STAFF APPRAISAL

30. Over the last decade, Barbados economy has experienced very low growth, and fiscal and external imbalances have gradually led to an unsustainable situation, with very high debt, and very low reserves. These challenges must be addressed by a combination of fiscal consolidation, measures to boost growth, and debt restructuring. The authorities’ Economic Reform and Transformation program seeks to address these long- standing structural imbalances and implement an aggressive front-loaded and comprehensive reform agenda – extracted from p.18 of the IMF Report 2018

 

The 77 page IMF package detailing the REQUEST FOR AN EXTENDED ARRANGEMENT UNDER THE EXTENDED FUND FACILITY; STAFF REPORT; STAFF SUPPLEMENT; AND STATEMENT BY THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR FOR BARBADOS was posted to the International Monetary Fund website on October 4, 2018. It is no surprise the traditional media has not seen the value in unpacking the details of the arrangement secreted in the voluminous and technically worded documents.

What has been widely communicated is that in record time the new Mottley government has been able to secure the approval of SDR 208 million or USD290 million. The government’s PR has been quick to point out that the draw down from the IMF represents 220% of Barbados’ IMF quota and is a ‘homegrown’ program.

Key elements of the program are:

  1. Fiscal adjustment: increase primary surplus to achieve 6% by 2019/20
  2. Reform state owned enterprises (SOEs): reduce transfers to SOEs by 2%
  3. Structural reforms to support growth: improve business facilitation
  4. Debt restructuring: debt is deemed unsustainable and government has aggressively moved to administer ‘haircuts’ to bond holders

In the background section of the document (p.7) the IMF delivers a negative synopsis of the performance of the Barbados economy post the 2008 global financial crisis. One of the program objectives of interest to the blogmaster is item 8, p.9: “Increased investment demand can restore growth and increase its potential. Restored credibility in the macroeconomic framework is expected to increase investment. Higher net FDI inflows will contribute to improving the stock of capital and, through this channel, actual and potential growth could reach close to 2 percent by the end of the program“.

 

Other key deliverables of the IMF program:

  • Fiscal discipline will help address external imbalances and rebuild international reserves.
  • Fiscal reforms over the program period aim to address structural weaknesses in Barbados’ fiscal framework.
  • Streamlining, restructuring, and privatizing SOEs will substantially reduce transfers to public institutions
  • Vulnerable groups will be protected by strengthening social safety nets
  • The authorities remain strongly committed to the exchange rate peg, which has been in place since 1975 and has provided a key anchor for macroeconomic policies.
  • The program will lay out a roadmap for normalization of monetary policy.
  • The CBB Act will be amended, with the help of IMF TA, to strengthen the autonomy of the CBB and the limitation on CBB financing of the government, among other enhancements
  • The authorities have made progress in identifying debt restructuring parameters that would provide debt relief without jeopardizing financial stability.
  • Significant progress has also been made in discussions with domestic and external creditors.
  • Debt management capacity will be strengthened.
  • To promote long term and potential growth, labor, product and service markets will be liberalized
  • The authorities intend to establish an Economic Program Oversight Committee (EPOC) to strengthen societal ownership and build public support for the measures in the program.
  • Data inadequacies continue to hamper understanding of key macroeconomic aggregates.

 

The part of an IMF agreement that raises the most concern are the condition or in the case of Barbados what are the targets we will have to meet to be able to draw down on the SDRs approved.

 

Quantitative performance criteria:

  • Floor on the central government primary balance (excluding repayment of central government arrears)
  • Ceiling on the stock of Net Domestic Assets of the CBB
  • Floor on the Net International Reserves of the CBB
  • Non-accumulation of central government external arrears (excluding arrears resulting from nonpayment of debt service for which the government is pursuing a debt restructuring).
  • Ceiling on grants and transfers to public institutions
  • Ceiling on the stock of public debt

Indicative targets:

  • Ceiling on the stock of central government domestic arrears
  • Floor on CG social spending Structural benchmarks

Structural benchmarks

  • These will focus on SOE reforms, growth and business climate, CBB autonomy, tax policy and revenue administration, public sector reform, and public financial management (Table 2 MEFP). The structural benchmarks will be critical to underpin the adjustment effort.

The average citizen will not read the IMF report and others will ‘scan’ to satisfy a mild curiosity.  It is obvious to the blogmaster after reading the report that there are significant changes still to come that will drastically affect Barbadians from all walks of life. As a people are we ready to be that chanage?

 

Link to Barbados : Request for an Extended Arrangement Under the Extended Fund Facility-Press Release; Staff Report; Staff Supplement; and Statement by the Executive Director for Barbados

468 responses to “IMF Program Unpacked – Our Way of Life Will Change, FOREVER”


  1. Barbadians pocket books cannot sustain or support these measures
    Bert will failed
    Banking fees have tripled in a short space to recoup some of its losses coming from the default
    Now Dr. Mascoll and Jermey Stephens have entered a vocal fight as to how Bret measures would impact investors confidence
    Those who were touting the almighty hand of the IMF as barbados Saviour for economic recovery are having buyers remorse.


  2. Just read what the failed DLP candidate George Connolly produced on BB Today. He strongly opposes what he calls austerity.

    In other words, Mr Conolly wants that those few taxpayers who bring in the big forex exchange shall go on nourishing the clueless masses above their means.

    That won´t happen. It is time for Mr Conolly to do some hard work – like those who bring in the forex. We do not need snobbish academics who live above their means, with too many titles and badges.


  3. http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/203079/usd74m-arrears

    A prime example how the :

    BLP – Brutalisng Lowly Pensioners / People = BLP

    Well this is the EVIDENCE of their reckless record since JUNE 1 , 2018 !!

    No doubt David is PROUD of this evidence !!


  4. Fractured,

    Breach of copyright! I told so first. Of course, penalities and more interests are kicking in. The IMF money is for the payout of said group.

    You call me a leading gov apologist despite the fact that I criticise the size of cabinet, the size of admin and the lack of growth plan. Maybe I am just fair and balanced, working for the common good and not for kick-backs.


  5. For what it is worth the discussion must move pass partisan nonsense if Barbados is to climb out of the deep social and economic hole we find ourselves. This is serious business.


  6. Have any of you who has posted so far ‘scanned’ the 77 pages most of which is fact based if we accept central bank and BSS as credible sources?


  7. pp 19 sq:

    “program implementation will be challenging. Risks to the program include limited implementation capacity, untested ability to maintain high primary surpluses over a sustained period, and risks related to the debt restructuring process. However, the authorities’ ambition offers an opportunity to address Barbados’ long-standing challenges. The tasks are arduous …”

    p. 49: “23. Public sector pension reform aimed at ensuring that the system is sustainable in the long run is a priority”: lower pensions for the civil servants.

    p 71: No indication for a haircut on USD debt. How does this fit to the goal not to devalue?

    Good luck Barbados! BB is now where Greece was in 2010. Long way ahead.


  8. “Over the last decade, Barbados economy has experienced very low growth, and fiscal and external imbalances have gradually led to an unsustainable situation, with very high debt, and very low reserves. These challenges must be addressed by a combination of fiscal consolidation, measures to boost growth, and debt restructuring.”

    Hmmmmm……..

    ……….and the resident yard-fowl wrote “Barbadians pocket books cannot sustain or support these measures…… Bert will failed (fail).”

    Perhaps the consortium of yard-fowls (or DEMS) are conveniently forgetting that they are responsible for the “precarious position” of the Barbados economy.

    “For argument’s sake,” supposed this present BLP administration (UPP or Solutions Barbados) had continued with the policies of the former inept DLP administration, what would be the state of the economy today……..

    ……… especially taking into consideration that, rather than implement policies to deal with the global economic crisis, David Thompson adopted an “economic policy” of “we will wait and see what happens.” MISTAKE # 1.

    This “policy initiative” CONTINUED during the period of his illness and months after his death, which resulted in “the bureaucratic inertia of the various tiers of government.”

    And now the DEMS are saying “BERT will fail,” perhaps similarly to how ALL their economic policies FAILED to achieve the desired objectives…………

    ……….. such as the much touted Medium Term Fiscal Strategy 2010-2014; Medium Term Development Strategy 2010-2014

    Easy decisions were not taken by the DEMS due to political considerations, such as the potential “political fallout” from trying to balance politics with implementing harsh economic decisions……. evidenced by what we are seeing played out presently, where the DEMS, their yard-fowls and the “conspiracy theorists” spewing dictatorship shiite about Mao and Mugabe are constantly critical of economic decisions now being taken.

    Against the background of their repeated mantra of “bring solutions,” the DEMS “overwhelmingly rejected” David Estwick’s proposal of domestic debt and foreign debt restructuring via a sinking fund strategy and using new sources of finance, such as the UAE.

    But this debt restructuring issue is not new. Barbados’ foreign amortization and debt service was estimated at between $300 million to $400 million annually.

    Recall after former PM Stuart mandated the Fiscal Deficit Committee of the Social Partnership to make recommendations on the way forward for the economy, they submitted a 30 page report outlining a debt restructuring proposal, specifically suggesting “Government should cut the coupon rate and extend the maturities on Treasury Notes and Debentures by 200 basis points to yield the $112 million in savings.”


  9. @Blogmaster
    “For what it is worth the discussion must move pass partisan nonsense if Barbados is to climb out of the deep social and economic hole we find ourselves. This is serious business.”
    ++++++++++++
    100%. If you want to achieve this on the blog you’d have to moderate heavily. Most comment(er)s here are morbidly and blindly partisan.


  10. @A> Dullard,

    Absolutely. Also, we cannot talk about a social and economic hole while the blog is dominated by second-rate partisan politics. It is the job of the chairman to gently guide commenters on to issues of national importance.
    For example, what is the government’s cultural policy? What is its educational policy, apart from the nonsense of a Knowledge-based economy which forms part of BERT and the wish that we will all speak Mandarin in a few years time? The prime minister has called the Pine (an area that returned a BLP MP) a favela; what does she mean by that and what is she doing about it? I can go on.


  11. @ A Dullard
    If you want to achieve this on the blog you’d have to moderate heavily.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Wrong.
    All this would achieve is a propaganda styled facade that reflects a false sense of focus.

    What the Blogmaster is talking about is a CHANGE in attitudes ….which is then reflected on the blog.
    i.e. -that brass bowls will wake up…

    Fear not… this WILL come …and soon…

    Once the asses hit the grass, and then proceed to RAPIDLY feel the many ‘PLIMPLERS’ in the grass, you will see a DRASTIC change in approach….

    Shiite boss.. …Maripoka may begin to sound like Ping Pong or PLT….
    GP may even grow up…. and Hal may just go away and focus on local issues in London town….


  12. @David

    “if we accept central bank and BSS as credible sources?””

    This is a GOOD STATEMENT/QUESTION owing to the fact that IMF has previously repeatedly questioned these two identities statistics. If the statistics are in fact not accurate then the whole IMF PROGRAM viability is questionable. Based on reading what CG is responsible for in the program and knowing GOB previous track record, IMF PROGRAM is destined to early failure.


  13. Govt having no growth plan and govt now having to contend with an additional pressure of NO local or international investor confidence Bert is condemned to failure
    A population the small size of barbados cannot pay household debt and govt debt
    Those are some of the realities govt must faced


  14. Also high inflation would take its ravages on local economy as people try to manage their end side to accommodate their daily livelihood living out of necessities
    The prolong effect of high inflation on the local economy would lead to massive business closures and high unemployment
    Govt take of revenue from taxation would slow significantly
    The banking industry would continue on a protective path which will ensure its security and try to secure outstanding customer debt where households are in arrear of mortgage payments specifically placing higher late payment fees on the borrower resulting in negative impact and forced the debt holder to sell for a lower price or go into foreclosure
    The real estate market would at first enjoy a small but short term rebound in sales( nothing significant to boast of profitable gains) sales forced by having an over saturated market mostly induced by fire sales at reduced prices

  15. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @Dullard
    BU is a reflection of Barbados. Bajans are more passionate about politics than most. Nuff long talk, nuff blaming, and nuff DOING little, esp if it were to veer from the status quo. The politically passionate rule.


  16. It is difficult to understand Mr Stephen’s shattering investor confidence comment. The greatest threat to investor confidence was a possible devaluation of the Barbados dollar. The Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation programme is designed precisely to protect the value of the dollar which should instil not shatter investor confidence.(Quote)

    First, Mr Stephens hogs a lot of media publicity that his economic intelligence does not justify. I am sure he has a top degree from UWI. However, Dr Mascoll is also wrong. The ‘greatest threat’ to FDI is not devaluation, but default.


  17. @ NorthernObserver who wrote ” Nuff long talk, nuff blaming, and nuff DOING little “.

    Some do what is in their personal best interest.

    I believe the majority of you BU bloggers have your “safety blankets” in overseas bank accounts / properties.


  18. Maybe he is seeing an across effect resulting from the default
    As a matter of fact rigt after the default local businees marketsc were shut out from buying products from Cannadian manufacturers unless they had all cash on hand to buy products
    That also can be described as low investor confidence in our local business

  19. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    If you are curious about the future of Barbados the important passage to read is #29 on the “… significant risks due to the extensive nature of structural reforms needed and limited implementation capacity.” Since it is written in mealy mouthed bureaucrat jargon I will offer here a translation of relevant passages into plain discursive English.

    “The government’s ability to sustain high primary surpluses over several years is untested.” No Barbadian government has ever achieved high primary surpluses over several years in the past, even during years of high global growth. No other Caribbean government has ever achieved this either. So it’s not that this is “untested” at all, it is rather that ALL previous tests have failed. Risk of failure ~90%.

    “Growth could be weaker than projected if fiscal multipliers are higher than expected…” In economics, the fiscal multiplier is the ratio of a change in the GDP to the change in government spending that triggers it. A high fiscal multiplier is a GOOD thing if you expect growth, but a bad thing if you are anticipating economic contraction. The risk that they are pointing out here is that the government’s attempts to cut spending will trigger a severe recession. Risk of failure ~50%

    “SOE reforms will require considerable political commitment.” Given the sense of entitlement of BLP yardfowls on top of the widespread expectation of the Bajan public that the government is supposed to provide employment, it will require a revolution in political culture to reform SOEs effectively. Risk of failure ~85%.

    “The debt restructuring operation will also entail risks; for example, the inclusion of treasury bills in the operation may hamper liquidity management going forward…” This means that after giving treasury bill holders a severe haircut nobody will buy treasury bills in the future if they can avoid it. No kidding. The commercial banks are the major users of these instruments and they will be forced to buy them to maintain statutorily required liquidity levels, but no-one else will touch them for a long time. Risk of failure ~45%.

    “Weaker growth in key source tourism markets (in particular, the UK) could slow arrivals and reduce private investment…” Obviously. Risk of failure 99%.

    “… faster tightening of monetary policy in the US could appreciate Barbados’ real exchange rate…” Tightening of monetary policy mostly means raising short term interest rates. If the US does this the US dollar will be worth more compared to the Euro or Pound or Canadian dollars, which means Barbados will be more expensive for European and Canadian tourists. This is not particularly likely in my estimation because Trump will want to keep the US dollar low as he pursues his trade war with China and everyone else. Risk of failure ~10%.

    It is the combination of these risks which translates into Bush Tea’s assurances that overall risk of failure approaches 100% (actually, technically it is only about 99.996288% 😉 if we assume that any one of these risks could cripple BERT), or as he puts it “our ass is grass.”


  20. Putting all pointed out in the IMF report for sucess
    Then apply all to the following
    A small population
    Low wage earners
    No productivity
    No exports
    Free education
    Free social services
    Plus govt ongoing committments to debt
    It doesn’t take the mind of a economist to see that Bert would miss the goal post by more than a mile
    The weight of Bert measures are unsustainable when realistically applied


  21. @ PLT
    This matter is not even worth debating….. it is SO obvious.

    Our failure is guaranteed – as it has been now for some YEARS (after nothing happened as a result of the Great CLICO robbery)….
    …and when Caswell did NOT BUP.

    Bushie is forced to admit that Hal is 100% correct about the state of our State.

    Our best hope now is that some natural calamity will provide an EXCUSE on which our incompetent and clueless politicians and their assorted yardfowls can blame our future chaos.

    The REAL discussion now should be focused on how we can adjust to being a failed State……

    BTW
    Is Atherley REALLY serious with the jobby he was spouting yesterday about legislating what people say on Social Media?

    What idiocy!!
    That is akin to seeking to legislate that Twitter should be a controlled medium where only wise tweets are allowed….
    The REAL challenge is to learn to SUCCEED in the new environment…
    – BUT that would require honesty, transparency, openness and INTEGRITY….
    however, it is MUCH easier for brass bowls to pass some shiite law….

    Grass and plimplers for our BB donkeys…..


  22. @ peterlawrencethompson October 10, 2018 10:49 AM

    Since the programme is on such path, we should leave the paper behind and consider what will happen next:

    A true turn and true reforms? BERT II to IV?
    Cancellation of said programme?
    Mass emigration and international banks leaving Barbados?
    Devaluation?
    National autarchy and nationalization of the private sector?
    Or dictatorship with censorship as the Red Bishop suggested just now?

    And: How can we protect our private assets against politics?

  23. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ PLT at 10 :49 AM

    I did not recalculate your measurement of each probability but mine have come close enough. Tell me though did you see the statistical evidence that the home grown plan was based on? The soil this plan was based on seem to have been denuded of nutriments.


  24. Government has racked up about $74 million in arrears to foreign commercial creditors. That’s based on new information released by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). It said the amount was accumulated between June 1, when Government suspended debt payments to these entities, and the end of last month.
    The news came as a foreign group representing several external creditors on Monday announced that on September 26, it submitted a “financial restructuring proposal” to Government.
    Rafael M. Molina is managing partner of London-based law firm Newstate Partners LLP. That entity, and Arnold & Porter LLP in Washington DC, are representing an unknown number of foreign creditors.”(Quote)

    Oh dear. I said this would happen here on BU. All the creditors had to do was to sell on their debt to the predators hedge funds who would drag the government through the New York courts. International lenders are not Barrack, they will take action. Where is White Oaks when you need them?

  25. Dishonest Bajans Avatar

    Is there a Carribean Regional Property Fraud against overseas elders and does this sound familiar to what is going on in Barbados?

    How did my C/ville property end up in Jagdeo nephew’s hands?

    –overseas-based Guyanese asks

    He is 70 years old and still working at a major airport in New York. Like many Guyanese, he too owns or maintains family properties here.

    It was supposed to serve as a getaway in his retirement.
    However, for Victor Sukhai, his property seems to be no more his. He claims it has been sold illegally without his knowledge.

    Since 2009, it passed from a number of hands, including the nephew of former President Bharrat Jagdeo. It is now deemed to be owned by a radio station reportedly belonging to Ansa McAl, a Trinidadian company.

    Sukhai is contemplating his legal options, in a battle to take back a property that was bequeathed to him by his mother in her will.
    Sukhai’s case would be but one of many property cases said to be involving fraud with deeds and other property documents

    There have been an increasing number of complaints filed about property frauds involving personnel from the courts, staff from the Registry and officials of the legal fraternity.

    For the victims, finding resolutions can take years because of a muddled court system.
    Many of the victims live abroad and sometimes only discover years later that their properties were sold, sometimes by real estate companies, and at other times by fraudsters.

    According to Sukhai, his mother, Etwarie Sukhai, in her Last Will and Testament on September 17, 1976, left him the property at 30 Garnett Street, Campbellville.

    The will left $25 for the older brother, Kissoon Lall, with the second son, Bholan Nauth Sukhai, to receive $2,000. The rest of the estate was left to Sukhai, the third son.

    On June 10, 1977, the mother died and less than a year later, on April 10, 1978, the property was transferred via a Transport into Sukhai’s name.
    According to Sukhai, he left his sister in the home and went abroad to live.

    The airport worker said that in September, he visited a lawyer, Vrinda Jagan, in New York where he instructed her to prepare an Irrevocable Power of Attorney in the name of Parmanand Maraj. Maraj is Sukhai’s nephew-in-law.
    Maraj, via the document, was authorized to conduct business pertaining to the Garnett Street property.

    However, Maraj claimed he was threatened when he went there by persons in the home.
    On the land, Maraj saw a massive radio tower.
    Maraj was told that the land now belonged to the owners of the radio station- known as IRadio. That radio had linkages to former Natural Resources Minister, Robert Persaud, whose wife Kamini Persaud, was one of the directors.

    IRadio had its office on the western side of the Garnett Street property, on Seaforth Street.
    built the station there and then constructed the tower on the lands that Sukhai said that he owns.
    How the property ended up in hands of IRadio, now sold to Ansa McAl, is what the US-based Guyanese man wants to know.

    According to documents pertaining to the property, filed at the courts, a man named Kissoon Lall, sold the property to one Diaram Ojha, of 28 Garnett Street, in 2009.
    Kissoon Lall has the same name as the eldest brother of Sukhai who was left $25 by his late mother in a will.

    In June 2013, Diaram Ojha resold the property to one Ryan Dev Basdeo, of Railway Embankment, Cummings Lodge for $5M. Basdeo is said to be the nephew of former President Bharrat Jagdeo.

    The former president was the one who a few weeks before he ended his second term in office in November 2011, controversially approved several radio licences to close family and friends and members of the People’s Progressive Party.
    Among those licences was the one to IRadio.

    Shortly after the Coalition Government entered office in May 2015, Jagdeo’s nephew flipped the property to IRadio Incorporated for a healthy $32.2M.

    “I don’t understand what documents were used to sell this land. I don’t know who gave permission for a radio tower to be erected on my property. I saw some documents with what appears to be a Transport. It is clear fraud to me and I will be pursuing my legal options with my lawyers,” the New York-based man said.

    IRadio itself was owned by Telecor & Cultural Broadcasting Inc, which received the licence for the radio frequencies, including 90.1 and 91.5FM.
    Telecor’s Company Secretary then was listed as Omar Lochan, Deputy Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Natural Resources.

    Both the former minister Robert Persaud’s wife, Kamini Persaud, and his sister Ruth Baljit, were said to be on the radio station management.

    http://www.kaieteurnewsonline.com/2018/10/10/how-did-my-c-ville-property-end-up-in-jagdeo-nephews-hands/


  26. Partisanship is a crippling problem for Bim

  27. Dishonest Bajans Avatar

    Theft and corruption by the top dogs are the most crippling effects in Barbados.


  28. Nope, mediocrity being sold as punching above our weight is the problem
    We aren’t even mediocre by any standard but no one wants to admit it


  29. Simpson/SOL…is giving up majority shares.

    Whatever happened to the oil terminal sale, that would have been part of the package to sell to Canada…did it ever go through.

    “Parkland Fuel Corp, a Canada-based marketer of petroleum products, said on Wednesday it would buy a 75 per cent stake in privately held SOL Investments Ltd and its units for CAN$1.57 billion (US$1.21 billion).

    The deal gives Parkland access to 526 retail gas stations, expanding its presence in the US Gulf and Atlantic coasts, the company said.

    Upon closing of the deal, SOL’s parent company Simpson Group will own a stake of about ten per cent in Parkland, the companies said in a statement.

    Parkland will also get a call option for purchase of the remaining 25 per cent stake in the company.
    The transaction will be financed by Parkland through debt financing of around CAN$1.1 billion underwritten by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and National Bank of Canada.

    Last year, Parkland signed a deal to buy Chevron Corp’s gasoline stations and refinery in British Columbia for CAN$1.46 billion.
    Parkland said it will retain the SOL operating brand and key management and SOL will continue to be managed from the Caribbean.”


  30. Mia Mottley needs to get rid of all them multimillionaire advisors who became leeches feeding off the skeletal remains of barbados economy
    The fall out from this default would having rippling effects home and aboard.
    Notice Commissiong a vocal opponent of past govt initiatives voice is missing while barbadian households become crippled with austerity measures


  31. Say the government is taken to court and forced to clawback from decisions taken, what next. The reserves falling (subtract IMF inflows + SD). And debt to GDP is 170%. This requires non partisan input.

    Bushie your earlier comment to Hal is bang on the money.


  32. “Parkland will also get a call option for purchase of the remaining 25 per cent stake in the company.”

    Ah wonder if that will then include the oil terminal when desperation hits the government to sell.


  33. Plse read up on Argentina after it defaulted and how it was chased by predator hedge funds. All these funds do is buy debt – and over-priced homes in Barbados, a form of moneylaundering.


  34. David your frustration level is on an all time high
    You need to calm your nerves some what because your expectations for change will not result in what you had expected
    The good ole days of putting things off for tommorow has finally caught up with barbados


  35. With all these lawyers infesting the parliament and all round Mia like FLIES…they would still think they can fool us into believing that they did not know they will be sued in international courts for the island’s DEFAULT on debt..

  36. William Skinner Avatar

    One man a few decades ago opened a car dealership sellling Suzuki cars. Just heard he sold one of his companies for 1.2 billion USA dollars. That is over 2 billion Bds dollars. An entire country , in the meantime, borrows 249 million US or 500 million Bds and we shout : Genious , Great , exceptional .
    Go figure……,,,,,,


  37. Interesting difference of opinion between Mascoll and Stephens. The buzz on the ground supports Stephens.


  38. @Redguard

    If you attack the perception that Barbados has been a successful model island up to about 2006/7 you deflate the psyche of a proud people and leave us exposed!

  39. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ WARU at 12:50 PM

    Financialisation of the Barbados economy is here to stay. We like it so. We can continue to direct our efforts on petty political matters . We are lucky it did not include the Oil Terminal.

  40. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Bush Tea
    Atherley zooming in on social media; Caswell missing .
    These days are funny nights


  41. Mascoll remains one of our outstanding public economists; Stephens is right on this issue, by default, but he is not a bright economist. He is popular because he is often (too often?)used by the economically illiterate media. They need to get new ideas and new forms of analyses.


  42. @Vincent

    Saved by an election or Comissong?


  43. If you attack the perception that Barbados has been a successful model island up to about 2006/7 you deflate the psyche of a proud people and leave us exposed!(Quote)

    Welcome to the real world.


  44. As a matter of fact…let’s see if despite lawsuits against the island for DEFAULTING, let’s see if Mia will STILL stubbornly refuse to pursue DLP criminals and their co-conspirators to recover all the people’s STOLEN money.

    This will be really, really good to watch..

  45. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU at 1 :13 PM

    Neither. Saved by Jeff Cumberbatch.


  46. “We are lucky it did not include the Oil Terminal.”

    Don’t count you luck just yet..there is still 25% of SOL to be bought, it will also be interesting to see how that oil terminal case winds down with FTC I believe it was..

    …..dollars to donuts that case with the other gas station company challenging the sale, a French company…RUBIS…now I remember … is still stuck in the nonfunctional Supreme Court..the only reason it was not included in the sale to Canada..

    Was it not Fruendolittle who was pissed that FTC was holding up the oil terminal sale.

    ..did he know Simpson was planning to sell SOL to the Canadians…ah will bet my last dollar not, Simpson would never had told him that little secret, why should they.


  47. @David

    We have been exposed for decades now but 2009/2010 is when it really became obvious. Mr. Thompson refused to take any decisive actions, Mr. Stuart ditto and Ms. Mottley who had ten years to formulate a plan has only exposed us more.

    Time to stop negative benchmarking, all that has done is moved the standard for mediocrity further and further back

    And the truth is we stopped punching decades ago (After Tom Adams). All we do now is run talk

  48. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Hal Austin at 1 :00 PM

    Not money laundering. It is speculative financing. They are using the new financial engineering contrivances. The real estate bubble in Barbados will soon burst . Let us pray that NIS will not be part of the collateral damage.


  49. https://barbadostoday.bb/2018/02/15/dlp-plot/

    It makes perfect sense to see what the Mia opposition had to say back then about the oil terminal sale to Simpson…..

    “The Opposition Barbados Labour Party (BLP) is accusing the Freundel Stuart administration of plotting to bypass the ruling by the Fair Trading Commission (FTC) on the sale of Barbados National Terminal Company Ltd to the Sir Kiffin Simpson-led Sol Group.

    The BLP’s Kerrie Symmonds said in Parliament yesterday that he had evidence Government was contemplating changing the law so the sale could proceed, despite the FTC’s ruling on November 28 last year that the deal could not go through in its current form because it was “anti-competitive, restricts competition or potential competition”.

    In fact, during debate on the Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure for 2018 to 2019 Symmonds claimed to have had a copy of a January 19, 2018, letter from Sol to the ministries of Finance, Energy, and Industry and International Business, seeking confirmation on a draft legislation.”


  50. It makes even more sense to see what lies Simpson was saying back then too..

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2017/12/01/fear-not-4/

    “Fear not!

    Article by
    Barbados Today Published on
    December 1, 2017
    It is still not saying whether it is willing to go ahead with the planned purchase of the Barbados National Terminal Company Ltd (BNTCL) or whether Government’s asking price of US$100 million would be met.

    However, in a statement today, the Kyffin Simpson-led Sol group remained adamant that the multi-million dollar deal would be of benefit to the entire country, and it would not place Sol’s competitors at a disadvantage.

    Businessman Sir Kyffin Simpson
    The Fair Trading Commission (FTC) ruled last week that the proposed acquisition of BNTCL by Sol could only go forward if certain conditions were met.

    In handing down its decision, the FTC stipulated that there could be no 15-year moratorium on the construction of new terminal facilities.”

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