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Four transformational truths are Timing, Innovation, Strategy and CollaborationThe Elements of Transformation Strategy

There is the proven that individuals and businesses who continually adapt to the environment in which they operate will likely succeed. If we try to fit how the local public sector has been managing its business compared to the private sector and the world it gives currency to the use of the word anachronistic. Prime Minister Mia Mottley has been a frequent user of the word of late.

Unfortunately as part of government’s objective to modernize processes in the public sector, hundreds of low level, low skilled workers have been retrenched. Understandably concerned Barbadians have inquired why send home workers from the bottom if the exercise is about cutting cost? We have to protect the most vulnerable and we will be holding the government to its word that BERT has an adequate safety net included.

Honest Barbadians will admit  however if the public service is to operate efficiently in the current environment there must be a job redesign. We have listened to successive governments braying about improving business facilitation. It is not the fault of the workers although the blogmaster will suggest this is where trade unions- the workers representative- have failed in the last 25 years to strategically add value to the process of nation building.

It is an indictment on the leadership of Barbados that in 2018 government departments still record transactions in ledgers- documents still require the ‘lick’ of a stamp. The blogmaster supports the requirement to urgently transform from the analogue to the digital. Leveraging technology to efficiently deliver services is a no-brainer.  What is difficult to understand is how come successive Barbados governments have invested billions in education per capita and lag scores of other countries that have expended less!

During a recent press conference Sir Hiliary and Eudine Barriteau of the University of the West Indies (UWI) highlighted that the regional university was ranked 591 out of the 1,258 in the  Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings. Of interest is that both of them touched on the ‘technology and innovation park‘ which is promised to open in Bridgetown in January 2019.

In the link provided we are informed the facility will house classes to support a Bsc. Software Engineering degree programme and also technology start-up bushiness to conduct research and development in conjunction with students at the UWI. She also revealed that talks have started with Gabriel Abed of Bitt Inc about supporting new tech start ups.  Beckles also shared this is being done with the cooperation of Chinese Universities.

In BU’s most recent blog – Senator Rawdon Adams Sobering Intervention in the Debt Restructure Debate  Adams asked what kind of Barbados do we need to build now that we have dismantled what was to deliver on the kind of life we want (words to this effect).
Barrow presided over an agrarian economy, Tom Adams shifted to a mix of agrarian and services and Owen Arthur went the whole hog by switching out to a services economy. Given the suspicion how the world views jurisdictions that provide services for international business companies there is clearly an urgent requirement to incorporate new business lines to diversify and hopefully spur economic growth. Feedback so far is that the RERE programme is only a baby step in the right direction, it has to go a lot further.  Making Bridgetown a smart city is a Barbados Labour Party (BLP) manifesto promise. Ronald Jones had responsibility for Human Development and innovation. What was achieved in this regard is not worth mentioning. Pushing more ‘coding‘ in schools is a national imperative.
Although mentioning China is a hot button word for many- a hegemonist is a hegemonist- a look at how it has been integrating technology to create opportunities for its people is instructive.

 


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396 responses to “Time to Build Barbados Silicon Valley”


  1. Donna

    “We should also seeking to reduce our food import bill”

    You really dreaming if think for one moment that you are going to get any of these young people labouring in the hot Bajan sun…it is not going to happen … so you better rethink the idea of producing more food locally to reduce the food import bill.


  2. Give me the vote and watch muh. We got this. We hitting de ground running.

    You get the drift.


  3. Does it have to be in the hot sun?


  4. @ Lexicon,

    Young people will labour in the hot sun if they own the land they are farming.


  5. Donna

    In 1986 a good friend of mine and his brother started one of not if not the biggest Chicken plant in St. Thomas … I think it was called Uncle Wilbert … named after their uncle… and within five years the Chicken Processing Plant went under. Now I said that to say this: some have tried to produced locally but without much success….


  6. Hants

    When last have spoken to a young Bajan regarding working the land in the sun Bajan Sun? We ll a Bajan girl from St. John told me last year that her grandmother told her mother that not one of her of grandchildren should ever step foot in that hot Bajan sun to work the land.


  7. Hants

    That is a real oldie dey muh brother.

    Promises,promises,promises.hahahah

    Never mind – you gimme de vote and watch muh.


  8. re The media is doing what it always do, allow itself to be manipulated by people with money and influence. It does not change the underlying issues. TRUE NO DOUBT……BUT……..
    QUESTION AFTER 10 YEARS DOES BU AFFECT THE UNDERLYING ISSUES? IF SO, HOW SO?……….APART FROM THE DAILY DRIVEL OF TALK, TALK AND MORE TALK USUALLY POINTLESS AND UNRELATED TO THE UNDERLYING ISSUES


  9. @Talking Loud Saying Nothing October 22, 2018 2:02 AM @ Simple Simon & Piece, I have got to disappoint both of you. I know a number of people who teach english as a foreign language both in the UK and outside. A small minority of them are black and they all have the same story. It is a fact that foreigners do not want to learn english from blacks even though their mother tongue might be english. You will be hard pressed to find a black english teacher in China, Japan or in the middle east.”

    Off the top of my head I know at least three black Bajans who are teaching English in Japan. All with university degrees from UWI. Some of them HC people. All black people, not a brown skin fella in the lot. The Japanese Embassy here is advertising virtually everyday for people with university degrees to teach English in Japan. I don’t think that it is realistic that the Japanese Embassy expects to recruit a whole lot of white people in 95% black Barbados. A sibling worked in Saudi Arabia [that hotbed of liberalism and religious tolerance , lolll!!!] for almost two decades. No did not marry a Saudi. Did NOT convert to Islam. Lolll!!! Did not marry an Englishman either lolll!!! Did not convert to the English brand of Christianity either although living there for decades.It is not about foreigners “liking” us whatever that is. It is about the MONEY. When we want liking or love we get it at home. A niece is presently teaching English from at her home to elementary school children in China. The good thing about 4 year olds is that they are not yet racist. The son of a friend married a Japanese woman and is living and working in Japan.

    So yes t is still a racist world. But there are some changes.

    Note that I am not saying that racism does not exist. But on my jobs I have never cared who liked me or did not like me. Lemme do the work, tek your money and be outta there.

    Fat black woman attitude. Mercenary. Lolll!!!


  10. @Hal Austin October 22, 2018 9:13 AM “Are you bonkers are just plain stupid? ”

    Neither.

    You made a comment to the effect that the Canadians, being a non-world power should keep out of “big people business” At the time the Canadian Foreign Minister had reprimanded the Saudis for the imprisonment of an activist.

    Maybe David of BU can find your comments. I am just too busy now to take you on.

    My questions still stand. Do you still think that the Canadian Foreign Minister was wrong in her assessment of the Saudis. Do you still support the Saudis?


  11. @Hal Austin October 22, 2018 9:13 AM. “Similar to the attempted intervention by the dozy Canadians and EU about same sex marriages in Barbados.”

    And by the way the Canadians and the EU were right to reprimand the Barbados government for denying gay people the right to marry.

    And the Canadians were right to reprimand the Saudi government for their imprisonment of activist.


  12. @Lexicon October 22, 2018 11:46 AM “her grandmother told her mother that not one of her of grandchildren should ever step foot in that hot Bajan sun to work the land.

    Grandmother was an idiot.

    Sometimes our sweet beloved grannies are idiots.

  13. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Lexicon at 11 : 46 AM

    My man you mashing the crease. How do you not know that our ladies of lighter shade of pale from my parish, St. John, have a proclivity to get skin cancer? That is good preventative advice from a caring grandmother.


  14. This is how we roll. Champagne taste.

    “The curtain came down on the annual Food and Rum Festival last night with the much-anticipated Taste the Spirits of Polo event.”

    The ladies in the photo looking sweet.

    https://www.barbadosadvocate.com/news/food-fun-and-fashion%C2%A0


  15. Hants
    October 22, 2018 11:27 AM

    @ Lexicon,
    Young people will labour in the hot sun if they own the land they are farming.

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

    No they won’t, they will be looking to sell the land for development!!


  16. Agree with your view John. Have a stroll on the grounds of the primary schools for example, the plots used to teach agricultural science are runaway with bush.


  17. then according to the enlightened here, THERE IS NO LEADERSHIP TO INSPIRE THE CHILDREN EVEN IN THE PRIMARY SCHOOL AGE GROUP

    THEY HAVE NO INTEREST IN GRASS OR PLIMPLERS AH LIE?


  18. GP
    don’t you find Bajans hilarious! Silicon Valley? wuhlah!


  19. @ Georgie Porgie,

    BAJANS WILL BECOME FARMERS WHEN THERE IS NO FOREX TO BUY FOOD.


  20. When there is no forex we will lose weight like Venezuelans.


  21. Hants October 22, 2018 5:32 PM

    @ Georgie Porgie,
    BAJANS WILL BECOME FARMERS WHEN THERE IS NO FOREX TO BUY FOOD.
    PLEASE KINDLY NOTE THAT Georgie Porgie ACTUALLY DID SOME FARMING


  22. JOHN

    I think for some young people selling weed is much more profitable than selling land… and Vincent Codrington … from what I have gathered the grandmother’s concerned was centered more on the nature of the work rather than on the detrimental effects one is subject to when in full exposture to the sun.


  23. @ Georgie Porgie,

    I ALSO DID SOME FARMING IN BARBADOS.


  24. @Hants

    A vibrant agriculture sector is important for food security, reduce imports/foreign outflow etc. Unfortunately it is not transformational given what is required to support our way of life and the remediation that is required.


  25. @ David,

    Cannabis is the future of a vibrant agriculture sector.


  26. @ David
    A vibrant agriculture sector is important for food security, reduce imports/foreign outflow etc. Unfortunately it is not transformational…
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    It is even more important than ‘transformational’…
    It is foundational.


  27. @Ping Pong October 22, 2018 5:34 PM “When there is no forex we will lose weight like Venezuelans.”

    The Venezuelans can slip across a land border in order to buy food or find work.

    How does on slip across 90 miles of Atlantic Ocean?


  28. In general,
    Besides making sport in “de rum shop”, I saw BU as a place where we cant put our ideas. A place for brainstorming, because we have a few good brains in “de rum shop”. I saw the “silicon valley” as a man throwing a pebble into the water and watching the ripple it cause.

    I do not know if we can come up with short term solutions for 50 years of mismanagement. I think we will have to plant those trees and wait for them to bear fruit.

    We also have to look at what was tried before and figure out why it failed. PLT may be on to something with his coding, but he may have to fine tune it. We cannot match up to other countries man to man. He (Bajans) has to find a space and exploit it,

    It pains me so say this but RA (what if his last name was Holder) may be on to something. I wish that he and his team enjoy great technical success and honest financial rewards. Perhaps, some young Bajans may acquire some level of coding expertise from his group,

  29. William Skinner Avatar

    @ TheOGazerts

    The problem is that we keep playing musical chairs with the same people that have mismanaged the country for the last fifty years.
    They are totally incapable of changing their ways. The only way forward is to radically change the education system and hopefully produce future leaders, who will be more inclined to be innovative and creative.
    From where I sit if 2033 is the appointed time to see the light; we are in serious trouble.
    After 2033 what? Our problem goes beyond forex and trying to meet IMF targets. We need a radical overhaul of how we are educated to see the world and ourselves.
    We can’t advance a people by telling them: smile for the tourist and keep the country clean for the tourists.
    It comes back to Errol Barrow’s question: What kind of mirror image do we have of ourselves?
    Step one: Ensure that the educational system is in tune with a new national plan of self sufficiency via the full utilization of our limited resources.
    Step two: Harness the creative power of our citizens especially those between the ages of 14 and 39. Create a new vibrant generation within that demographic.


  30. Bush Tea
    October 22, 2018 8:57 PM

    @ David
    A vibrant agriculture sector is important for food security, reduce imports/foreign outflow etc. Unfortunately it is not transformational…
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    It is even more important than ‘transformational’…
    It is foundational.

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

    Slavery actually worked!!!!

    It was an early form of the socialist experiment!!

    No joke!!!

    Each large plantation was a “state” within a “state”!!

    It housed, clothed and fed its members from cradle to grave.

    Everybody benefited to various extents, …. some more than others!!

    The young worked to support the old.


  31. No John slavery did for work for the enslaved. They could have fed, clothed and housed themselves without being enslaved. Slavery was not an early socialist experiment. Slavery was capitalism at its worst, its most extreme.

    And in any event we are not going back there. If you try that we will kill you. Death also works for those with extremist wishes.


  32. Simple Simon

    You have to be specific when you refer to the term Slavery because it meant different things throughout different period in our human history.
    Biblical Slavery was totally different from Islamic Slavery … which proceeded European Chattel Slavery… which had within it the economic incentive you spoke of above … And last but not least there are those among who believe that the Irish Indentured amounted to nothing more than White Slavery
    … with proceeded or came just after the Atlantic Slave Trade…


  33. Simple Simon

    And then the Roman Empire practiced a totally different type of Slavery than the ones made mentioned to above …


  34. Some are educated to the height of ignorance.

    What next? The origin of the word slave and how many different words we can get from slave…….


  35. “And in any event we are not going back there. If you try that we will kill you. Death also works for those with extremist wishes.”

    Damn straight. John will be the first to be taken out.

    “The problem is that we keep playing musical chairs with the same people that have mismanaged the country for the last fifty years.

    They are totally incapable of changing their ways. The only way forward is to radically change the education system and hopefully produce future leaders, who will be more inclined to be innovative and creative.”

    Damn straight. ..and the future generations will be much different to the current and past generations and are quite likely to do some taking out of lowlife, corrupt lawyer/ministers and their thieving friends and dirtbag criminal masters in the minority community as well…

    The crap BLP is doing currently will not be tolerated indefinitely. ..as long as they know.


  36. “Slavery actually worked!!!!…… It was an early form of the socialist experiment!!……No joke!!! ”

    Hmmmmmmmm!!!!!!

    I’m shocked that after the recorded accounts of slavery and its psychological affect on the enslaved, in the year 2018……a supposedly sane individual could actually think and write the above comments.

    How the hell could slavery be considered “an early form of the socialist experiment,” when the enslaved were not considered as human beings……but chattel……property that could be bought and sold.

    I’m now convinced that John is not only a racist, but he’s also a “pure bred jackass.”


  37. TheOGazerts

    You are ignorant of the concept of Slave … because for one… a biblical slave enjoyed far greart rights than a chattel slave… Also there were severe penalties the master of a biblical slave faced if he mistreated his slave …. And a slave in the Roman Empire was more like a servant who was allowed to go home at the end of his work day…


  38. Artax

    You are specifically talking about a chattel slave … but far different rules applied to the biblical slave as well as the slave in the Roman Empire…


  39. @John
    Slavery actually worked!!!
    +++++++++
    Is that the Quaker view? Or the view espoused by Rush Limbaugh? This is really the age of enlightenment but I can say that I am not surprised that you harbour such views.

    Mississippi and Alabama are calling they want members for their White Citizens Council.


  40. Lexicon

    I’m sure that everyone knows the different categories of slavery……so there isn’t any reason for definitions or explanations of each, whether it is indentured, Roman Empire, Islamic or Biblical.

    John responded to Bush Tea’s comments about agriculture by making a reference to slavery. Anyone of reasonable thought would interpret his comment as a reference to chattel slavery……..

    ………..especially taking into consideration his “pet subject” is the Quakers and their alleged assistance to the enslaved.

  41. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ William Skinner

    Kind sir, I have noted that you ALWAYS POST an unerring message.

    Time and time again you can be depended on to ignore the bleating sheeple (which the Honourable Blogmaster calls the “class idiots”) and stay on task and address what our problems are.

    You said and I quote

    “…Step one: Ensure that the educational system is in tune with a new national plan of self sufficiency via the full utilization of our limited resources…”

    De ole man wonders if our newest minister of Education has the grey matter to assess what you and a few others have been bellowing from the wilderness for several years now?

    Might I humbly suggest something Mr. Skinner?

    You need to write an outline for these people to come here on BU and see and go away , COPY THEN BRING TO THE NATIONAL STAGE AS THEIRS

    That is the modus of “class idiots ” unfortunately, they are incapable of making anything so they must copy what they see AND COPY IT BADLY.

    EDUTECH was such a model of copying gone bad because it was not based on any pedagogical insights nor did it benefit from “educators “.

    Note that I said educators as opposed to teachers and you would know the subtle difference Mr. Skinner.

    If it is not too much of a bother and vexation to the spirit, would you just write an outline to explain what this new leap has to be lest the posturers and New March Visionaries of the Internet Cut and Paste Innivation Brigade, are going to be relied on in the Mugabe administration that is to roll out in 2019.

    May the Good Lord save us from these posturers.

    Then you continue and de ole man quotes you again

    “…Step two: Harness the creative power of our citizens especially those between the ages of 14 and 39. Create a new vibrant generation within that demographic…”

    I am going to share something with you.

    [[ I am using square brackets because I only want you to see it.

    A few years ago, BIDC launched an exercise where they went around the island tekking the names and profiles of bajans under a pretext of compiling a national database of the creatives in Barbados.

    The reason that his WILL FAIL Mr. Skinner is that, IF DE OLE MAN WERE TO WRITE A FEW WORDS TO SHOW YOU A SEED SUFFICIENCY PLAN, I guarantee you that, unless you yourself were creatively imbued, YOU WOULD NOT SEE IT!!!

    Over 200 plus entries above Bush Tea gave the formula for a National Innovation and Creativity Facilitation Council which would form part of the foundation for the Step 2 you outline above

    But, and here de ole man is going to post the $6 million question to you good sir, what is the methodology that you will use to choose the persons who will man the organization that is going to identify the people with the creativity to drive the Next Wave???]]

    De grandson is working on a poster for you that was generated as a result of something you said earlier elsewhere on BU, that item should be finished today.

    Depending on which of the BU BORG is on duty hehehehdh, it should be visible shortly thereafter.

    I am inclined to try to write up an article to assist in that process of “creativity harnessing” but de ole man sort of busy till the 6th heheheh.

    I will however try to do this soon.


  42. Don’t blame the American Whites for enslaving blacks from African …blame the Barbadians White who taught the Americans Whites the concept of chattel slavery…just study the history of North Carolina from the 1960s…


  43. Here we go again allowing an important topic to be hijacked by a rehash over a trivial point. A people get the government they deserve.


  44. How’s that silicon valley thing going? Let’s see, following previous posts, Barbados needs to change its educational system so as to produce more compliant and productive slaves of the biblical variety to work in agriculture presumably in a place called silly-con valley. For the urgent attention of PM Mottley.

  45. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Piece
    Thanks for your compliments. Back in 1984, I sent such an outline to the Task Force on Unemployment. I will try to dust it off and tweak it into an article.


  46. @ William
    Boss…
    NOTHING (that is within our control) from 1984 is currently relevant….
    So please start fresh with that article…..

  47. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    You sound like a certain world leader @BushT with your disavowal of an ’84 era plan from the politician Skinner.

    His plan may indeed have some relevance today just as a nuclear treaty signed in late ’80s still has some value despite a current decision to abort that formalized plan.

    There is always some modicum of merit to WELL DEFINED, PROPERLY PREPARED plans….so let’s see what Mr Skinner is made of 🤣.

  48. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Bush Tea
    @ de pedantic Dribbler

    Merit in what Bush Tea says but the foundation of radical change is still relevant ,taking into consideration, that we have not radically touched the educational system since the early sixties.
    The outline will therefore be “tweaked” bearing in mind our current realities


  49. @Lexicon October 23, 2018 4:14 AM

    Thanks Lexicon. But neither John nor I were talking about obscure periods of slavery in Greek, Roman or Ancient Islamic times. Although it is always wrong to enslave any of God’s children.

    My grandmother was born in 1879. She died in 1969, two years before I became an adult. In 1969 my six elder siblings were already adults. I was talking about the slavery imposed on her grandparents, and the inter-generational poverty her family, my family suffered. I am talking about a beloved grandmother born 41 years after the abolition of slavery in BARBADOS. A woman who worked at Mangrove Plantation, St. Peter all the days of her life and at the end of it had only an 18 x 10 chattle house with holes in the floor, and a packed rock step. A hard working woman, without any bad habits.

    I won’t let people like John get away with pretending that “slavery worked”

    My question to him and to people who think like him is “slavery worked for whom?”

    The people who owned Mangrove, St. Peter Plantation?

    Because it certainly did not work for my grandmother’s grandparents who worked hard all the days of their lives and left nothing materially to show that they had ever lived.


  50. @Lexicon October 23, 2018 8:19 AM “Don’t blame the American Whites for enslaving blacks from African.”

    But the American whites DID enslave blacks from Africa. So who is to take the blame if not them?

    And American whites of that era happily enslaved African and American born blacks because it was profitable for them to do so.

    TransAtlantic slavery was entirely about MONEY for WHITE people.

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