Submitted by William Skinner

Our private sector has never been the engine of growth. It has never indicated any earnest desire to accept such a role. Since independence, it would be very difficult, to identify, a period where our private sector, both traditional and current, drove the growth engine.

Ever since the decline of the plantocracy, successive governments, have been the true engineers of economic development. A glaring example of the private sector’s deviancy was the housing sector boom of the post-independence period, when the traditional private sector refused, to engage in any broad-based effort, in public housing for lower income groups.

Agriculture, tourism, manufacturing and to some degree construction, were systematically underperforming because the sector, was mainly concerned with maintaining low wages and engaging in protracted battles with the powerful Barbados Workers Union (BWU). It can be safely argued that the sector was also very reluctant to employ and or promote, the new generation of university graduates, who could have brought a new thinking to the sector. This colonialist attitude resulted in very talented blacks being denied prominence in the board rooms.

The strident criticism of the last government’s generous concessions to the Sandals group, were fuelled by the same private sector, that could not develop a product such as Sandals. Successive governments have bent over backwards to please the pathetic assortment of whiners, within our private sector, who act as if they have never made a penny in profit and apparently believe that the public must underwrite their investments.

Our corporate power houses were interested in nothing more than retail operations and enjoyed the luxury of exploiting consumers, when natural disasters such as hurricanes occurred, and they could increase the prices of basic items such as sardines, bread and milk! That was the extent of their thinking and approach to national economic development.

Our prime industry tourism fell victim to a lethargic and incompetent private sector, that refused to invest heavily in marketing the country and left the demanding work to successive governments, that in turn populated overseas agencies with party sycophants, who knew little or nothing about promoting the product. There was no symbiosis between agriculture and the tourism industry. This meant that a considerable portion of the foreign exchange earned usually found its way out of the country, to maintain the industry.

This unpatriotic sector executed its final betrayal, when it sold one of our most powerful corporate entities, Barbados Shipping and Trading (BST) to foreign interests. BST was a powerful entity that acted as its own government. At one time it managed several estates and allowed them to become run down, rather than invest in the agro-industry. The true history of this organization will reveal it was steeped in unpatriotic corporate practices and rather than innovate and move toward new investments, that would have utilized emerging technological tools, it opted to engage in the greatest act of corporate cowardice by selling out.

As the new government rides on tremendous goodwill, it would do well to read the riot act to our private sector and inform it, that the same way it cannot be business as usual for the civil servants and the citizens, as we go through tough economic times, it cannot be the same for the private sector. It is time that it be told in no uncertain terms to step up to the plate.

Former Prime Minister, Owen Arthur once told the sector that it represented a pack of whiners; another Prime Minister, Sir Lloyd Erskine Sandiford, once had to remind the sector that he was not elected in a boardroom. Another former Prime Minister Freundel Stuart told them that if they wanted to dictate how the country was managed, they should consider running for office.

In recent times the same sector was in the forefront of marches organized by trade unions against a government. There is an old saying: “He who helps you buy a big guts cow or horse does not always help you feed it.”

A word to the wise.

133 responses to “Private Sector Disengagement Challenging Development”

  1. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    It is a radical oversimplification to conceive of the myriad business organisations in Barbados, from sole proprietor corner stores to multinational conglomerates, as a coherent private sector. Even among those who carry the banner for the sector there are radical disagreements: the Chamber of Commerce under Eddy Abed was perpetually at loggerheads with the Barbados Private Sector Association under Charlie Herbert.

    The key factor that unites them is that they ARE all looking for growth… their OWN growth, the growth of the Barbadian economy is merely a byproduct that is of little concern to them. The fact that economic growth in Barbados has been anaemic is testament to the fact that most Barbadian companies have failed to grow themselves. There have been exceptions; but a significant number of the exceptions have been fuelled by corruption which has the effect of damaging the wider economy rather than growing it.

  2. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    All the private sector has been interested in from plantocracy days is filling their own guts and pockets at the expense of the majority populstion on the island…they are useless jackals…

    ……that level of greed selfishness and sense of entitlement to taxpayers, consumers and pensioners money will end only when there are more medium and large black owned businesses generating thousands of jobs and automatically widening the tax base starts.

    Mia better tell them that practice they have of pushing governments to marginalize other businesses on the island so they can monopolize then suck the money to offshore accounts…ends right here, right now. ..cause she is the one have to face the electorate. .


  3. Read that the measly 5% increased for govt workers to take effect in August
    Was wondering if the Private Sector was on board in giving their workers an increase in helping to pull the debt ladden wagon.
    Since the election the private sector has openly stated there willigness to corporate with govt proposals
    It would be interesting to see if there service and goodwill would be only that of lip service or a merit of goidwill towards their employees of a wage increase which would be financially beneficial to creating growth in the economy and cutting govt debt
    Lest all forget the Private Sector have already reaped a great financial reward by way of tax write offs


  4. The blogmaster has always shared a view that the economy is public sector led. The traditional definition of private sector in Barbados context does not apply. An analogy is the dysfunctional system of government borrowed from England.

  5. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    Another day
    Same rhetoric
    We must do this….Mia must do this and the other ……..
    BUT HOW? how?

  6. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    That is the main reason the few minorities on the island have been so successful in heavily exploiting for decades the dysfunctional system of government from UK forced on the people…

  7. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    GP….by doing it…how did you treat your patients or teach your students…

    She aspired to be PM…no one should have to show or tell Mia how, she was duputy PM, AG, minister of education before and through a 14 year period..

    So define…. how.


  8. Our private sector, or what passes for it, has always been passive when it comes to business. From the plantations, when all they had to do was to sit back and wait for the canes to grow then harvest them; then plant potatoes and other ground produce while the cane shoots grow for the following season; to acting as middle people with their distribution net work operating mainly out of Roebuck Street; and their cottage industry of a rum industry.
    They remained on the sidelines while the tourism industry was developed in the late 1960s, driven mainly by the Lat Sir Ronald Tree on the West Coast.
    The big formations – driven manly by family loyalty and marriages – were functional, not practical. The Shipping and Trading, was a good example of that until the Trinidadians took them over.
    We have had for the last 100 years a grossly dysfunctional department store, based on a long out-dated model, which operates like a Middle Eastern bazaar, selling everything from books on meditation to cou cou and salt fish. I often wonder how the business makes a return per sq metre.
    Even the way it collects cash from customers has not changed in all that time, due mainly to a distrust of staff. In short @William, our polite class has failed the nation; our so-called business class has failed the nation; our educated class has failed the nation; and our professional class has failed the nation.
    Trinidadians dominate our businesses; on the West Coat property is largely owned by dodgy foreign hedge fund managers; and our incompetent and dishonest lawyer class is busy defrauding clients.
    That, my friends, is the real Barbados, a place where some tourists come to sun themselves and tolerate harassment from a few unemployed, and unemployable, people. Wait until the new Barbadians get hold of the nation.

  9. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Mr Skinner, no one can dispute that the private sector of any country must be a significant driver of economic growth just as no one can dispute that a solid goverment platform is a necessary foundation on which that growth is built.

    You have however contorted yourself to bash the Bajan private sector (white plantocracy and their descendants really) in an unworthy way…writ large you have dismissed completely the hard work of several private sector entitities (some fully Black owned, some partially so) which have contributed massively to our economic growth in tourism, industry, building and more.

    You offer an emotive, one-sided perspective which maligns, rightly maybe, Bajans businessmen of the pale hue but there is much more to our nation in the last 25 years than a BS&T, Goddards or Cave Shepherd….moreso you again emotively offer half truths with your remark about the non inclusiveness of Black university graduates…surely the example of Goddards as one example during my adult life does NOT match your claim.

    There is much validity to what you write but there is also quite some misdirection and half truths…we do not improve the discourse with such imbalance!


  10. PeterLawrenceThompson,

    Do you understand capitalism in all its varieties? Do you know anything about the history of business? Do you know what constitutes the private sector?


  11. late 1950s early 60s….

  12. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Besides…despite living in an advanced society like US for decades, you still give of the aura of continuing to live in 1950s Barbados where you could not walk through Belleville or Strathclyde unless you worked there…because of apartheid practiced by minorities.

    I was in Belleville up to last week at a dentist…that era is gone and folks like me pack cannons..aint no dumb ass minority approaching folks like myself.

    The only thing left for a real government with mental strength left to do….is put the greedy minorities in their place.., their grip on the governments have been ripped away by the electorate…the few mentally stunted ministers in the Mottley government still controlled by minorities will be exposed….

    Mia can…. how…. safely as much as she wants…only if she wants.

  13. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    HAL
    please explain………..Wait until the new Barbadians get hold of the nation.
    WHO ARE THESE new Barbadians?
    WHEN WILL THEY get hold of the nation?
    HOW WILL THEY get hold of the nation?.

  14. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    @ DPD
    RE There is much validity to what you write but there is also quite some misdirection and half truths…we do not improve the discourse with such imbalance!

    DEMONSTRATE IN DETAIL THE MISDIRECTION AND HALF TRUTHS IN THE MAN’S STELLAR ESSAY, AND EXPLAIN HOW YOUR MORONIC MOUTHINGS IMPROVES THE DISCOURSE

    EXPLAIN HOW SKINNER, THOMPSON & HAL ARE WRONG IN ANYTHING THAT THEY HAVE POSITED, AND DISCUSS HOW THINGS MAY BE IMPROVED& HOW THE MALADIES & TRUTHS THAT THEY HAVE EXPLORED CAN BE IMPROVED.

    CAN THE EXISTING PRIVATE SECTOR BE FORCED TO DO BETTER? IF SO, HOW SO?


  15. Demographics, deer boy, demographics. When the New Barbadians children grow up they will be seen as Barbadians with full entitlements. However, their values will be different to our traditional values, due to religion, ethnicity and family beliefs.


  16. @ GP
    Have a look at Fiji for an idea of what is possible.

  17. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    DULLARD & HAL
    PLEASE ILLUMINATE AND ILLUCIDATE FOR THIS DUMMY
    AS I TELL MY STUDENTS, “YOUR ANSWERS ARE TOO SHORT AND LACKING IN THE REQUIRED DETAIL”


  18. @ DPD

    What is your issue with the essay? You said a lot but did not really say anything in your ‘rebuttal’.

    A. Dullard

  19. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    RE A. Dullard June 29, 2018 8:41 AM

    @ DPD

    What is your issue with the essay? You said a lot but did not really say anything in your ‘rebuttal’.

    A. Dullard

    DULLARD YOU REALIZE THAT TOO?
    THIS PSEUDO INTELLECTUAL & PSEUDO PSYCHOLOGISTS CAN TALK MORE IRON THAN CAN BE PROCESSED BY A BESSEMER CONVERTER

    PS HE KNOW A LOT ABOUT THE AETIOLOGY OF CERVICAL AND SPINAL INJURIES TOO


  20. A. Dullard,

    Fiji is a good example, but it is not the only one. Bajans are sleep-walking in to the future. All it takes is a generation – about 25 yeas. New Barbadians give birth, kids go to school and university, then return to comet for top jobs. Then there is entryism: get key jobs in important ministries, keep you head down and at the right moment start to feed information to the right sources. ie work in the land registry, by stealth change the documents, then at some point claim ownership – either when the real owner dies or moves ay for a long period. Our undertakers already do this.

  21. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    RE Then there is entryism: get key jobs in important ministries, keep you head down and at the right moment start to feed information to the right sources. ie work in the land registry, by stealth change the documents, then at some point claim ownership – either when the real owner dies or moves ay for a long period. Our undertakers already do this.

    ARE YOU SAYING THAT THE YOUNG GENERATION WILL BE CRIMINALS AND WHITE COLLAR CROOKS?

    YOUR IDEA IS DEVIOUS, DEVIANT AND DIABOLICAL!


  22. Hal
    Pray tell what is the new department store model? Because whether Macys in New York, JohnLewis in London or Galleries Lafayette in Paris, I see a model quite similar to Cave Shepherd, apart from the online presence of course, which you dismissed as a threat to brick and mortar few weeks ago.😒


  23. “The strident criticism of the last government’s generous concessions to the Sandals group, were fuelled by the same private sector, that could not develop a product such as Sandals.”

    So wait it is okay for foreign businesses to whine in private and get a wash pan of concessions, but wrong for locals to do so in public? Yes the local business sector needs to step up, but there must be equity and fairness.

    How was Couples performing, without concessions? If the concessions provided to Sandals were made available to all hoteliers, what impact would it have on their product and performance? These are the questions we must answer before praising Sandals, an organisation that benefits from significant concessions across the region and markets its properties moreso than islands. Win-win for Butch.


  24. Is there analytics to confirm what Sandals adds to the value change (economies).

  25. Georgie Porgie Avatar

    @ Enuff June 29, 2018 9:46 AM
    perhaps one major contribution of Sandals is the tv ads it runs in NA
    whereas these ads seek to promote Sandals, they also help folk to be aware of the islands

    two different members of my church in recent years journeyed to St Lucia for their honeymoons because of Sandals ads


  26. GP
    Dah is muh point, concessions graanmurhh but one marketing/advertising strategy focused on the brand. Gotta be getting out licking.


  27. You may be hungry , unemployed but the private sector glorifies the repeal of the NSRL for simply being able to buy new cars.

  28. Georgie Porgie Avatar

    Enuff
    you are 100% correct
    the ads mention the particular islands but do focus on the brand
    the tourists are attracted to the brand……..the island is secondary

  29. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @A. Dullard and @GP is is not amazingly indicative of bias that you cam reference that I supposedly said a lot but said nothing but praise an essay that gives so much emotive noise, plucks trendy headlines and absolutely says NOTHING empirically to defend the fullsome noise… SMH.

    Your retorts make EXACTLY the point : biased, imbalanced, emotive words do nothing to move a discussion forward.

    Alas, in brief, to reply to your biased approach:

    …”What is your issue with the essay?” A: It is a one sided liberal themed screed. Period. The history of the Bajan plantocracy and their off-spring is pellucid but to continue that harangue in the face of the changing nation over the last 25 years is absurd.

    Pulling headline news will cut it for blog folly but not serious debate. I thought this blogger trended towards serious debate NOT BS emotive clap trap.

    …you asked….”DEMONSTRATE IN DETAIL THE MISDIRECTION AND HALF TRUTHS IN THE MAN’S STELLAR ESSAY, AND EXPLAIN HOW YOUR MORONIC MOUTHINGS IMPROVES THE DISCOURSE”

    That will take time and proper review to get facts accurate ..but from top of mind…it is absolutely a misdirection to suggest that Black grads have not infused senior management at some of the whiteshoed commercial establishment…I specifically cited Goddards Enterprise where I know there have been Black senior execs for years.

    Does that mean that there is no nepotism in white owned establisments…NO….but it does mean the blogger’s grand statement is off the mark. There are other examples to affirm that misdirection and mistruth.

    …”EXPLAIN HOW SKINNER, THOMPSON & HAL ARE WRONG IN ANYTHING THAT THEY HAVE POSITED, AND DISCUSS HOW THINGS MAY BE IMPROVED& HOW THE MALADIES & TRUTHS THAT THEY HAVE EXPLORED CAN BE IMPROVED.”

    I responded to @Skinner’s piece and offered NO opinion on the views of the other bloggers.

    I am not here to provide detailed treatise on commercial improvement unless you desire a consultancy…to quote another, there is a fee for that!

    Generally however methodologies for improvements are clear and those can be discussed ad nauseum but it’s the innovative plans that create the WOW factor.

    Despite the half true premiss that govt has driven economic growth and that the private sector has focused principally on I would wager that govt employment reminds high in the civil service and related regulatory/govt agencies…obviously that does not grow an economy, employment apart.

    It is misdirection to suggest that govt is the principal driving force behind tourism marketing. Absolutely and of necessity they are a crucial partner (think the sewerage debacle to put that in context of their importance) but in every other way the private sector hoteliers and property management companies are the driving force to the conferences, trade shows, expositions, visits by overseas delegations etc etc that enhance and drive revenue for the island.

    You guys can praise who and what you want to but if you do so on the same band wagon train gang because it suits your own narrative rather than because it truly breaks down the facts who am I to say you are simply being as imbalanced as the author…🤣

    Being right about the plantocracy and the accepted hegemony of a white commercial class is one thing but to gloss over the efforts of the Raysides, Everson Elcocks, the various Black hoteliers, the architectual firms like Selby/Rose/Mapp, the engineering groups like the Grenville Phillips, the many small business contractors and other service providers, the midsize chicken farmers etc etc who most definitely drove significant economic growth in the nation is just plain absurd!

    As a group small business invariably employ more people and generate more economic activity than many of the more well known large firms…that’s just a simple fact of life.

    I gone.

  30. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ William Skinner:
    “Agriculture, tourism, manufacturing and to some degree construction, were systematically underperforming because the sector, was mainly concerned with maintaining low wages and engaging in protracted battles with the powerful Barbados Workers Union (BWU). It can be safely argued that the sector was also very reluctant to employ and or promote, the new generation of university graduates, who could have brought a new thinking to the sector. This colonialist attitude resulted in very talented blacks being denied prominence in the board rooms.”

    So where did those same ‘talented black university graduates’ end up if not in the very public sector the management and financial state of which is manifestly described in the many Auditor General’s reports and international financial and regulatory ratings of the country’s economic and social performance and achievements?

    It can be cathartic to look back, sometimes in anger as in your case; but to move forward you must have your face to the future and your back to the past.

    Black Bajans need to stop worshipping the economic god of Janus and exit his month to see the spring awakening of their future economic development.

    Black Bajans need to stop with the old racial bashing of the almost extinct old ‘white’ plantocracy and merchant class. They are doing nothing but whipping an economic dead-horse while carrying a monkey on their social backs.

    Whoever controls the importation, production and distribution of food that feeds a nation is also in control of a vital lever of the nation’s economy.
    Check and see who is in control today in Barbados, if not the money-making new Barbadians whom that ‘foreigner’ black called Hal Austin loves to hate.

    The future of ‘scientific-based’ organic agriculture is there for the taking by the same black man with marijuana being a staple which was once the cause of his incarceration but can now be turned into his pot of gold of economic freedom given that most of the land (unlike in the bad old plantation days when sugar was King) is now in the hands of a mainly black controlled government.

    The future is also digital in which the same depressed, despised, and discriminated against black man or woman needs to carve out his or her own niche.

    The digital world is his or her oyster and there is no excuse and alibi by blaming the white man for lost opportunities to capitalize on the potential positive contribution social media can play in the brave new world of the Internet instead of using it to denigrate, disgrace and debase their own race.

  31. Georgie Porgie Avatar

    LOL DPD LOL

    YOUR LENGTHY TREATISE IS AS BORING AND UN-ENLIGHTENING AS ALL THOSE SERMONS I LISTENED TO AT THREE HOUR DEVOTIONS ON GOOD FRIDAY WHEN I WAS A DUTIFUL AND DILLIGENT ANGLICAN

    I HAVE A JOB FOR YOU DPD
    WHY NOT TALK INTO A BESSEMER CONVERTER AND MAKE US SELF SUFFICIENT IN STEEL AND FOREX?
    OR JUST TALK INTO THE BIO DIGESTER AT HOAD’S FARM IN ST ANDREW?


  32. Say it louder Miller…so that the Mia government can hear..

    “The future of ‘scientific-based’ organic agriculture is there for the taking by the same black man with marijuana being a staple which was once the cause of his incarceration but can now be turned into his pot of gold of economic freedom given that most of the land (unlike in the bad old plantation days when sugar was King) is now in the hands of a mainly black controlled government.”

    “The digital world is his or her oyster and there is no excuse and alibi by blaming the white man for lost opportunities to capitalize on the potential positive contribution social media can play in the brave new world of the Internet instead of using it to denigrate, disgrace and debase their own race.”

    Say it louder Miller..


  33. @Dee Word

    Yes there has been a democratizing if you will of the business class in Barbados but the degree of control and influence continues to be anchored in the cattlewash class.


  34. Ya know why right, because black people tend to not know when they have been FREED..

    … the electorate untied the current government, freeing them to be loyal to the majority population and the population as a whole..

    .. but the problem will still remain…will the mental runts for ministers with their sketchy reputations in Mia’s government see it as such, will they acknowledge their new freedom and commit to those who elected them only..and who freed them.

    If they don’t, I can already see where this is going, so they better do.

  35. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    @Dee Word
    I HAVE AN EDITOR LOOKING FOR ARTICLES FOR BMJ, NEJM, THE LANCET
    ARE YOU STILL RESEARCHING THE AETIOLOGY OF CERVICAL AND SPINAL INJURIES


  36. @Dee Word

    Further, Goddards company is the proverbial outlier. Several of the other examples you cited track success to the same White class controlled business sector.

  37. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    @ DPD
    re Generally however methodologies for improvements are clear and those can be discussed ad nauseum but it’s the innovative plans that create the WOW factor.
    CAN YOU PLEASE KINDLY EXPLAIN HOW THE methodologies for improvements are clear AND HOW innovative plans that create the WOW factor……BUT DONT DO IT ad nauseum.

    tHANKS IN ADVANCE FOR YOUR KIND ASSISTANCE.


  38. For the BU dudes, can’t hurt to be taught using eye candy..lol

    https://www.facebook.com/tasha.mcknight.3990/videos/223434328474170/?t=28

  39. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    so now is into soft porn?


  40. So now you are Grenville?


  41. All these religious madmen…it is a lingerie ad.

  42. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Some interesting expectations.
    The private (for profit) sector, have rarely had any appetite for ‘public’ housing for ‘low income’ persons. Even public bodies have difficulty running these undertakings at a ‘break even’ level.
    The BS&T died a long time ago? what has changed since that demise? Has Sagicor been any better? The GoB also has land.
    Several of the private players have done well, and made the shift from distribution to other endeavours. However, their growth has come via expansion elsewhere. As PLT noted, their OWN growth, which may or may not (frequently) be in Bim.


  43. Wily thinks the question should be : DOES BARBADOS HAVE A PRIVATE SECTOR

    Bloated civil service and 90+ State Owned Enterprises INDICATE that the MAJOR EMPLOYER in Barbados is the government by a significant percentage and the Private Sector controls only a small insignificant percentage. The private sector is relegated to a small tourism service industry which cannot support the present socialist government expenditure levels.

    STOP BLAMING GOVERNMENT SHORTCOMINGS ON THE PRIVATE SECTOR.


  44. @Blogmaster

    Your WRONG in assuming “economy is public sector led”, IN FACT THE GOVERNMENT IS FULLY IN CONTROL OF THE FAILING ECONOMY. i AGREE THAT THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD BE IN CHARGE AND LEADING THE ECONOMY, HOWEVER THIS HAS NOT BEEN THE CASE FOR THE LAST 15+ YEARS AT LEAST.


  45. Why not place blame on a sector who still belives it is entitled to the public purse in return for paltry jobs
    Why does govt have to pull the heaviest load of employment when private sector takes a large piece of the pie
    For what it is worth govt over the years according to Audit general reports have guarantee loans for the Private Sector and many have not been repaid
    In which international country does this foolishness occur. The private Sector had become an army of occupation ready and able to suck off govt nipples when the opportunity arises.


  46. “The private (for profit) sector, have rarely had any appetite for ‘public’ housing for ‘low income’ persons.”

    There is a way to do it though. Go read the Bees manifesto again, close, close. Wunna ain’t fully grasp the magnitude of the people’s manifesto yet.


  47. The real private sector invests in research either in a collaborative or a go it alone system. Check out AT&T, Dupont; Big oil & Pharma.; etc. These guys know you gotta invest in order to survive and grow. They invest in unknown and unheard of technologies in the hope that it may be the next cash cow and not a giant money sucking experiment. . Even Amazon does it, they have invested in technology and stuff to help them dominate and be a true driving force in their industry and in business world etc.. The real private sector is ableto visualise where they want to be in 10 to 20 years with or without the help of the govt.

    If you have a parasitic private sector that sees it role as maximising profit at all cost without even doing any research on how to improve the host their are feeding on, you will get what we have bout hay. The tick ride the dog. and complaining if the dog even tries to scratch behind his/her ear to rid itself of the unwanted parasite. Please feed the dog; please help the dog grow big and fat; help your host so you can have the healthiest dog as possible thus ensuring you a long as possible ride on your host/dog/cat etc.

    He don’t have capitalism bout hay; we got crony parasitic capitalist bout hay pure and simple.

  48. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Hal Austin asked me “Do you understand capitalism in all its varieties? Do you know anything about the history of business? Do you know what constitutes the private sector?”

    Well, yes, yes and yes. I’m a management consultant. Capitalism is not very complicated and it is what I have been involved in as an entrepreneur, graduate student, executive and consultant for four decades. What was it you wanted to ask me?


  49. @Enuff June 29, 2018 7:28 PM ““The private (for profit) sector, have rarely had any appetite for ‘public’ housing for ‘low income’ persons.”

    So what is wrong with private non-profit housing? What is wrong with non-profit housing on the whole? When the banks didn’t want to know us didn’t our men who knew how to build, those men who built everything in Barbados from Government house, to plantation house to chattle house, to almshouse, didn’t those men not then go home on weekends and build houses for themselves, their children, their siblings, their colleagues and their neighbours?

    Isn’t that how our parents and grandparents got their private non-profit housing?

    Do we need somebody in the great white north to package our traditional model and sell it back to us as private for profit housing?


  50. Had a fellow tile a house for me on a non-profit basis, because my father taught his own nephew the trade, then that nephew taught my workman the trade, so long after my father was dead the workman/tiler rewarded me.

    Hal Austin asked Peter “Do you understand capitalism in all its varieties? Do you know anything about the history of business? Do you know what constitutes the private sector?” And of course Peter was able to answer. I can’t, but what I do know is that if you sell all that you have you will have to buy all that you want.

    Maybe that is the capitalist ideal?

    But is it ideal?

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