brains and mouths never make a connections.

  11. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Sue Springer is another jackass, misleading bajans one day with her lies, changing her tune the next day….you cannot believe a word any of them say….all of them are self-serving.


  12. A couple of posts on this thread have mentioned Dr Warren Smith of the Caribbean Development Bank, who has advised Barbados government to reduce its debt burden, possibly by selling some of its assets. The port at Bridgetown and the GAIA have been in the conversation. This has not made quite the splash on BU that I would have expected, but it is an idea the voters should keep in mind.


  13. @ Chad99999
    Anyone who takes advice from Jamaicans on fiscal policy deserves exactly what they will get.

    Did you know that we have been hiring Trinidadians and Guyanese in recent years to run the local sugar industry? It seems that the white Bajans in control (and Arnie Walters) could not find any whites to fill the “mis-management” positions …so they went out and recruited jokers from countries whose sugar industry had failed. (Obviously black bajans could not be considered for these positions…as Money Brain previously explained in relation to his father’s business having to be sold)

    Basic common sense should tell us that STRONG COMPETENT AND DECISIVE action should be taken to turn these entities into profitable operations. …but Instead, some Jamaican jackass advises us to sell them (to foreigners or local whites – that hate our black asses) who will then take the same strong actions against the black staff and the black customers — AND THEY WILL MAKE THE RESULTING PROFITS…just like EMERA /FLOW/SANDALS/BNB….

    If you come with this shiite line of argument Chad, ….Bushie will be taking away ALL your 9’s…. permanently….


  14. @Bushie

    But you got another White woman as Ms. Barbados

    We think this ‘beauty’ shiite is an imposition of the supremacist logic.

    If there are to be, at least let it speak to another acili.


  15. What else would you expect Pacha..?
    Our national values are al albino-centric…
    Our standards of beauty are albino-centric
    Our developmental aspirations are all albino-centric
    Our foods are albino-centric

    If it wasn’t her, it would be the black one who look most like her….

    LOL
    …the only reason the damn politicians are black is because the alternatives see it as beneath them to be ‘representing’ the brass bowls of Bim….

  16. Anonymouse - The Gazer Avatar
    Anonymouse – The Gazer

    When i first came to BU it looked as if we were carrying on a discussion that started over 30 years ago. Still seem like the same conversation….

  17. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Lol……the young girl Harris who is representing Barbados is said to be mixed race, looks like something in the middle eastern/Caucasian range…to me.

    Suffice it to say, the girl does not seem to hold any illusions that she will win, she claims she looks at it as an experiene she can take through her life… whatever that means.

    If the Ms Universe organizers in Barbados had any goddamn sense, they would know the tone of the pageant changed years ago from a cattle call/show, they should have done some research in the 9 years the island did not compete..they should do some research now, for next time.

    The females countries are sending to repesent them are their exceptional professionals…was Wendy Fitzwilliam from Trinidad not a law graduate when she won Ms Universe…they send their medical graduates etc..the most exceptional……..their specialists in various disciplines ..

    ……..the judges want oodles of education…..oodles of proven talent, musical or whatever. .. and particularly volunteer work that can make a difference in the country and the world…a really mixed bag.

    For the donkeys that would want to challenge me…I too am mixed race, so are my children, so are my grandchildren and I am sure 40 generations of my descendants going into the future will also be mixed race…….we live in the real world……so stuff it.

    Crusoe…I mean you

  18. millertheannunaki Avatar

    @ Well Well & Consequences September 22, 2016 at 1:18 PM
    “For the donkeys that would want to challenge me…I too am mixed race, so are my children, so are my grandchildren and I am sure 40 generations of my descendants going into the future will also be mixed race…….we live in the real world……so stuff it.”

    Being of mixed race, or to be more politically sophisticated, of mixed ancestry or heritage is something to be really proud about.

    Why not live in both genetic worlds? At least there is the big chance you would not be prone to those genetically-based diseases which tend to ‘plague’ those from the so-called pure side of the racial spectrum.

    Trust me I am a Vet, it’s better to be a Rottweiler crossed with a Doberman than to be a pure Rottweiler or Doberman in the tropical climes of in-breeding.

    But Nature does have her freaky shortcomings in other respects.
    Just look at what happens when a hobbyhorse of crass stupidity is crossed with a DLP ass called an ac donkey. The result is a pure stupidly stubborn mixed-up yard-fowl of the ac (asinine consortium) breed.

  19. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Lol…..Miller, that’s what they get from inbreeding. …ACs…Alvins…..Pedants.

    Mixing races has advantages…ya get to live in several different worlds and have a better understanding of the bullshit people do….to retain control…..

    I know ya noticed that these “pure bred” groups got MAJOR mental illness…lol


  20. Let de ole man dance here wid wunna for a likkle bit and lef out de hunkie, and steatopygia deficiencies of white girls over blacks or dugulas.

    We seem to be repeating a theme that, irrespective of the Fumble and Bumble team of Stuart and Stinkliar, circles, rather undulates, like a pendulum from DLP to BLP

    I was earlier “speaking” to the Gazer and barely skirted on this suggestion/tangent to thought.

    i will revisit it for your collective consideration

    It is obvious from the calibre of donkeys that we are be-saddled with every fire years that we have people with falsified national credentials.

    By national credentials i do not mean the normal certificates and legal degrees i mean the qualifications that are required for National Service and Sacrifice.

    Someting dat shows dat de people know what is required of them, for people and cuntry.

    I am of the misguided? opinion that the only way/basis upon which your donkey, or mine, or any aspiring politician, from any party, should be elected for parliament should be based on both of us, irrespective of personal academic achievements, having a appropriate read stellar “National Service Record”.

    The NSR, unlike dem mek up manifesto portfolios like this dat i copy from Michael Adrew Lashley DLP statement “…he brings to politics the knowledge, expertise and experience of a well-trained lawyer. He defends his clients with a passion that reveals great respect for people and for the law…” or that of Mia which reads “…At the community level, Ms. Mottley founded the annual LIME Pelican Semi-Pro Football Challenge in 2011, and is the patron of the Lynden Grove Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to community causes…” should have meat worth of our vote.

    I want wunna to go to the site http://www.caribbeanelections.com/knowledge/biography/country_list/bb_bio.asp if they decide to let wunna in now since de ole man has been tekking a look at dem materials in great detail heheheheheheheh and see that every one of thei profiles of existing and past politicians, in whom we vest such confidence to run our natioal affairs ARE TOTALLY DEVOID OF ANY SUBSTANCE!!

    Dont tek me word for it, LOOK FOR WUNNA SELVES

    We all dun know dat people going try to falsify their NSR, if we were to adopt that as a requirement for national sevice, but you know something David “you can hide and buy land “BUT YOU CANNOT HIDE AND WUK UM” read dat it is impossible to falsify what is pun de internet UNLESS WUNNA IS NORTH KOREA!!

  21. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/king-time-nationwide-boycotts-injustice-u-s-article-1.2802077

    This advice can also teach bajans how to boycott businesses.


  22. “A team of international consultants will evaluate the ICT infrastructure for the agriculture and fisheries sector and design an integrated system for knowledge management which must include a market information system, document management system and a farm management information system.”

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/86172/agriculture-fisheries-tech#sthash.dts93sN5.dpuf

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