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Why You Should Watch the Quarterly Economic Review

 

Created 30 Jul, 2018

Every quarter, the Central Bank of Barbados publishes its review of Barbados’ economic performance. The video review, delivered by the Governor, is livestreamed on the Bank’s website and YouTube channel, and also posted in its entirety – about 10 minutes – on its Facebook page. These reviews provide insight into how the economy is faring, so if you haven’t been watching them, you should be. Here’s when they take place and what you should be listening out for.

 

 

 

 

The review is usually released about a month after the end of the previous quarter and covers Barbados’ economic performance so far in the calendar year. This means that while the review at the end of the first quarter will look at January to March only, the one at the end of the second quarter will cover the first six months of the year, and the one at the end of the third quarter looks at the period January to September. The year’s first review, the one that is usually held in January, actually reports on Barbados’ economic performance for the entire previous year.

 

 

In the review, the Governor shares key statistics – indicators – that reveal the health of Barbados’ economy. He usually gives an update on economic growth – the increase in GDP (Gross Domestic Product), or put another way, in how much the value of the goods and services Barbados’ produces has increased by, relative to the same time the previous year – as well as on the debt to GDP ratio, which compares how much Barbados owes to the value of what it produces.

 

 

The Governor also speaks about the fiscal deficit – how much more the Government is spending

than it is earning (If the Government is earning more than it is spending, that would be called a fiscal surplus). The fiscal deficit is tracked through the fiscal year, so if the Governor mentions “an overall reduction in the fiscal deficit from the previous year”, he is not referring to the calendar year, but rather to the 12 months starting from April and ending at the end of March, since Barbados’ fiscal year is April 1 to March 31.

 

 

The quarterly review usually includes other important indicators such as unemployment, the level of international reserves, and the retail price index – how much prices have increased over the past 12 months – as well as an overview of how tourism, one of our biggest sectors, is performing. It typically ends with a forecast for how much the economy is projected to grow as well as the Central Bank’s prescription for what action is needed to strengthen it.

 

 

The Central Bank of Barbados’ quarterly economic review provides timely, credible information, and now that you know the areas that help to tell the story of Barbados’ economy, you can keep abreast of how it is performing and of how you can to help improve it.

The next Central Bank of Barbados quarterly economic review will be published Thursday, August 2, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. Watch it live on the Central Bank of Barbados’ website, www.centralbank.org.bb

 

 


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224 responses to “Governor Cleviston Haynes Delivers Q2′ 2018 Economic Review”


  1. What prevented the project from progressing was the request for a judicial review and the court agreed, period. Anything else is speculation.


  2. Would not be surprise if Hyatt turn a blind eye to building the project on the basis that Barbados default has become a major concern within the financial markets and hitching their project into a market that have a default portfolio is risky with financial factors that can impact the Hyatt negatively

  3. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    Artax August 3, 2018 12:08 PM

    “It is only after Hyatt’s construction and known percentages of occupancy levels over a sustained period of time, during the “season” and “off season,”………that can make a determination of forex generated by the hotel.”

    Artax,
    I understand that an individual is not allowed to establish a foreign currency account in Barbados.
    Let us suppose that I am an an American investor and plan to build and own a hotel in Barbados. I have designed my business model to accept credit and debit cards, and 95% of my bookings is expected to be done online. All monies received from credit card and online transactions are deposited into a bank account in New York. Foreign currency collected in Barbados is primarily used to help pay the salaries of “ex-pats” working at the hotel. At the end of every year, I intend to convert the profits I make in Barbados dollars into US dollars and repatriate them to the USA.

    Roughly speaking, Is this business model feasible enough for our discussion?
    If it is, let us say that you carry out your analysis as outlined above, and determine that US$3 billion was generated by my hotel. Such information only tells how well my hotel did. But as Mike Hammer would say: “Yuh can’t touch this”.
    Then as an inquisitive Barbadian accountant, you go one step further and determine that not one single dollar in foreign currency has ended up in Barbados. That shows you how poorly Barbados did, with respect to earning foreign currency from my hotel.

    Having gone around the block a few times, you smile and console yourself over the fact that at least some jobs have been created for your brothers and sisters. That’s all you can do.

  4. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    Mariposa August 3, 2018 6:52 PM

    “Walter Blackman agree with the dotting of the i’s & crossing of t’s. However…..”

    Mariposa,
    If you agree, that;s enough.
    When I was growing up, I used to hear how the Dipper and the DLP took credit for the Deep Water Harbour, which was Grantley Adam’s idea.

    If the Hyatt Hotel is built, we have already prepared ourselves to hear that the BLP took credit for a DLP idea.

    More than fifty years have passed. The simple, little politricks remain the same..


  5. First time I heard Dipper taking credit for the ‘Deep Water’ harbour.What should surprise the educated uninformed is what Dipper told Grantley at the opening of the Port.He told Grantley he should jump into the water and dont come back.


  6. So Ross University is relocating to Barbados? 1500 student to live at Coverley? Wondered about the construction activity going on.

    https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20180803005475/en/Adtalem-Global-Education-Announces-Barbados-New-Location


  7. When I was growing up, I used to hear how the Dipper and the DLP took credit for the Deep Water Harbour, which was Grantley Adam’s idea.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++

    Just shows what simpletons we have in Barbados and how easy it was and is to mislead them!!

    What Grantley Adams ever knew about sugar … or containerization?

    The Deep Water Harbour was predicated by the world demand for sugar and the booming economy of Barbados as a result of that demand after the war.

    Prices were high and it made financial sense to build it to get the sugar into the holds of ships as efficiently as possible!!

    Grantley Adams or no Grantley Adams, the Deep Water Harbour would have been conceived and implemented.

    Like EWB, he was just a passenger.

    Also, containerization was becoming the means of shipment and there was no way a container could be fit on a lighter and then offloaded on the Careenage!!

    The result was a lot of lost jobs, no lightermen, no stevedores, no lighters etc etc … and no doubt a reduction in the number of goadies!!

    Union control of the port …. perhaps that was GA’s contribution!!

    The Grantley Adams Airport is also … not a result of Grantley Adams …. in case we have any simpletons on this blog who may believe this.


  8. LET ME MAKE THAT LAST POINT CRYSTAL CLEAR.

    GRANTLY ADAMS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WAS NOT BUILT BY GRANTLEY ADAMS, WHETHER YOU BELIEVE ME OR NOT!!


  9. @David who wrote “1500 student to live at Coverley? ”

    Maloney again ?


  10. John August 3, 2018 9:40 PM

    @John, you have made a very interesting point. Containerisation was becoming the mode of operation. The development at the now deep water habour was going to happen, the leader that was in office at the time just took the applause etc.

    I often think we see Caribbean development in a vacuum, or at least we are thought Caribbean economic development in a vacuum.

    I am not old enough to know about Barbados during the war years or just after the war years, but i was lucky enough to see an old documentary on the rebuilding of Germany and Europe after the WW2.

    Europe was literally flattened and had to be rebuilt. The documentary went on to say that only in the 1980s did the German govt consider that Germany had fully recovered from the devastation of WW2. Great Britain made its final payment to the USA for the money borrowed to fight WW2 in 2006. The lend lease act.

    The rebuilding efforts started in the late 1940s and continued until completed. Many west Indies went to(were recruited) Britain in the 40 and 50 etc solely because many of the young men in Europe were dead; maimed and/or incapable of doing the work required. Today i don’t see the need of West Indians in EU or UK as we are not really needed, there is no emergency/devastation/ shortage of manpower. Likewise this attitude will be seen in USA etc.

    Coincidentally many of the industries in the Caribbean became more successful as the world needed the raw materials etc, so they got the suppliers from any and every where. The US was basically untouched by the war and it flourished. Immediately after WW2 the scenario was that a vacuum was created and was filled by the one who could fill it. The USA’s industrial muscle and caribbean labour for the UK.

    In my opinion this artificial vacuum that was created and filled was seen as the new paradigm for the Caribbean by the young leaders of political parties at that time. I guess it was not been seen as abnormal?

    Fast forward, Now that Japan & Europe in the form of the EU are back to full or close to full strength. The vacuum that many depended on is no longer there. Thus a rebalancing or realignment. In the USA and the Caribbean, those associated industries that flourished during that vacuum are being brought back into balance. This may be seen as a decline from the hey days of the 1960s etc

    I say all this to say that we many may be looking back over the last 40/50 years and saw what Caribbean countries have accomplished. But that accomplishment has under “abnormal circumstances” after a devastating world war that created opportunities that probably would no have occurred if the war didn’t occur. Just look at what happen in the previous 30 year to 1945 .

    There has been no major war since 1945. Maybe we need a major world changing event to create a vacuum to allow us to benefit again.

    Other than that the economic models we follow has a role that Barbados has been assigned to act/play out. May be unaware of the role scripted for us. So don’t be surprised that that role is not what we truly want for our selves.


  11. @ David,

    “Promotech yesterday held the ground breaking ceremony for a new $25 million headquarters next to Sheraton Mall in Christ Church.”

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2018/08/03/promotech-project-shows-faith-in-the-economy-pm/


  12. @ john
    Obama had ONE quarter of above 5 % without any tax cuts.
    So far trump has ONE quarter of above 4% with tax cuts

    What is your point in comparing one trump quarter with one or more Obama years?


  13. @ David,

    Seems like Barbados is going to have a construction boom.Imagine if Hyatt gets going.


  14. @ Hants August 3, 2018 10:53 PM

    I would take a construction boom as opposed to an explosion.

    From what i heard the building for the RUSM is already constructed at the LESC. Govt will re-purpose some newly built buildings for the medical school, so maybe not so much building/construction there. The student body maybe using some of the unoccupied units in Coverly, so maybe not so much building/construction there either.. Time will tell if it goes boom in the construction sector.


  15. @ sirfuzzy,

    new $25 million headquarters next to Sheraton Mall


  16. Next to Sheraton Mall? Is that east of the Parking lot? Trying to envisage the location but I think there is a vacant bit of land east of the lot between Sheraton and Vauxhall.

    Tech returns to the same area where Intel was located.


  17. @ Sargeant,

    I posted a link above @ August 3, 2018 10:41 PM


  18. Obama had ONE quarter of above 5 % without any tax cuts.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Why don’t you do some checking as I suggested earlier before you state this as a fact!!


  19. sirfuzzy
    August 3, 2018 10:34 PM

    John August 3, 2018 9:40 PM
    @John, you have made a very interesting point. Containerisation was becoming the mode of operation. The development at the now deep water habour was going to happen, the leader that was in office at the time just took the applause etc.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Somebody had to pay to put the Deep Water Harbour there.

    Sugar output in the boom following the war years did that.

    In 1957 it passed 200,000 tons.

    That’s why the Sugar Storage Facility and the conveyor system dominate(d) the facility.

    This year sugar output has risen from 2017 to just over 11,000 tonnes, about what it was at the end of slavery almost 200 years ago!!

    How many islands in the Caribbean had a Deep Water Harbour from the early 60’s?

    How many had exports that could justify the building of such a port?

    I seem to remember when I was in St. Vincent c.1989 that it had just built a cruise terminal but my memory is not as good as it used to be.

    Certainly it would not have had the economy to support such an investment before Tourism.

    It now has an international airport.

    I think it was in the process of design around the time I was there.

    There was the ET Joshua Airport I used to fly into at the time on LIAT.

    No jets landed there at that time, runway too short.

    Dominica likewise.

    I remember flying into the new Airport there in 1998 and I am pretty sure it could not accommodate jets given the contorted maneuvering the LIAT plane had to perform in landing.

    I think it was called Hewanorra Airport but could be mistaken.

    The old airport I think still operated on the other side of the island if memory serves me right.

    I suspect the Deep Water Harbour serviced the neighbouring islands through the schooner trade but I can’t say that with any certainty.

    I seem to remember merchants in Bridgetown travelled to and sold items to the nearby islands so I suspect cargo came to the Deep Water Harbour and was broken down and shipped to their customers.

    The French Islands are different.

    As departments of France they are way more advanced infrastructurally than any of the independent countries like Barbados, St. Vincent or Dominica.

    Martinique and Guadeloupe also had thriving sugar industries, larger than Barbados I believe, think their sugar industries still thrive but could be wrong.

    Both will have the benefit of France as a market.

    Plus, I suspect it is harder for corruption to flourish to the extent it flourishes in any of the three mentioned islands!!

    French Gendarmes are rotated in from metropolitan France so I would imagine it would be difficult to get away with the crap practiced in say Barbados.

    So, any body actually believing that Grantley Adams or Erroll Barrow gave Barbados the Deep Water Harbour or the Airport is living in la la land!!


  20. I hear the St. Vincent International Airport under Ralph is a pork barrel!!

  21. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    @ John,

    You have made a good observation with regard to France and her dependencies (horrible word!) – Martinique and Guadeloupe. In another post a couple weeks back, I made a statement that Barbados should seriously consider some form of pact with those islands (our neighbours) and by extension France in an effort to rejuvenate Barbados.

    It is evident that Caricom is a failed project and that Barbados could well benefit by establishing genuine ties with France. There was a certain blogger whose name I cannot recall who expressed surprise by my suggestion. However we must take into account that France are one of the big boys whilst Caricom remains a region of handicapped nations.

    Martinique has always been the poster child for France, unlike Guadeloupe. However we would be foolish to continue to ignore these two islands.


  22. @Inniss

    #BTEditorial – Still a few more questions for Mr Lashley to answer
    Article by
    Barbados Today
    Published on
    August 3, 2018

    In Greek mythology, a Chimera is a fire-breathing female monster with a lion’s head, a goat’s body, and a serpent’s tail. It does not take a physiological or engineering genius to figure out who or what the remnants of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) regard as this monster that so brutally condemned them to relative obscurity on that fateful May day this year. Too bad the DLP was unable to create its own version of Bellerophon, the mythical greatest hero and slayer of monsters, whose most outstanding feat was killing the Chimera.

    However, ‘a thing which is hoped for but is illusory or impossible to achieve’, is the definition of Chimera that more aptly describes the efforts this week of former Minister of Culture Stephen Lashley to defend a last-minute contract to Cranston Browne, the chief executive officer of the National Cultural Foundation (NCF), and by extension, contracts granted to various people by the DLP in the dying days of the Freundel Stuart administration.

    For, despite his legal arguments, Mr Lashley, a lawyer, left unanswered some compelling political questions.

    Since the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) took up office following the May 24 general election, it has complained bitterly about such contracts, some of which it charged were renewed up to two years before they were set to expire.

    “I have already started to talk to the country about the many contracts signed in the dying days of an administration that had long seen the dissolution of Parliament. We must investigate how to get a better deal for Barbadians from these hastily concluded contracts and leases that the previous Government signed off on, at lightning speed, even as the nation was days away from going to the polls,” Prime Minister Mia Mottley said in her Budget presentation on June 11.

    These charges have since been repeated several times, without challenge, as the former DLP ministers and candidates seemingly retreated to lick their wounds.

    However, after the Sunday Sun carried a front page story on July 22 headlined, ‘Shocking Contracts’, questioning the renewal of contracts for Browne, as well as Chief Executive Officer of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH) Dr Dexter James, former Minister of Industry, Commerce and Small Business Development Donville Inniss fired back.

    Mr Inniss, who was Minister of Health when Dr James was appointed, defended the reported $257,129.64 annual salary that the hospital boss received, and chastised his former Cabinet colleagues for not speaking out in their defence.

    We will not suggest that it was this order – pardon us, this plea – from Mr Inniss that prompted Ms Lashley to respond, but in his statement to Barbados TODAY he explained the meticulous nature of the process in renewing Mr Browne’s contract.

    He said Mr Browne’s two-year contract, signed in 2016, expired on April 21, 2018, and that the board of directors had agreed at a meeting on February 22, to renew the contract for another two years, commencing April 22, 2018.

    However, this is where it gets interesting. It was not until May 8, two months after Parliament was allowed to dissolve automatically, that the chairman wrote to the minister requesting approval of the contract renewal.

    “Having received the Board’s recommendation . . . the minister by Cabinet Paper invited the Cabinet to consider the recommendation [and] at its meeting of May 17, 2018 the Cabinet considered and approved the minister’s recommendation that Mr Browne’s contract be renewed for a period of two years effective April 22, 2018,” Mr Lashley said, adding that it on May 22, two days before the poll, that he advised the chairman of the Cabinet’s approval.

    The question remains, Mr Lashley, why did your Government wait until two days before the election, six weeks after Parliament had dissolved, to grant a new contract? Surely, it could not have been this urgent, otherwise it would have been dealt with much earlier. In this context, why not wait until after the poll and allow the incoming administration a free hand?

    The story gets even more interesting. It would appear that in the haste to get the contract done and dusted, a serious error was made with the date and responsibility was deflected.

    “In the preparation of the contract, I’m informed that the NCF management made an error in the first paragraph with respect to the date of the contract and repeated the old date of April 22, 2016, when in fact it should have stated April 22, 2018,” the former minister said.

    There is no reason to believe that there was any hanky panky involved on the part of the former minister, in the issuing of the contract. However, the wrong date did not look good, and it provided an opening for detractors to question his sincerity, for while he did not sign the contract, he is the minister and little errors like this can result in big headaches later, as was the case here.

    However, if the latest media reports are true, Mr Lashley as one of four defeated DLP candidates who will vie for the leadership on August 12, all four of whom were pulverized at the polls by their BLP opponents, will have even bigger problems resuscitating the emaciated party.

    Maybe this is his greatest chimera.


  23. checkyourfact.com/2017/08/31/fact-check-trump-claims-gdp-never-hit-3-under-obama/


  24. @ john

    checkyourfact.com/2017/08/31/fact-check-trump-claims-gdp-never-hit-3-under-obama/


  25. These numbers, however, are not really comparable to the second-quarter growth touted by Trump. Quarterly data compares the change in GDP from the preceding quarter, while yearly data compares the change in GDP from the preceding year.
    Although the economy never reached annual growth of 3 percent under Obama, quarterly growth did surpass 3 percent eight times during his presidency. The highest growth recorded was 5.2 percent in the third quarter of 2014.


  26. @ john

    Not only did one quarter above 5% but Obama also had another two quarters at or above 4%

    Why r u comparing YEARLY gdp with QUARTERLY gdp?????????


  27. May the DLP rest In peace and rise no more.Wunna misguided barefoot,bagbline hoes.Wunna destroy a good and proper country.Between 1628 and 2007 a period of 389 years,the National Debt of Barbados was 6 billion dollars.Why I recall in the late 70’s lil Buhbaydus loaned mighty T n T a few million.Between 2008 and 2018 or a 10 year period,the cavalier and incompetent Democratic Labour Party led by an idyut of colossal proportions,added an additional 9 billion dollars in debt,leaving the country reeling in junk status.Stuart will remain the one PM under whose watch ministers and lawyers raped the treasury like it was their personal ATM.Gaul bline de dems.May they all fry in eternal damnation in that place reserved for the wicked like Rev Charles Morse.

  28. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Walter Blackman
    “More than fifty years have passed. The simple, little politricks remain the same..”
    And they will continue. I recall when Barrow legislated salaries in 1975 or thereabout, Tom Admas, then the Opposition Leader blasted Barrow and said that the collective bargaining process should “never” be abandoned. Adams won the government in 1976 and he went on and legislated salaries as well.
    Now Walter, you are a big man and I cannot tell you what to do but by now you should have learnt to ignore “Enuff” or is a lot of the ignorance being trumpeted on BU. I actually thought that with the elections over and the trough now opened to the other side, that some on this blog , will be so busy fulling their guts , like their twins did, that we would have been spared from their repetitive garbage but I was wrong. I know about people singing for their supper but now they are blowing trumpets as well…………


  29. Martinique has always been the poster child for France, unlike Guadeloupe.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Do you know why?

    Guadeloupe and Haiti have something in common during the period 1801 -1804!!


  30. Gabriel
    August 4, 2018 8:43 AM

    May the DLP rest In peace and rise no more.Wunna misguided barefoot,bagbline hoes.Wunna destroy a good and proper country.Between 1628 and 2007 a period of 389 years,the National Debt of Barbados was 6 billion dollars.Why I recall in the late 70’s lil Buhbaydus loaned mighty T n T a few million.Between 2008 and 2018 or a 10 year period,the cavalier and incompetent Democratic Labour Party led by an idyut of colossal proportions,added an additional 9 billion dollars in debt,leaving the country reeling in junk status.Stuart will remain the one PM under whose watch ministers and lawyers raped the treasury like it was their personal ATM.Gaul bline de dems.May they all fry in eternal damnation in that place reserved for the wicked like Rev Charles Morse.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++

    Guess that is kinda like Obama, except with a few extra 0’s.

    Now we have to watch and see if the rate of change in debt will be slowed, stopped and reversed … here and in the US!!


  31. @John

    The difference is that the greenback is the reserve currency of the world.


  32. john2
    August 4, 2018 8:39 AM

    @ john
    Not only did one quarter above 5% but Obama also had another two quarters at or above 4%
    Why r u comparing YEARLY gdp with QUARTERLY gdp?????????

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Obama was a disaster, Trump may become one too but for the moment, it sure doesn’t look like it!!

  33. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ John August 3, 2018 9:40 PM
    “Just shows what simpletons we have in Barbados and how easy it was and is to mislead them!!
    What Grantley Adams ever knew about sugar … or containerization?
    The Deep Water Harbour was predicated by the world demand for sugar and the booming economy of Barbados as a result of that demand after the war.
    Prices were high and it made financial sense to build it to get the sugar into the holds of ships as efficiently as possible!!
    Grantley Adams or no Grantley Adams, the Deep Water Harbour would have been conceived and implemented.
    Like EWB, he was just a passenger.
    Also, containerization was becoming the means of shipment and there was no way a container could be fit on a lighter and then offloaded on the Careenage!!”

    You made the above assertion with the conviction of a man injected with a serum made from the bark of economic reality and the leaves of technological change.

    The only thing which separates people today from those of those who lived 200 years ago is the alien-imposed master called “Technology” which has shaped their outlook (values) on how they interact with their ‘fellow’ humans and other species.

    So, for you to come here and pontificate that is ‘exactly’ the result of technological ‘advancements’ which caused the ‘modernization’ of both ports of entry to Barbados and not the vision (foresight) of some two-bit labour-loving rabble rouser is tantamount to intellectual heresy.

    Of course it was not the politically-driven thought processes of GHA which led to the technological improvements to both ports of entry and exit to a changing world along with the economic benefits which accrue.

    It was the ‘sovereign’ guarantee provided by a political leader with vision to facilitate the securing of loans to finance the building and upgrading of both national assets to be repaid out of the taxpayers’ purse.

    How come you would rather suffer a thousand deaths from perennial intellectually tortuous gymnastics than to simply recant your misguidedly misinformed foolish position that it was the intervention of your god Yahweh and his appointed angels called the Quakers who put an end to slavery in the British West Indies?

    Haven’t Peter L. Thompson and others been arguing ad infinitum that is was a combination of economics and technological factors which put a ‘moral’ end to slavery and not some bunch of religious nutters calling themselves Quakers who themselves kept slaves and benefitted commercially from their ‘cheap’ labour and mental incarceration before the onslaught of the ‘Industrial Age’ under the aegis of Empress Victoria?

    It is ‘precisely’ because of changing technology that we, living in the ‘Information Age’, can quickly counter, expose and dismiss the long roll of bullshit you like to peddle about slavery on BU.

  34. Walter Blackman Avatar

    I followed Hants’ link to the story in Barbados Today about Ross University relocating to Barbados. At the end of the article, here is the first comment:

    “Max kleist

    This was likely a DLP initiative…as usual the Bs get all the credit”


  35. Yes Walter we have become a society polorized on all issues. Was it you who stayed that BU is a microcosm of the wider society?


  36. @ john

    I do not care what Obama was or what trump is

    my interest was in your pushing of the 4% increase after the tax cut. That’s why I keep pointing out to you that Obama had 5% increase without tax cut.
    like a politician you are digressing.

  37. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @Walter Blackman August 4, 2018 11:36 AM
    ““This was likely a DLP initiative…as usual the Bs get all the credit””

    This claim is ‘most likely the case’ given the time-frame surrounding this ‘forced’ relocation.

    Would the ‘ruling’ BLP administration be still insisting on the removal of the Coverley death trap just in case the government finds itself facing a multi-million law suit arising out of the ‘untimely but clearly preventable’ death of a white American student even if a post-mortem exam proves that the ‘high’ class student was way over the controllable limit in whatever contraband substance that would be found in his ‘decaying system’?

    It only proves that the only difference between the BLP and the DLP are the names of electoral financial backers who are called either Twiddle de-Bees or Twiddle de-Dems.


  38. Desperate situations call for desperate actions.

    Barbados needs all the help it can get .

    Next logical actions. Legalize Marijuana and Casino gambling.


  39. Hants,

    How about legalising prostitution?

  40. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    William Skinner August 4, 2018 11:01 AM

    @ Walter Blackman
    “Now Walter, you are a big man and I cannot tell you what to do but by now you should have learnt to ignore “Enuff” or is a lot of the ignorance being trumpeted on BU. I actually thought that with the elections over and the trough now opened to the other side, that some on this blog , will be so busy fulling their guts , like their twins did, that we would have been spared from their repetitive garbage but I was wrong. I know about people singing for their supper but now they are blowing trumpets as well…………”

    William Skinner,
    Looked at from any angle – the social, political, and economic – the nation of Barbados is floundering. If there is one lesson to be learnt from being stuck in this resultant miasma, it is the need for us a people to be able to unite and fight against our common enemies.
    However, there are many negative attitudes being displayed on BU, and my argument is that these attitudes are endemic in the wider society.They need to be highlighted, and concerted efforts must be made to change them.
    If you travel around Barbados and listen carefully to the conversations taking place among black people, you are sure to come across this type of everyday dialogue:
    “Man, yuh so-and-so idiot, I tell yuh that yuh wrong. You ain’t got a clue about whuh gine on. You should have gone from the womb straight to the tomb, Yuh public nuisance. Yuh effing parasite…….”
    “Man, shut yuh effing mout’ yuh kiss-me-……liar. People like you only want killing. Cayenne jail is too good for you. You deserve to be tied behind a cow’s ass and pissed to death”.
    The graphic description is a deliberate attempt to get you to see the magnitude of the problem. Nothing is sugar-coated in the general population. As you move from village to village, the black-on-black cursing increases in rawness and intensity. What is the underlying cause?

    We simply cannot continue like this. I have no “beef” with any individual blogger on BU.. All I can promise you is that I will ignore some comments, and that I will use some to try to teach and educate. My focus is on bringing attitudes to the surface so that we can all “eyeball” and understand some of the factors which are responsible for where we are today.

    It takes twice as long to get rid of negative attitudes as it does to develop them.
    How do we go about tackling the massive amount of self-hatred, diffidence, and lashing out that we exhibit as a people? Where do we start.? How can we expect Barbados to become a better place if we don’t start?
    It is an extremely daunting task, but, in my opinion, totally ignoring the exhibitors of negative attitudes on BU is not a viable option.

  41. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    David August 4, 2018 11:53 AM

    “Yes Walter we have become a society polorized on all issues. Was it you who (said) that BU is a microcosm of the wider society?”

    David,
    Yes. It was me.
    BU is also proving to be a good political bellwether. A swing in the political pendulum on BU has been followed by a similar directional swing in the mood of the Barbadian electorate.


  42. Dominica’s loss is Barbados’ gain

    Its an ill wind that blew Barbados some good

    Just remembered another offshore medical school opened recently and there was some back and forth sniping on these pages, is this new entry an upgrade?

    So much for Caricom brotherhood, but if Barbados didn’t pony up you can bet your bottom dollar that another of the sisterhood would step in to fill the need.

    Lastly whether the Gov’t be good or whether the Gov’t be bad, whether the Gov’t is BLP or whether the Gov’t is DLP the Maloneys of Barbados will prosper. Soon all the political gadflys who termed the homes “chicken coops” will be singing the praises of the luxury villas in Coverly.


  43. This is not the services or industry we need to grow our economy. Where is the BLP bounce? Where are the private sector investors, the public spending, consumer spending? We are hanging on straws. We cannot even have a proper debate.

  44. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Cleviston Haynes

    Could You tell me why IN ALL YOUR PRONOUNCEMENTS post taking over from the former Governor of the bank Worrell you have make NO MENTION OF

    a. The humongous resources that the IDB has made available through the Central Bank

    B. The onerous mechanisms to access these monies?

    I mean de ole man ent got no resources available to me barring de grandson yet over the last two years three people, SSS, Colonel Buggy and another feller worker a campaign that some believe resulted in not one seat!

    What Is your public relations department doing other than sucking their badwords?

    Entrepreneurs And other serious persons in out community need resources that the Central Bank aggressively administers and ensures thst your intermediaries DO NOT BEGRUDGINGLY DOLE OUT THE MONEY and the refuse to pay their stipulated premiums and, if the projects fail because governments compete with the recipients of the funding, get unlawful judgements against the Central Bank recipients.

    EVEN IN THE FACE OF YOUR GUARANTEES CLEVISTON.

    This wickedness that is perpetrated against the indigenous efforts of bajans HAS TO STOP.

    IN ONE breath wunna does be talking about ” helping the small black man” and just so with the following breath wunna does be seeking to kill him

    I wonder if the Honourable Blogmaster might be disposed to lift that paragraph and make it into a blog like he did for Peter Lawrence Thompson?

    A title might be “is Barbados really serious about supporting Microenterprise?

    Or ” How can a Barbados Central Bank Guarantee Fail?”

  45. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ the Honourable Blogmaster your assistance please with an item about the ineffective Central Bank guarantee and why it is doomed


  46. @Walter

    It was an easy call just like the warning being given to Mia and the BLP, hero to zero in the prevailing climate is possible. Also to the third parties, time to make a move, find a way!


  47. @ john
    I do not care what Obama was or what trump is
    my interest was in your pushing of the 4% increase after the tax cut. That’s why I keep pointing out to you that Obama had 5% increase without tax cut.
    like a politician you are digressing.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    https://edition.cnn.com/2017/12/15/politics/is-trumps-bill-largest-tax-cut-in-history-no/index.html


  48. @john

    We can argue on whose tax cut it was

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