Submitted by William Skinner

As the clock ticks, those of us who refuse to be drawn into the web of deception that is now the main engine driving the ambitions of the Barbados Labour Party and the Democratic Labour Party, can do nothing more than rely on a dwindling number of independent thinkers to save our country.

Fifty years of non-creativity, excessive dillydallying and two parties that are now totally lost, have brought us to the brink of what some have now gleefully determined as doom. The armchair economists are regurgitating figures with almost gay abandon; the trade unionists want increases that we cannot afford and unfortunately, the new third parties seem to be struggling with producing exciting alternative policies to capture the imagination of a populace that is looking for leadership in all the wrong places.

A Prime Minister who once hijacked the salaries of public servants has asked us with a straight face: How did we get back here? Well Sir, we never left here because we refused to have a progressive and enlightened economic plan for the country. So, you are as guilty as all those who went before you and came after you.

Throughout the years, we have been told about: the Singapore model; a service economy; we were to be leaders in offshore business; manufacturing was to be revitalized; the sugar industry was to be brought into the twenty first century; flyovers were to be used to reduce and improve traffic; the public service was to be restructured and I can perhaps write another forty or more promises and policies that were never implemented, were completely botched or simply were dead on arrival.

Somewhere along the way we could amass so much debt that a third of this year’s estimates will now go to debt servicing. Imagine that over a billion dollars including 30 million per year on a new jail. In the meantime the promised revitalization of Bridgetown is now another pipe dream; we have allotted 300 million to pay policyholders because we allowed an insurance company to operate without placing the necessary funds to protect policyholders in the treasury; as a result of political skulduggery , we paid a contractor about ten times more rather than settle as was advised by mediation; somehow we found millions to spend on a cricket field to watch the West Indies “get beat” or the occasional concert by Rihanna.

It will therefore pain any sincere citizen to even be in the same room as the BLPDLP supporters because they are either blind to the mammoth collective economic ruin that these two parties have visited upon the country or they have imbibed some mind-altering portion while at George and Roebuck Streets.

The answer to all this mismanagement and political chicanery is to be elated because some Indians and whites decided to “march in disgust”. Somebody needs to tell me, what is the suffering the whites and Indians are experiencing, when in fact everything that the Black political class has done and not done has redounded to the economic benefit of these two groups. These days are very funny nights indeed.

We need to put public servants on a four-day week to reduce the wage bill. If this is not done we would never get out of this hole. In the mean time begin a restructuring program to reduce the public service. Utilize the Polytechnic, UWI and the community college as sophisticated vocational training centers to make people employable within a year; embark on a road and highway infrastructure plan, included should me a mammoth relocation of houses and buildings to have more lanes and wider roads. Such a program should cost about one billion dollars over fifteen years and guarantee thousands of jobs. Any Minister of Finance should level with the country and forget pie in the sky economic theories and seek to use technology to ensure that all citizens pay their fair share of taxes. Over the next ten years at least 200 million must be spent to have a modern fishing industry that can effectively reduce the food bill and lead to healthier diets. Another 200 million should be spent on small farming with modern business concepts. Such expenditure would rapidly off set unemployment, in the public service, caused by the restructuring job losses. The Ministry of Education should be radically reformed and the Human Resources Department should be guiding educational policy to ensure that education is directly for ensuring job opportunities. This will allow the armchair economists and party hacks to go to the beach and stop talking crap! As the elders say: they need a good bush bath.

Where will the money come from? Cutting out wastage; proper road network and public transportation to improve productivity; investing in technology to ensure faster and more accurate service providers; educating future citizens in areas such as robotics and coding; eliminating praedial larceny and the immediate appointment of a Contractor General with the powers to prosecute white collar criminals. The thousands of jobs created will reinvigorate the economy and thereby generate wealth.

69 responses to “Solutions for Barbados – Put Public Servants on Four Day Week and Cut Salaries…”


  1. David April 7, 2017 at 1:54 PM #

    “Do you remember when David Estwick recommended a public sector wage freeze in 2009 how the late David Thompson responded?”

    @ David

    2009 was the appropriate time to have introduced a wage/salary freeze, restructure the civil service, invest in technology to speed up business development processes and reduce the delays in business facilitation.

    In 2017, why should an individual have to wait 3 weeks to get a birth certificate or or a passport?

    The government could have reduced the high costs associated with rent, by establishing as department responsible for refurbishing and subsequent maintenance of all government property. This could be extended to vehicles as well.

  2. CUP Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZ Avatar
    CUP Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZ

    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger April 7, 2017 at 10:21 AM #

    98% of the lawyers in Barbados are mediocre, I have seen some of them perform in court and it was painful and horrifying…I wondered, though knowing, which law school would pass them.@@@

    Many of these new lawyers are set up to fail so that the ones with Sir and QC can prevail ,Its a set up , i have seen it over the years injust how the law book are written , Even the law dictionary are smaller with less word meaning and cases sited, the books for the 30s 40 and 50s are different after BROWN vs THE BOARD OF ED. the informantion was removed and reduced as black children entered the school,Known a dumbing down, its all busines not justice or fairness based on law, or even rule of law in BARBADOS,


  3. rae days social contract

  4. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Some interesting ideas….it is never too late.

    @FB
    “I wonder why Massy does not hold this govts feet to the fire…they do have the power to do it.?”

    All the BIG co’s have diversified themselves such that interests in Bim are “just another location”. They are not going to insert themselves politically in a public way. In NONE of them is Bim by itself their major market.

    All efforts towards ‘feeding ourselves’ is a step forward. While new infrastructure is never bad, maintaining what we have, and bringing it up to snuff is a first step. Face it, we have “too many cars pun de road” (my title for next years Crop Ovah song). While public expenditure must be addressed, I suspect that NGO expenditure is a huge savings opportunity beyond the civil service.

    The ‘divide’ between business and government has widened substantially over the past years. This needs to be narrowed. It is less about policy, than about attitude. And I will add, the attitude of a few.

    And across the board, the lifestyle of Barbadians has exceeded sustainability. Not just the public expenditures, but also private expenditures. And they become tied.


  5. @Hal

    This is why many here have been making the point that promoting ideas is not the challenge, it is for all stakeholders to anchor on consensus first. For example the NUPW is asking for a wage hike AND appointment of temporary officers. Couple the ask by the NUPW with the fact Akanni and co were reelected with a large majority. You get the point? There is a leadership vacuum in the country.


  6. David,

    You may not believe it, but the leadership of the NUPW is more crazy than the Stuart-led government; they want a 23 per cent wage hike and more jobs. Have they been drinking?
    The members voted for them because they are scared of losing their jobs. What is more, not a critical article appears about them in the media.,


  7. @Hal

    Do not be naive. The NUPW does not want 23% increase. They have pitched at 23% to compare with the government pitch at 0%. It is just a negotiating ploy. Added to which the IR climate is health at this time. If the government was sensible to manage the relationship with the social partnership it would have gone a long way to building consensus with stakeholders at a time when difficult decisions have to be made.


  8. We see the big head, big brain (space) people commending this missive from Solutions.

    We still think it is all shiiiite.

    Just tinkering with the furniture on the Titanic

    This is the kind of idea that would reliably come from the inheritors of the neo-liberals, Richie Haynes acolytes

    The vicious, backward conservatism of Barbados, as a culture, will never accept that we are in unchartered territory and that any ideas we have known of, or which have been forwarded for the last 30 years are totally useless.

    If Solutions Barbados can do no more than has been suggested previously, we must conclude that they cannot be serious.

    We are not at all impressed!


  9. @Pacha

    This ‘missive’ is from William.


  10. David,

    Really? And there I was thinking that they really wanted a 23 per cent rise. So if government negotiators know this is just a ploy, then when does the real negotiation begin? In a so-called nil inflation economy, one with a massive debt-to-GDP ratio, with a current account imbalance that matches Greece, then the 23000 members of the NUPW seem to have a winning hand….or do they?
    In fact, if Stuart was not such a coward he would take the nuclear option: no pay rise, sack McDowall, and the unions would walk out on strike. High unemployment, and even higher consumer debt, all the government has to do is put the police on the street and prepare to protect the peace.
    Put judges and magistrates in protected hotels and with the banks and other lenders demanding payment it will be a fight to the end. Who will win?
    Have you ever heard of the National Union of Seamen and their 1964 strike, Reds under the Bed? Or Arthur Scargill and his 1982 miners’ strike; or the air controllers against Reagan? I can go on.
    Tough leadership to pulverise these silly school kids such as Mary Redman and the good Rev Morris playing at politics. It is one thing talking, but something else taking tough action. Then there is the alternative of putting union leaders in protective custody. The members will abandon them.


  11. Good Heavens, @Hal. So glad you never got interested in elective politics on any of those regular visits to the island.

    You cite 1960’s & 80s era strikes which were of a totally different time and context; an Air Traffic strike where a President was able to use ‘special’ directives to break the back of that matter and conflate those to current day Bim and a civil servant walkout that would bring the country to a crippling standstill.

    Geezus. Is that ‘tough leadership’ or utter foolhardy brinkmanship!

    Even if Stuart did ‘win’ some aspect of the initial brouhaha he and party would lose badly politically.


  12. @ Angela Skeete

    Barbados is weight down, and every voter can help very soon Shed weight, put all DLP MP out of Parliament,No pension for this bunch of DLP Ministers/MP for the next 10 years.The new Government must shed weight, so No Parliamentary Ministers,No deputy PS in Ministries

  13. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    Too many of our people have an attitude and an air of entitlement. Our expectations are running way ahead of our reality. We want to enjoy the same quality of life like those in first world country without the economic clout. We have a discriminate taste for all things foreign. This model is upside down, something must give .

    Who do we expect to support or bail-out our foreign lifstyle when we hardly earn enough cover the basic? We have too many importers vs exporters. Our imports are over twice our exports. The economy needs a rebalance. We don’t need any more businesses running down the same babados dollar.


  14. After a second reading of William´s article, I have to admit the article contains great ideas. However, you cannot wash out the attitude of the plantation within two or three generations. The madness and tragedy of the Deep South will go on for generations in Barbados. The masses and their representatives in the Talking Assembly are not ready for self-governance.


  15. … Example: Give a Barbadian government 1 billion as a gift. They spend it for parties, for holiday, villas and new cars for their cronies. A country with 18 ministries and 60 state agencies for a few people. After one year, all the money is gone. They blame postcolonial trauma and bad weather. Give the same amount to Switzerland. They drill a new tunnel through the alps to improve traffic, pump it into innovative sectors of state universities and move the rest into a trust. A country with eight ministries and 90 state agencies for 8.4 million people.


  16. @ Tron
    Top drawer observations boss….

  17. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    When will contributors to this blog realise that bim does not lack for ideas or studies,just check each ministry of govt and see the amount paper submitted by a myriad of consultants over decades which have never been implemented………the question is why?

    Tron and Bernard have made the same point differently from time to time…..it takes the natural social evolution for the masses to arrive at a suitable way forward……I would add or a cataclysmic occurence e.g. Trump.

  18. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Troñ….ya oñ track…..huñdreds of taxpayers millions spent òñ çoñsultants and idèàs òver the ďèçàďes as Vìñçèñt said, but when the sĺavès iñ parliament keep getting calls from their local bribemasters Cow, Bizzy et al, all those fiñè çoñsultants ideas fly away….75 years more to wash away that slave miñd.


  19. In respect of the government and the unions negotiations,both EWB and JMGM resorted to legislating salaries and wages when the twain fail to agree.

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