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Submitted by David Comissiong, President,Clement Payne Chambers

ftc

CLEMENTย ย  PAYNEย ย  MOVEMENT

CLEMENTย ย  PAYNEย ย  CULTURALย ย  CENTRE

CRUMPTONย  STREET

BRIDGETOWN

BARBADOS

25 January 2017

Ms Sandra Sealy

Chief Executive Officer

Fair Trading Commission

Green Hill

St. Michael

Dear Madam

Re: Proposed Sale of the Barbados National Terminal Company Limited and its proposed merger with the SOL Group of companies

I write this “Open Letter” to you as a Citizen and taxpayer of Barbados, and also in my capacity as President of the Clement Payne Movement of Barbados.

Over the past fortnight I have been approached by many individual citizens and residents of Barbados, and โ€“ in a more organized manner โ€“ by members of the Barbados Integrity Movement (BIM), expressing great concern about the proposed sale of the Barbados National Terminal Company Ltd (BNTCL), and its proposed merger with the Kyffin Simpson-owned SOL Group of companies. (I would also like to note for theย  record that the BIM provided me with much valuable information about the proposed sale/merger.)

As you are aware, the statutory agency that you lead โ€“ the Fair Trading Commission โ€“ was established by the Government of Barbados in the year 2002, and was given a mandate to promote, maintain and encourage commercial competition in Barbados for the benefit of the Barbadian people. In addition, your agency was mandated to prohibit and prevent the restriction of competition and the abuse by large monopolistic enterprises of any dominant positions that they may acquire in any particular area of trade or commerce in our country.

It is also important to note that the other statutory agency with which we are concerned here โ€“ the Barbados National Terminal Company Ltd (BNTCL) โ€“ was established a mere four years earlier (in 1998) on the identical anti-monopoly principles of free and fair competition.

Indeed, the BNTCL was incorporated by the Government of the day following the closure of the Mobil Oil Refinery, and was designed to be a governmental corporation that would manage the storage and distribution of all gasoline, diesel, heavy fuel oil, kerosene, and aviation (jet) fuel imported into Barbados. And, as a governmental entity, BNTCL was required to relate to and service ALL of the private fuel and gasoline retail companies operating in Barbados on a basis of absolute fairness and equality.

Furthermore, the existence of the Government-owned BNTCL definitely benefitted the people of Barbados, in that the rate of return that BNTCL set for itself was a mere one-half of one percent, as against the previous rate of 12 per cent that Mobil charged when it ran the fuel storage facility! Thus, the state-owned BNTCL was not motivated by mere profit-making considerations, and instead set out to ensure that Barbadian consumers got the best prices possible for fuel products.

And so, over the past 18 years Barbados has consciously pursued a distinct state moderated anti-monopoly policy in the fuel distribution and retail sector of our economy, and this policy has worked well for our nation and people.

Now, however, there are signs that the “monster” ofย  private sector, profit driven, monopoly is rearing its ugly head in this sector of our economy.

At present, the fuel retail market in our country is controlled by a mere two companies โ€“ Rubis Caribbean which controls 30 per cent of the market, and the SOL Group which controls a massive 70 per cent of the market.

Now, this level of monopoly or oligopoly is extremely disturbing as it is: but, to make matters worse, we have recently learnt that the present Government โ€“ which was reelected to office in 2013 on a distinctly anti-privatisation platform โ€“ has entered into an agreement to sell the BNTCL (the company that owns and operates our nationโ€™s only oil terminal) to the Kyffin Simpson-owned SOL Group, and to thereby bring about a “Merger” between the SOL Group of companies and BNTCL.

It is against this background that the Clement Payne Movement now hereby makes an official request that the Fair Trading Commission carry out a comprehensive investigation into this proposed sale of BNTCL to the SOL Group, with a view to exploring all of the possible โ€œanti competitionโ€ and monopolistic implications of the said sale.

Indeed, we wish to remind the Fair Trading Commission that under Section 5 (I) (e) (III) of the Fair Competition Act, Chapter 326 C of the Laws of Barbados, the Fair Trading Commission possesses the power (and is bound by a statutory duty) to take such action as it considers necessary to prevent mergers that are detrimental to the principles that the Commission is mandated to uphold.

The Clement Payne Movement has paid very close attention to Section 20 of the Fair Competition Act, and we believe that this section of the Act provides your Commission with an excellent framework for analyzing the relevant facts and for ultimately determining that the incestuous sale of BNTCL to SOL must not be permitted to be consummated.

The relevant portions of Section 20 are as follows :-

(1)ย  From the commencement of this Act, all mergers by an enterprise that by itself controls not less than 40 percent of any market are prohibited unless permitted by the Commission in accordance with this section.

(Thus, in light of the fact that SOL already controls a massive 70 per cent of the market, a “prima facie” case already exists for prohibiting its merger with BNTCL ! Indeed, the Commission is obligated to begin the process with a preliminary decision in favour of prohibiting the merger โ€“ a decision that may only be reversed if there are really compelling reasons to do so!)

(2)ย  The Commission shall conduct an investigation into the proposed merger in order to satisfy itself that the proposed merger would not affect competition adversely.

(Mr Mauricio Nicholls, the CEO of Rubis Caribbean, has already publicly pointed out that competition will be adversely affected in that Rubisโ€™ business in Barbados is dependent on the operations of the countryโ€™s only fuel terminal, and that with the proposed merger the said fuel terminal will be exclusively in the hands of Rubisโ€™ sole competitor. One therefore cannot want any moreย  direct or compelling evidence of an adverse effect on competition than this!)

(3)ย  The Commission shall conduct an investigation into whether the proposed merger would be detrimental to consumers.

(SOL is a private sector company that operates on a profit maximizing principle, and that has to answer to its profit-demanding shareholders. No doubt, it will be driven by the desire to recoup the tens of millions of dollars it will have spent on acquiring BNTCL and by the additional desire to make a profit on its investment. Thus, only a purblind idiot would believe that such a sale and merger would not bring in its trainย  increases in retail fuel prices to the Barbadian consumer!)

(4)ย  The Commission shall conduct an investigation into whether the proposed merger will be detrimental to the economy.

(In the six years between 2011 and 2017 Rubis Caribbean purchased Chevron Texacoโ€™s Barbados operations; invested an additional US $50 Million in Barbados; increased its number of service stations from 12 to 17; and is in the process of constructing its Caribbean headquarters building in Barbados. But, Mr Mauricio Nicholls, Rubisโ€™ CEO, has publicly warned that if Rubis’ sole competitor โ€“ the SOL Group โ€“ is given the distinct and unassailable competitive advantage of owning the countryโ€™s only fuel terminal, that Rubis will have to reconsider remaining in Barbados. Therefore, the clear answer to the question is:- yes, the proposed merger would be detrimental to the Barbados economy!)

It should also be further noted that none of the factors specified in Section 21 of the Fair Competition Act for permitting a merger apply to this case. These factors are as follows:-

1.ย  A merger may be permitted if the parties establish that the merger is likely to bring gains in real efficiencies that are greater than the effects of the limitation on competition that are likely to result from the merger.

(It is difficult โ€“ if not impossible โ€“ to conceive of a more efficient arrangement than the one that exists now, with the state-owned entity fairly and even โ€“ handedly servicing all of the private sector retail companies, and at the same time looking out for the consumer by settling for a rate of return that is extremely modest and yet still sizeable enough to enable the enterprise to make a more than reasonable profit for the Government and people of Barbados. Thus, one CANNOT argue that the proposed merger will bring any gains in efficiencies, much less any gains that would be capable of off-setting the obvious ill effects of the limitation on competition that the merger would cause.)

2.ย  A merger may be permitted if one of the parties to the merger is faced with actual or imminent financial failure, and the merger represents the least anti-competitive alternative uses for the assets of the failing business.

(This is a total non-factor! Not only is SOL one of the richest, most powerful and most stable companies of Barbados, but no less an authority than Sir Frank Alleyne, Governmentโ€™s former Chief Economic Adviser, has publicly described BNTCL as the โ€œCrown Jewelโ€ of all Government enterprises! Thus, neither one of these profitable and stable companies requires this proposed merger in order to survive!)

It is against this background therefore that we now call upon the Fair Trading Commission to do its duty and to protect Barbados and Barbadians from the spectre of unhealthy monopoly and the unholy restriction or distortion of competition that this proposed sale and merger portends.

We also remind the Fair Trading Commission that it is an INDEPENDENT entity that is governed by its own Act of Parliament, and that it not beholden to any particular Minister of Government or partisan political Administration.

We trust that the professionalism and objectivity of the Fair Trading Commission will shine through all of its dealings with this matter, and that there will be no need for recourse to the ultimate Review role that the Supreme Court of Barbados always reserves for itself in matters of this nature, particularly where duties are imposed and procedures stipulated by an Act of Parliament.

We now look forward to hearing from the Fair Trading Commission as soon as possible.

Yours faithfully

DAVID A. COMISSIONG

PRESIDENT

 


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105 responses to “"OPEN LETTER" to the Fair Trading Commission on the Proposed Sale/Merger of BNTCL”


  1. If SOL as stated has 70% of the distribution market why is this sale even being contemplated? Why is there a feeling the political directorate expects the deal to be rubber stamped by Jeff et all?

  2. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @David
    The letter asserts that Sol has a 70% share of the distribution market, not 30%.


  3. Thanks Peter, a typo.

  4. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    I have never read the Fair Competition Act, but Mr. Comissiong makes a convincing case here. I fear that the reason for the sale is also under Section 21 of the Act: “A merger may be permitted if one of the parties to the merger is faced with actual or imminent financial failure.” In this case the party faced with imminent financial failure is the Barbados government. Without this US$100 million in the treasury soon there will probably need to be draconian restrictions on access to foreign exchange.

    I know that the Barbados government does not meet the criteria of this clause: it is a shareholder rather than a party to the merger.


  5. @Peter

    Based on the mouthings of government operatives there is no imminent financial crisis. Also, we must remember RUBIS has expressed an interest in the deal. There appears to be room to negotiate this matter without selling the whole hog to SOL.


  6. Some years ago, when there was a thriving 2nd hand car sale activity, the oligarchy that was located on Fairchild Street met with others of the afflicted sorry i meant to type affected (but i past the word now) met and decided that it was “buyout time”

    And so, one friday evening 45 minutes after the specific car dealership had closed, a certain man from the Customs and Excise Department slinked into the said dealership and got into a brand new ******* car and drove out

    And that was the end of the 2nd hand car industry.

    It is similarly purported that, when SLIME and SLOW and the other entity wanted to continue raping the populace of Barbados by (a) charging the caller AND THE EFFING RECIPIENT of cellular for phone calls (b) administering an accounting system which continues to teif minutes from users of phones & THE FTC still ent got no way AND JES IS NOT INTERESTED in double checking if this is true.

    NOw it is purported dat all of de staff up deah does get Samsung phones and pay nothing as their monthly bill comes due but the bowl of pottage that the FTC (IS PURPORTED TO) drink from with its apertif of Samsung S7’s cannot obtain under the noble Jeff Cumberbatch.

    In the USofA FTC members/staff having charge accounts at the same SOL outlets would be construed a conflict of interest but how would one expect Jeff to know if, hypothetically speaking, Sandra and She husband got charge accounts deah.

    In fact, barring someone giving verbal assurances that their S7 or their gas DOES NOT COME FROM or is a bribe for soft enablements THERE IS PRACTICALLY NO WAY FOR Jeff to know if a feller getting kick backs.

    Always remember that Frank King, the man of honour that he was, and still is, is purported to have resigned when he is said to have encountered similar “pottage bowls” when Minister Ronald Toppin was in power.

    Purport verb “appear or claim to be or do something, especially falsely; profess. an in “she is not the person she purports to be” synonyms: claim to be, profess to be, pretend to be;

  7. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Need anymore be said? Thank You PLT
    “In this case the party faced with imminent financial failure is the Barbados government. Without this US$100 million in the treasury soon there will probably need to be draconian restrictions on access to foreign exchange.”

    The joke is, Mr DC writes as though Rubis is a charity? I cannot believe given the movement in bulk oil prices versus the price at the pump, that the BNTCL was only making those mark-ups? What were they doing….passing the product through another entity first? And how would those minimal mark-ups make it a jewel in anybody’s crown?


  8. Connect the dots.

    http://solpetroleum.com/guyana


  9. THERE WILL BE no devaluation of the Barbados dollar! – See more at: http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/92842/pm-devaluation-barbados-dollar#sthash.teGrqvCs.dpuf


  10. Since many of our โ€œindigenousโ€ companies are foreign owned, I PERSONALLY do not have a problem with government selling BNTOC to the SOL, a company owned by a Barbadian.

    The fate of Barbadians, their jobs, homes, businesses, savings, insurance coverage, etc, lay predominately in the hands of foreignersโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ. Trinidadians in particular.

    Barbados Shipping & Trading (BS&T) is now owned by Trinidadian Massey Group of Companies and was rebranded as Massey, thereby removing BS&T forever from our landscape.

    Barbados Holdings Limited (BHL), which produces our Pine Hill Dairy milk and award winning Banks beer, is now owned by the Brazilian company AmBev.

    Barbados National Bank is owned by Trinidadian Republic Bank and was rebranded to reflect its ownership, removing โ€œBarbadosโ€ from its name.

    Barbados Light & Power Co. Ltd., is now owned by the Canadian company Emera.

    The Trinidadian owned Ansa McAl Group of Companies own Stokes & Bynoe and Brydens Stationery.

    90% of the stalls illegally constructed in the old Fairchild Market compound are owned by Guyanese & Jamaicans, while at least 60% of the stalls located in front the Fairchild Street Bus Terminal are operated by Guyanese.

    Majority of the vendors in Spry Street are Jamaicans.

    Why should there be concern as to why government did not sell the oil company to the FRENCH based international private limited company, RUBIS?

  11. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Artaxerxes,

    Do you think that seminal statement of Barbados for Bajans which you just announced resounds with Sandra Sealy of the FTC, or Humpty Dumpty of the Immigration Department or Downlowe and the Cahill scam or Alleyne Arthur as he sold out the Bank and the effing list goes on and on on both sides?

    Each one of those illegals that you cited in those various venues has paid Humpty Dumpty $800 for the 3 month extension that exceeds the 6 month maximum for the last 5 years!!!

    Why should we get vex bout trunks 2000 mile wall when right here our people jes selling out for thedown payment for the apartment buildings?

    When trunk started talking bout mek king America Great again the message was and is, let us get rid of the foreigners.

    And you dun see that he won.

    Unfortunately In addition to the sellouts like Humpty Dumpty and Alleyne Arthur tell me how many Bajans give a flying bag of badword?

    We are doomed


  12. The Barbados economy is now officially – deflation – why is this not talked about among professional economists?


  13. @Hal

    This is a good point. In the traditional media we are subjected to the same two or three talking heads. If you peruse the UWI, Cave Hill website there are several economists with all their credentials who are happy to ‘lecture’ students unlike the Jeffs of this world.


  14. Now that the PM has signaled that he will approve the Hyatt hotel project will we see Comissiong filing the injunction as promised?


  15. David,
    What we have a new generation of economists being taught by an older generation from the same old lecture notes.
    In effect the same old same old. Our media executives are out of their league.

  16. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Art….whenever Simpson is through with the oil company, if he is alive, if not his children and grands if they do not keep it, will sell to a foreign entity for 5 times what they paid government for it, it will never be locally owned after that….

    …… do you see any of these 2 clown governments raising Barbados to a financial level that they can repurchase an entity for half billion dollars or more….have they ever done it in 50 years, they only know how to sell state assets, the government ministers of either party do not know how to purchase appreciating assets to benefit the majority population and never have….with theur track recirds, they never will..

  17. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Given how much Barbados imports, and the persistent issues with productivity over the years, it would have to be supply side deflation? Hoarding money?

    Doesn’t the GoB, and for years, set the retail price of petroleum products? The value in the distribution (BNTCL) is the monopoly status. Once privatized, what is to stop Rubis from opening their own distribution network? The Rubis squeeze is when their selling price is dictated, and their input cost is controlled by a competitor.

    Seems SOL is paying a lot, unless it comes with certain guarantees on distribution rights?


  18. We have to eyeball the terms of the agreement.The reporting suggest the ministry of commerce will continue to set the price points for the petroleum products. The agreement may disallow transfer of the entity to foreign hands. We need to see the agreement.

  19. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    What “I think” Hants was suggesting….connect the dots….is because of SOL’s buying power, they own retail distribution centres in many places (and I do not know the distribution set up in J’ca, Guyana etc) but their profit may come from being able to buy cheaper than the GoB. Given such products have a connection between volume/price, this is highly likely.

    For the thrust of DC’s argument to be valid, prices would have to rise, otherwise the consumer is paying no more and not disadvantaged. The profit he so detests is coming from economies of scale, And prices cannot rise if they are controlled by GoB.


  20. The issue for Barbados is to ensure we ringfence our local market. By any measure the concentration of interest by SOL in the local market is excessive.


  21. All that can be avoided by establishing a prices and income commission.


  22. Hal Austin, perhaps your comment re: โ€œWhat we have a new generation of economists being taught by an older generation from the same old lecture notes,โ€ is NOT confined to the Caribbean, but applicable to ALL world-wide universities.

    @ David

    Are you suggesting UWI lecturers should write newspaper columns similarly to Dr. Tennyson Joseph and Jeff Cumberbatch?

    And while perusing UWIโ€™s website, did you read, for example, any research items, technical reports or articles written by Dr. Philmore Allyene, Dr. Dwayne Devonish, Dr. Clyde Mascoll or the late Prof. Roland Craigwell?

    Have you read โ€œForeign exchange reserves – how much is enough?โ€ written by former Central Bank Governor, Dr Marion Williams?

    The material is there for all to read, but rather than search for it, you would prefer, in the absence of the necessary information, choose to be overly critical of UWI.

    The problem with us is, when Dr. Robinson speaks on economic issues he is deemed to have spoken from a DLP perspective and Dr. Mascollโ€™s comments on economic issues are interpreted as him presenting a political opinion from a BLP perspective.

    Jeremy Stephen also comments on economic issues in Barbados and uses the traditional media and the call-in-programs to โ€œspreadโ€ his message. When he first became president of the Barbados Economic Society, Maureen Holder of CBCโ€™s โ€œTalk ya Talkโ€ and a few pro DLP callers to that program held Stephen in high esteem.

    Now Stephen has been commenting about the true state of the Barbados economy, he can no longer hold audience with Holder at CBC and he is now labeled a supporter of the BLP. Chris Sinckler uses parliament to assassinate the manโ€™s character and as recent as Tuesday this week, he once again made disparaging remarks about Stephen.

    Yuh just canโ€™t win wid wunnuh.

  23. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    The counter argument is BNTCL has been around for many years, and other retailers could have entered the market, guaranteed the same buying price as SOL and Rubis?

    Today, a major component of a “gas station” are other items. Why we see in other places, retailers commonly associated with small convenience type stores getting involved in gasoline retailing. It is not a major investment in comparison to some others (manufacturing).


  24. @Artax

    You are saying the sum effort of the majority of our academics is to deposit their research papers in the public place?

  25. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    What is amazing to me is that these jackasses, having acknowledged that their ‘no-privatisation’ lies were nothing more than election-podium fantasy, didn’t start by getting rid of the money-pit organisations like CBC, NCC, NHC, MTW which are sinking us.

    This is nothing more than a desperate measure to repay Kyfin’s decades of DLP favours.

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


  26. David
    I think he’s saying that we are lazy. Rather than search and read for ourselves, we want to be spoon fed. Yet when we are fed, the feeders are considered political. We are however willing to be spoon fed garbage from the politically non-aligned, sorry “BDLP” non-aligned. #shamedthompsonsupporterswsitingongodot

  27. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    NorthernObserver January 26, 2017 at 7:56 AM #
    The counter argument is BNTCL has been around for many years, and other retailers could have entered the market, guaranteed the same buying price as SOL and Rubis?

    Today, a major component of a โ€œgas stationโ€ are other items. Why we see in other places, retailers commonly associated with small convenience type stores getting involved in gasoline retailing. It is not a major investment in comparison to some others (manufacturing).

    The planning process for new service stations borders on the impossible, even after a decade of effort and expense. The process alone requires a BDS$300,000 investment, nothing to do with land and building.

    Barbados is not a business-friendly place, that is the major impediment to fair competition which has gotten much worse under this DLP gov’t who have no comprehension about business facilitation.

  28. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @Frustrated
    Would you buy the CBC or the MTW etc? They need $$$, and will sell that which they can find buyers for, and where they can show value for money. The other which might attract attention is the GAIA, but we know that is a labour relations nightmare for any buyer.


  29. Enuff January 26, 2017 at 8:13 AM #

    โ€œDavid: I think heโ€™s saying that we are lazy. Rather than search and read for ourselves, we want to be spoon fed. Yet when we are fed, the feeders are considered political. We are however willing to be spoon fed garbage from the politically non-aligned, sorry โ€œBDLPโ€ non-aligned.โ€

    @ Enuff

    EXACTLY!!!!!!

    However, Iโ€™m sorry that I was not as concise with my comments as you were.

  30. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @Frustrated
    “The process alone requires a BDS$300,000 investment”, if true that is ridiculous. These are cookie cutter buildings and storage, even if you include a fluid change facility.

  31. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ NorthernObserverJanuary 26, 2017 at 7:30 AM
    โ€œThe profit he so detests is coming from economies of scale, And prices cannot rise if they are controlled by GoB.โ€

    Excellent observation!

    What you are implying here is that the death knell now โ€˜tollsโ€™ for the parent company BNOC. The BNTCL is the cash cow of that State-owned commercial entity.

    In the absence of this cow which was milked (until its udders were at times sore) to facilitate the government ‘s emergency cash flow requirements we cannot see it surviving unless subsidized by taxpayers.

    Who would want to buy its crude other than Emera via a most convoluted transportation, refining and trading arrangement?

    Would Emera (BL&P) be now given the right to import and store its own fuel oil and diesel requirements instead on total dependence on SOL?

    If the government does not see the necessity to directly control the importation, storage and distribution of these finished petroleum products why is it so keen to keep control over prices? Shouldnโ€™t this be left to market forces within a regulatory framework under the ambit of the FTC?

    Why do taxpayers have to be saddled with the cost of a โ€˜separateโ€™ Cabinet minister to perform a non-existent function and to exercise ghost responsibilities for energy other than that for policy formulation for the developing alternative energy sector?


  32. Artax,
    No. It does not apply all over the world.


  33. @enuff

    And if the academics realise there is a dearth of financial acumen in the media and wider population read gap how should they respond? Continue to do what academics in Barbados do? Who is responsible for finding ways to educate the public? Not those with the knowledge?

  34. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    NorthernObserver January 26, 2017 at 8:19 AM #
    @Frustrated
    Would you buy the CBC or the MTW etc? They need $$$, and will sell that which they can find buyers for, and where they can show value for money. The other which might attract attention is the GAIA, but we know that is a labour relations nightmare for any buyer.

    I’m no Kyfin business magnate, but let’s say that we offered CBC, Kensington Oval, Gymnasium etc. to qualified applicants around the world for BDS1.00 per year on a 25 year lease with no Sandals-like tax concessions except on facility-improvement imports.

    Let’s say some entertainment/sport entrepreneurs from around the world, who may be short on cash but long on ideas and effort, took us up on our offer after meeting qualifications and conditions.

    In one swell foop the gov’t of BDS has saved 50 million dollars per year in expenditure and embraced new thinking and benefited nationally by new investment. We have also turned tax-spenders into tax-payers.

    Or, we can continue doing what we are doing until no-one will cover our staggering losses any longer and we become Greece.

  35. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ HantsJanuary 25, 2017 at 10:28 PM
    โ€œTHERE WILL BE no devaluation of the Barbados dollar!โ€

    If you swallow that you could as well believe your mother is your grandfather’s sister.

    Weren’t similar cast-iron assurances given to the students about to enter the UWI?

    Weren’t similar commitments made to the thousands of public sector workers about the security of their employment just prior to the last elections?

    Didn’t poor OSA lose his head on the electoral guillotine for proposing Privatization as a possible solution to the countryโ€™s growing debt problem which is now about the drown the taxpayers in a perpetual quagmire of fiscal servitude.

    This administration speaks with a forked tongue in true serpentine fashion when it comes to Privatization.
    The boss man dismisses this path as a viable way to debt reduction and fiscal discipline. Others in his cabinet (especially his MoF and his bugbear the Don of motor-mouths) sing a different tune in public.

    Didnโ€™t the Guv of the CB raise the warning flag about the highly probable event involving a need to adjust the peg which ties the local currency to the US$?

    But what can one expect from a captain of a sinking ship? Didnโ€™t the captain of the Titanic tell the passengers and crew: โ€˜Donโ€™t panic, help is on its wayโ€™. Here comes the SOS IMF!

    They say a promise is a comfort to a fool. But as the elections season raises its silly head of arrival the fools of the Bush Tea Bajan brass-bowl variety are gathering in balls like sardines ready to greet the bottlenose dolphins.


  36. If we accept what retired professor Michael Howard is quoted as saying in today’s Nation i.e. the government polcies have failed and it was more concerned with political fallout, it is hard to see how the same government will be able to exercise the required discipline in an election year.


  37. Miller

    It is economic illiteracy. There is internal devaluation – the economy is now in deflation – caused by the current account deficit, and there is devaluation against the Greenback, which is technical.
    The old lady in Boscobel could not care less about which it is. All knows is that a pound of flour now costs more than last week.
    .

  38. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hal AustinJanuary 26, 2017 at 8:50 AM

    You are frequently promoting the argument that maintaining foreign reserves at a conservatively perceived โ€˜healthyโ€™ level is old school economics which still determines, according to your perception, inappropriate monetary and fiscal management tools.

    You have not yet convinced us that your avant-garde approach is the economic salvation and the โ€˜rightโ€™ path to further development of Barbados.

    We cannot see how your proposal of floating the Bajan dollar against a basket of โ€˜reputableโ€™ currencies could work unless there is a reliably firm foundation of foreign reserves denominated in some major international currency.

    You must ask yourself why does Singapore carry over US$ 251,364,000 in its forex savings kitty?

    Maybe the Singapore dollar can replace the US$ in your basket of floating currencies.


  39. Miller.
    I am tired of explaining myself. I did not retire to run an online school. What I have been saying is that if we played the currency futures markets in a rolling three-monthly basis, we could meet the requirements of the central bank/finance ministry, while having access to the Bds$600m we have in foreign reserves warehousing. Futures contracts do not tie up the cash.
    In all the central bank’s revelation we are never told what of the reserves are liquid and what are easy access investments.
    I am are that we do not have local people expertise in derivative trading, but that can be bought in.
    Finally, foreign reserves are kept for a number of reasons, sudden and unexpected increases in imports, outflow f capital, or most important of all, a shock event, what actuaries call a once in a 200 year event.
    Our last shock was on Sept 22, 1955. None of these justify the panic about the level of foreign serves. It is mass hysteria, brainwashing, consensus thinking, it is the under-use of our money.
    Since the earl1980s when derivatives created, the market is now valued at about US$800trn, and fast approaching a quadrillion.
    Financial engineering is now highly technical and calls fore the brightest of the brightest in mathematics. Far above my imagination.
    We need an Advanced School of Finance were the skills will taught, rather than spending more on low-grade lawyers


  40. @Hal

    Our “shock” is rampant consumption of things foreign by citizens.


  41. David,
    That is the Bajan disease, living above your means..


  42. David Commsiong is a public nuisance. He’s incapable of creating a single job in the economy but uses legal tricks to block jobs for poor black people. BU tolerates Commisiong’s disgusting pup. BU supports the plan of the public nuisance for an injunction to block for the umpteenth time a project of benefit to Barbados and poor unemployed blacks. We place the judiciary on notice to throw Commisiong’s rubbish into the garbage bin from day one. The time has come to end the rot . Sores that fester on the public body must be eradicated or the body will die. Progress cant be halted by one jackass. Commisiong is a public nuisance devoid of shame.


  43. Question how is it that SOL a local company can pay in US $?


  44. The people at the FTC, all of them, are there to serve the corporatists.

    And it doesn’t matter how much bureaucratic verbiage they rap their functions in

    The results will always be the same.

    The FTC is only a microcosm of a wider societal norm.

    The system talks about competition but has always moved towards monopoly

    And Kiffin Simpson knows this well

    That it is merely a matter of time before he has a complete monopoly of this industry

    The political elites, on both sides, will help him as well

    But they will never do for cooperatives what they are so willing to do for the local White corporate elites.

    Barbados is a willing slave society, still.


  45. Notions of ‘free’ or ‘fair’ trade were always misnomers, double speak.

    Trade or markets are never free.

    Are never fair

    Trade and markets were always fought for, protected, enforced.

    Like in the USA, capitalism uses the reverse of its intentions to mislead the stupid.

    So anything that says ‘fair’ really means unfair.

    And this schema covers all areas.


  46. All of our problems have been solved for the next 18 months during which time,
    0.5B coming in,
    projects wyndham,hyatt,paradise to start,
    14000 jobs created and just by happenstance elections will be called.

    Now you all will understand the greatness of this govt and its quiet leader,who will win the next election hands down and EWB correct that Bimmers have short memmories.

    So all prospective candidates do not waste your deposit as the economy batting like Sobers as a former PM would have said.


  47. David

    Why would you let somebody tell you that Bajans are uniquely spendthrift.

    People all over the world are doing this, as norm.

    The USA, which is supposed to be the leading post-industrial state has over 230 trillion dollars in debt, all told.

    But a notional income of 20 trillion.

    People are still trying to use their ‘homes’ as bank accounts, credit card debt, etc – all on the ris

    There is little difference between how Barbados government finances are and those of the people.

    We can then say that correlation is not causation, or could we?


  48. @Pacha

    You dare to compare Barbados to the country that has the world’s reserve currently?

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