Submitted by Tee White

On 17 May, an IMF team led by Bert van Selm, a Dutch economist and senior IMF functionary, held a press conference in Barbados’ capital, Bridgetown. At this, they announced their findings, after a 10 day review of the country’s implementation of its IMF approved austerity programme, the Barbados’ Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) plan. A statement issued by the IMF team declared that the government had made good progress in its implementation of the plan and had met all its targets up to the end of March 2019. To get a better idea of what these targets mean, it is necessary to review the IMF Executive Board’s approval, on 1 October 2018, of a BD$ 580 million (US$290 million) loan to Barbados under an Extended Fund Facility.

This agreement bears all the hallmarks of an IMF neo-liberal plan aimed at eroding the living standards of working class people and prioritising the funnelling of wealth out of the economy into the hands of local and foreign moneylenders. The agreement states clearly that its primary aim is to restore Barbados’ ‘debt sustainability’. Therefore, its priority is to ensure that the Barbados government is able to pay its debt repayments on time and in full, regardless of the social consequences for the country. It is not interested in consolidating and extending the social and economic gains that the people of Barbados have made over the last century, often at great sacrifice, or even in getting the country into a position where it could be debt free. Its intention is to make sure that Barbados remains a dependable revenue stream for those who make their living, not by working, but by living off interest payments. Unable to state its aims openly and honestly, the IMF resorts to easily recognised euphemisms to signal its intentions. Among its proposed measures to put Barbados’ public debt on a ‘sustainable path’ are ‘fiscal consolidation’, ‘reducing transfers to state-owned enterprises’, ‘mergers and divestment’ of state-owned enterprises, ‘reduction of the public sector wage bill’; ‘increase in user fees’ for accessing public services and ‘financial and labour market liberalization’. These euphemistic terms, like the use of ‘collateral damage’ in imperial wars of aggression, attempt to hide the human consequences of government policies through the use of innocent sounding words. However, they have very serious implications for working people in Barbados and represent a direct assault on the social and economic gains that have been achieved over the last century. They signal cuts in government spending on essential services such as public transport, privatisation of public services, redundancies for public sector workers, increased fees for accessing public services and granting finance capitalists greater freedom to do as they wish, while eroding the terms and conditions of workers, thereby making them less able to defend their interests.

The question arises as to what prompts the IMF to propose such a draconian assault on the living standards of working class Bajans. After all, although the country is classified by the World Bank as a high income country, the standard of living of the overwhelming majority of its citizens is most certainly not similar to that of people living in the developed capitalist countries. A trip on public transport or a visit to the island’s only public hospital would soon make that crystal clear. The IMF’s narrative is that the country’s debt burden is unsustainable and the measures outlined above are needed to make it sustainable. But is that what is really needed? When the current BLP government was elected in May 2018, the Prime Minister, Mia Mottley, stated that Barbados’ debt, when taking arrears into account, reached 175% of GDP, making it the third most highly indebted country in the world after Greece and Japan. Referring to the burden of the debt on Barbadian society, she declared, “”Today, servicing the debt consumes more money than the entire central Government’s wage bill. It consumes more than our education and health budget combined. It is a tight chain strangling our throat and has for a while”. It is, therefore, evident that the nub of the problem facing the government’s finances is the unbearable weight of the debt and that this is the problem that needs to be solved. The issue is not to use the debt as a justification for attacking the working people so that the debt can be sustainable. The issue is that the country needs to be freed from the debt noose that is strangling it and draining its wealth away. The IMF Executive have a different aim in mind and their statement declares, “”At 7½ percent of GDP, transfers from the central government to state-owned enterprises are very high, and a major contributor to fiscal risks”. This is where they want to direct their fire, not at the debt servicing which amounted to 17% of the country’s GDP.

In October 2018, the government announced that it had reached a debt restructuring agreement with its domestic creditors. These included local banks, insurance companies, charities, churches, cooperatives, credit unions, individual citizens and its own National Insurance Scheme and Central Bank. This restructuring, according to Deloitte, affected some 85% of the government’s debt, leaving the 15% owed to international creditors to be restructured. The government’s debt restructuring policy has been based on reducing the payable interest rate and extending the length of time over which the debt is repaid. Its 2019-2020 budget projects that, as a result, annual debt servicing will drop to BD$ 772 million, just under 8% of GDP, from its high of 17% in the 2017-18 budget. It is worth noting that even this reduced debt burden consumes more of the government’s finances than all its transfers to state owned enterprises which so concern the IMF and its Executive Board. In addition, the IMF’s BD$580 million loan, which is dispensed over the 4 year life of its Extended Fund Facility, actually amounts to no more than BD$145 million or 1.45% of GDP annually. Therefore its impact on balancing the government’s finances appears minimal. It is rather ironic, therefore, that the IMF is playing such a significant role in this issue and that while it is demanding austerity to address the country’s debt problems, it is itself adding more debt to the pile.

An analysis of the government’s finances does not justify the current austerity onslaught being waged against the working people of Barbados. It most certainly does not justify the efforts to roll back the social and economic gains that have been made at great human cost. Bajans must demand an end to the austerity measures and the defence of our people’s economic and social gains.

138 responses to “Closer Look at IMF’s Austerity Programme for Barbados”


  1. @ Tee White.

    That’s exactly what was allowed to be repeated In government on the whole and today we now have to not only repay the debt but look for the money to rebuild these entities through restructuring. It’s a double whammy, we have the accumulated debt to service but at the same time we have nothing to show for it and now have to find more money to buy new buses, garbage trucks etc. Plus if you take that way of management and spread it across most of the public entities, you can imagine the total mess we are in. You are right this nonesence has been going on for years and no government ever held those responsible accountable.

    In closing let’s look at the central bank. How could a central bank lose money when every single transaction is profit generating and they have a monopoly on the market they are in? That to me was the best one of all

  2. Freedom Crier Avatar

    Tee White May 22, 2019 11:37 AM “@ Mariposa
    “I share your outrage about the sentence handed down to the tourist sexual assaulter. It is a grim reminder of where we are as a society.”

    AS USUAL, RACE REARED ITS UGLY HEAD.

    The Story about the British visitor who was charged with assaulting a women in Sol Top Rock station. It was upsetting that a man would treat a woman like that.

    TODAY, WE READ HE HAS BEEN FREED OF ALL CHARGES BECAUSE CCTV SHOWED SHE WAS LYING.

    THAT HAS DONE IRREPARABLE DAMAGE TO THIS ISLANDS TOURISM. HE IS GOING BACK TO ENGLAND TODAY AND MILLIONS SPENT ON ADVERTISING THIS ISLAND CANNOT REPAIR THE NEGATIVE ADVERTISING SHE HAS CAUSED TO FOREX…TOURISM.

    We are trying to repair damage done in the last ten years and now we get this. The entire island benefits from Tourism, but ONE ACTION LIKE THIS CAN PUSH US FURTHER INTO THE WELL THAT WE ARE TRYING TO CLIMB OUT OF. The woman should be charged.

    DOES BU BLOGGERS CARE FOR THE FACTS? NO IT DOES NOT FIT THE NARRATIVE OF TEE WHITE LIES & ILK.

    https://www.bruceonpolitics.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/race-card-a-650.jpg


  3. The government didn’t repeat anything. The people as a result of disengagement contributed to the decline. We have to continue to educate the people the importance of executing on being civic-minded.


  4. David that’s true in that we need to try and get people to look at issues more practically and avoid party loyalty. The thing is though I find that all conversations seem to always end up being about the BLP did this and the DLP that. I also believe politicians know that too and use it as a method of deflection with great results. The problems we are dealing with today are probably more than 20 years old, the problem is we never demanded changed or accoutablility. Year after year tye Auditor General brought these issues to our attention and what did we do? it now as a result snow balled into what we now have.

    That is why I feel forums like these are so useful for discussion and thought sharing. Call me the eternal optimist but I hope some day they will be used free of partly loyalty as well.


  5. @John A

    Agree discussion is useful. We have the attention of the political class, they read and participate. There is sufficient track record here to demonstrate that BU is a forum useful for giving a pulse check of the wider population.

  6. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    A former PM asked “how did we get back here”?
    Possibly the author’s most telling insight came in his rebuttal of 10.18 pm, where he wrote “defending the social and economic gains that we have inherited”.
    Inheritances are frequently blown, because the inheritors never earned them in the first place, their foreparents did. Rather, they feel entitled, because they have always enjoyed these benefits. They are worthy of, and deserve them.

    Whether personal or corporate or governmental, the crux comes when we SPEND more than we EARN, or have saved. It is that simple.

    We can debate the components of earnings and expenditures. What is non-negotiable, is we must balance at some foreseeable point. OR we will lose those inherited gains, we will blow them. These gains are not guarantees, but privileges.

    And for those who think the IMF is a badword, and I’m not suggesting it isn’t, they are the lender of Last Resort. Balance your financial affairs, and you will not need them. This is the time to determine priorities. Is it continued free education or multiple diplomatic and trade missions around the globe? Is it a car or a luxury car? Is it universal healthcare or 1000 public employees? The choices go on and on.


  7. I think too the powers that be need to also stop mentioning things until such time as they are ready for implementation. This issue about bajans holding USD accounts was brought up in March’ s budget and we are nearly in June with no date set for implementation. That can be done quickly and would immediately allow badly needed foreign exchange into the system. I believe they should also allow all foreigners who are property owners here to also open USD accounts based on a current Land tax bill and passport. Lets get some hard currency from the million dollar mansions on the west coast paid into the landtax using USD instead.


  8. @NO
    This is the time to determine priorities. Is it continued free education
    +++++++++++++++++++
    For uttering those words you are now on the official black list i.e. to be arrested on sight and transported to the crow bar hotel aka Dodds. Don’t you know that “free education” is a core plank of the Gov’t come IMF or high water? As Hammer sang “Can’t touch this” I continue to be amazed that “free education” included post graduate degrees while students in countries with far more resources are burdened with student loans for undergraduate degrees.

    There is an alternate universe vibe, yesterday the blogmaster wrote that LIAT was not set up to make a profit.

    #tearingmyhairout


  9. @ Sargeant,

    It is worse than that. The brain drain from the Caribbean is per capita one of the highest in the world. In other words, hard-up Caribbean taxpayers are paying to educate workers for the Canadian, US and UK markets. You can’t make it up.
    Where are our clever economists and politicians?

  10. Barbados 2019 Avatar

    @ John A

    David that’s true in that we need to try and get people to look at issues more practically and avoid party loyalty. The thing is though I find that all conversations seem to always end up being about the BLP did this and the DLP that. I also believe politicians know that too and use it as a method of deflection with great results. The problems we are dealing with today are probably more than 20 years old, the problem is we never demanded changed or accoutablility. Year after year the Auditor General brought these issues to our attention and what did we do? it now as a result snow balled into what we now have.
    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    BEST STRATEGY FOR WEAK MINDED PEOPLE UNFORTUNATELY MOST LOCAL VOTERS FALL IN THIS CATEGORY.

    WHICH IS WHY BARBADOS IS A FAILED ISLAND WITH DEAD WEIGHT POLITICIANS STRATEGY OF DIVIDE AND RULE WHILST FLEECING FOR PERSONAL GAINS VIA CORRUPTION, BRIBE TAKING AND KICKBACKS.

    EVER NOTICE THAT POLITICIANS ON BOTH SIDES AFTER BEING ELECTED PUNCH ABOVE THEIR WEIGHT AND BECOME OVERWEIGHT WHILST THE MASSES OF VOTERS BECOME UNDERWEIGHT AND MUCH LIGHTER IN THEIR POCKETS.


  11. @ Barbados 2019

    Yes that’s true but as David said we have only ourselves to blame for this happening. I can’t remember which politician it was that said bajans had a 7 day memory. On day 1 they hot and vexx and by day 7 they can’t remember what they were vexx about on day 1.lol

    Sad but true unfortunately.

  12. Barbados 2019 Avatar

    @ John A

    I will not accept ANY of that blame because I HAVE NEVER VOTED.

    I GREW UP IN A POOR HOUSEHOLD WHERE THE ADULTS ALL VOTED FOR THE DLP WHO WERE SUPPOSED TO HELP POOR PEOPLE,

    WE REMAINED POOR IN THE HOUSEHOLD.

    AS AN ADULT I HAVE INTERACTED AND DONATED TO BOTH MAJOR POLITICAL PARTIES AND REALISED THAT NEITHER HAD THE PUBLIC BEST INTEREST AT HEART.

    I ALSO NEVER SAW POLITICIANS OR POLITICAL PARTIES AS ENTITIES THAT I NEEDED TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN LIFE.

    THAT IS WHY I AM WELL EDUCATED AND SUCCESSFUL AS I NEVER DRANK ANY OF THE KOOLAID.


  13. @ Barbados 2019

    Well all that may be true but seeing what you said, don’t you think then you should try and help those blinded by political loyalty to see and understand issues that may escape their grasp, as they may not be as well educated or exposed as you?

    I differ on that approach, i think we must try using facts and data to help those less versed to think for themselves and in so doing become independent of ” drinking the coolaid” as you put it. I always believe even the most stubborn person has the quality of reason buried deep inside them. I make it a practice talking across to people as opposed to down to them, as in business I can tell you from my experience some dam good ideas come from the man on the shop floor. Unfortunately few people stop to talk to them.

    Having said that we are all entitled to our view and approach, as that is what makes discussions like these interesting.


  14. Bravo, John A! Bravo!

  15. Barbados 2019 Avatar

    @ John A

    Well all that may be true but seeing what you said, don’t you think then you should try and help those blinded by political loyalty to see and understand issues that may escape their grasp, as they may not be as well educated or exposed as you?
    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    One can lead a horse to water but can’t force it to drink.

    I was not well educated or exposed when I made my decision as a young teenager by observing all around me whilst growing up in poverty.

    Only fools fall for the same storyline hook line which is detrimental to their well being and disposable income.

    I chose to be a leader and not a follower by observing the adults around me growing up including household and wider neighbourhoods and decided not to continue the same downward spiral.

    It comes down to one choice either to follow the crowd and be shafted or go in a different direction with a greater chance of autonomy and success.

    That is what I preach to the young and to anyone who cares to hear.


  16. @ Barbados 2019

    I can agree with you there but sometimes we have to lift some people up and carry them initially, so they can be enlightened a little bit till they can understand and break issues of a more complex nature down on their own. Bajans are proud people and many will out of pride, continue to not understand an issue rather than ask someone to help them with it. Blogs like these lend them the cloak of privacy so they can speak and seek help, without being looked down at. I hear your view but all I am asking is we take time to share knowledge and not condemn them to ” a life of Koolaid drinkers ” as you so eloquently put it.

    You were a strong willed person who was intent on bettering yourself at all cost. Regrettably not everyone is that blessed and hence you have to take out the proverbial pitch fork and give them a few gentle ” jucks” as we say to get them started.

  17. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @Sarge
    #havenohairtopull

    Funny. Of 10 prov + 1 Fed, that is 55 budgets in the last 5 years. Only 3 projected balance or surplus, and all were Quebec. You know what happened to that Gov’t? Our Feds promised a return to surplus after 2 years of deficit, that has now gone thru the eddoes with deficit projected through 2024. And each time a Gov’t attempts to rein in spending, they face a barrage of protests and demonstrations. God help any counter protesters who show up. The Ontario debt, the largest sub-sovereign debt in the world, is already on a per capita basis, 7x that which sunk the good ship Bim. Nobody cares much about deficits or debts UNTIL it affects them personally or they have made it their raison d’être to be a spokesperson for the poor and vulnerable.

    #onapermanentgraylist

  18. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Latest IMF buzzword in Article IV reports….MACROPRUDENTIAL…and it isn’t a big insurance company. “Synchronous” remains popular, and it isn’t a style of water ballet. “Fiscal Space” seems to be waning.

  19. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Northern Observer at 7:00PM

    Good observation on the question of Debt / GDP ratio. There may be quite a bit of hype in the theory surrounding this metric. It conceals more than it reveals,when superficially analyzed.

  20. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    The party loyalists and apologists will eventually disappear especially the little poodles here on BU. They only come out these days with two positions:
    1. The Bees: We are in this position because of the last ten years
    2.The Dees: We are worst of now because the Bees sending home people and raising taxes etc

    When serious debate takes place they get very silent.


  21. “Let’s put things in their proper perspective.”

    First things first, the topic of this thread is “Closer Look at IMF’s Austerity Program for Barbados.”

    So far, as at the time I wrote this contribution, you posted six (6) responses, NONE of which were RELEVANT to the topic.

    What does the particular assault charge have to do with the austerity measures as described in the article?

    A history of the man’s antecedents was not revealed in the newspaper reports. How do you know the man in question is a “sexual predator?” It is ludicrous for you to characterized the man as such without evidence.

    Do you know the reasons why the man “plead guilty?” He was scheduled to leave the island the next day and his lawyer told him to plead guilty to the charges because they were “misdemeanours.” If he did not enter a guilty plea, a trial would have been scheduled.

    How is asking you a simple question relative to the CCTV footage, which REQUIRED a SIMPLE “yes” or “no” answer, be interpreted as making an EXCUSE for a white man…… and how, as it relates to this specific issue, are white men raping and sexually abusing black women relevant?”

    All this does is to provide you with an outlet to express the SAME USELESS, IRRELEVANT DRIVEL you REPEATEDLY post to EVERY article on BU.

    “Stealing from the Treasury and pension fund;” “low life lawyers and politicians;” “120,000 off shore accounts;”……. is a regurgitation of the rhetoric spewed by Jacky Stewart….. thereby indicating your intellectual capacity is limited……… you have to rely on the contributions of others to make a comment.

    At least you have moved away from “Peter Harris, COW, Bizzy, Maloney and minority thieves.”

    Here you are, on every thread cussing and criticizing white people, yet you feel proud coming to this forum “saying” you are married to a white man.

    You are a FRAUD, NUISANCE and LIAR.


  22. “The issue is to understand how it is possible that an entity like Transport Board, which is given the responsibility of providing public transport to the people of Barbados allows the situation to come about where over 75% of its buses are not roadworthy and no one is held to account?”

    Tee White

    I agree with your above comment.

    We had minsters of transport from both BLP and DLP administrations issuing excessive amounts of permits (in several cases, for a small personal fee) to the owners of the PSVs.

    Then there was the situation where the former transport minister ignored an agreement between the Transport Board and UCAL to fix buses, in favour of Trans Tech Inc., which repaired buses, in some instances, three times the amount UCAL charged……..and those same buses had to be “re-repaired” by UCAL a few days after leaving Trans Tech.

    What is even more outrageous, is a minister driving an expensive SUV owned by Trans Tech Inc. And even after drawing this travesty to the attention of the public, this Mottley led VLP administration was in office one year…. and nothing has been done so far to hold Michael Lashley to account or address the other issues of corruption they raised while in Opposition.

    The TB was paying a Trinidadian consultant $22,000 per month, as well as 5 Trinidadian mechanics that were based at Mangrove Depot…… and we ended up with a situation where TB’s fleet went from 115 units in operation per day…… to 80 and subsequently 40 units.

    I gave an example a few months ago of the nonsense that happens at TB. There was a 2000 Mercedes Marcopolo Torino bus, BM42, that was refurbished and awaiting to be licensed and insured. This bus was stripped to repair other buses and its body is now on 4 barrels.

  23. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    He is a sexual predaotr trying to avoid going on the UK’s sex offender’s registry WHERE HE BELONGS…and where USELESS BLACK MEN LIKE YASELF…think you can keep him off so he can return to Barbados and assault and abuse black women again…

    Artax you are a useless specimen of a black man..an empty shell, useless to your race, useless to black women and children..why are you even on earth.

  24. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2019/05/23/he-slapped-my-behind/

    The sexual predator did not slap the behind of some giddy head young girl, he slapped the behind of a fully grown woman.

    Black women have to be very careful of black men who don’t mind seeing them sexually assaulted just so tourist dollars can flow in Barbados….nasty sell out black men who would sell
    their own asses, let alone black women and childrens..

    On another note, saw inthe press where Arthur did not win his guns and ammunition case, so i guess we wait to see if it is a guilty or not guilty, in Barbados it is hard to tell..lol

  25. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2019/05/22/arthur-off-to-prison/

    Well ah guess it’s off to prison. What can i say.


  26. “Artax you are a useless specimen of a black man..an empty shell, useless to your race, useless to black women and children..why are you even on earth.”

    I have mentioned in this forum on several occasions that I’m not too fond of white people and their racist agenda.

    Although I am one who is quick to frown and speak on how white people treat blacks.

    If being FAIR and giving them their due when necessary…. or I prefer not to “jump on a bandwagon” to see everything as a black versus white scenario…. or in the absence of all the facts I choose not to call someone a sexual predictor….. or label someone as such, WITHOUT knowing their history in those circumstances….or based on one allegation…….

    ………..makes me “a useless specimen of a black man..an empty shell, useless to your race, useless to black women and children,” the so be it.

    However, I will not keep “harping” about whites, calling them all types of names and expressing my dislike for them……. and then BETRAY my black brothers and sisters by MARYING a white woman.

    To do so, will NOT only be HYPOCRITICAL and I’ll be definitely “useless specimen of a black man..an empty shell, useless to (my) race, useless to black women and children.”

    But what amazes me is, despite your anti-white rhetoric, you married a white man….. and you justify doing so, by wanting us to accept his case is unique.

    Then why is it that you can’t put anything involving black and white individuals into its proper perspective, without trying to make it a racial issue?

  27. WURA-War-in-U Avatar

    The dumbest of black men sat back and caused centuries of enslavement of their own people, your skull is too thick for u to get away with enabling this new age modern day threat to black women and children.

  28. Fractured BLP Avatar

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/239919/mottley-stays-mum-liat-negotiations

    Wow !

    PM Mottley remains MUM on LIat negotiations !

    Why ????

    Because the CABINET of Barbados needs to review the Liat matter !

    Oh Holy Smoke !!

    What about White Oak a.k.a HOAX !!

    BDS $ 54 Million siphoned off to a … two man …..company ……at a time when no CABINET was in place !!!

    The PM is right to remain MUM over this :

    Most

    Unsavoury

    Madness

    Barbados deserves better !!

    David BU…..what says you ?????


  29. What evidence is there money has been illegally shared with White Oak except your suspicions? That said we are on the right track to question government contracts until the contractor general is in place.


  30. the Ministry of Finance said “good faith discussions with the Barbados bondholder committee have intensified since the start of 2019 in the context of a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) between [Government] and the advisors to the committee that was first put in place in September 2018.

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/239918/debt-talks

  31. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Hmmm…GAIA
    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/239920/airport
    “But in the end, the National Insurance Scheme and workers at the airport will be shareholders in the facility, Prime Minister Mia Mottley has revealed.”

    A story that begs many questions but answers none

    PS I just wanted in on the C&P action


  32. BARBADOS HAS AGREED to a long-term business partnership in the region of 25 to 30 years to completely renovate and refurbish Grantley Adams International Airport (GAIA),

    25 to 30 years to completely renovate ????


  33. @Hants

    This is long overdue. GAIA is a dump compared to others in the Caribbean namely St. Marten, Antigua, St. Vincent and a couple others.


  34. @ David,

    I just don’t understand why it would take 25 to 30 years to renovate and refurbish.


  35. @Hants

    We operate in a culture where maintenance is not a priority. A mash up and build back culture.


  36. @ Hants
    Is there a management deal? Prime minster is a very strategic thinker. Remember a few weeks ago she talked about improving the airport and I said that she was obviously in private talks with someone. The prime minister does not talk wild talk; she is not Stuart. Everything she says has a deeper meaning. Watch out for treason.


  37. @ David,

    It seems the lack of maintenance continues. More sick building issues.

    “Sources said the environmental issues have been ongoing for a while and the discovery of what appeared to be mouldy cupboards in the nutrition room that eventually dropped off, was the straw that broke the camel’s back.


  38. I am here listening to Brasstacks and the DEMS would make one believe that the last government was the greatest thing that happened to BIM.

  39. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    It should not take 25 years to repair and renovate, I expect that the contract MUST include ongoing maintenance and management.

    And David GAIA is NOT a dump. I know every airport in the region, from Trinidad to Jamaica.

  40. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    @roverp

    If the DEMS were so great, maybe someone can ask the DEM yardies why is it that the people skinned their ra@@es out a year ago?

    Was it a love t’ing by the people?

    Simple Simon
    Neither “B” nor “D”


  41. Rihanna’s new company, Fenty Beauty, has had a turnover of Bds$1500m in its first year – more than the foreign reserves of Barbados. She is Barbadian, an ambassador for the nation and loves her island home. Can’t this government persuade Rihanna to register her company in Barbados by offering the kind of deal it has offered Butch Stewart? Just an idea.


  42. On a visit to Frankfurt in the 80’s I observed that the airport was chock a block with brand name stores giving the appearance of a mall.I think our terminal 1 was built at a cost of Bd$27 million and started in 1971.Loading bridges were thought too expensive at $90,000.00 each at that time.In the 70’s and up until recently it was a nightmare getting on or off an aircraft in a wheelchair,negotiating those steep aircraft steps with 3 man handlers lifting and negotiating the ascent or descent while the passenger’s heart was perhaps in their mouth out of fear of falling out of the chair and crashing on to the tarmac.One lawsuit would have bought 2 bridges.The shortsightedness of it all.


  43. I think the article was worded ambiguously in that the airport lease would be for 25 to 30 years, not that the renovation would take that long. Privatizing our airport is no big issue once done correctly. If you are flying to the UK you are in fact landing at a privatised airport.


  44. The Prime Minister said discussions were held with the IFC, and after much discussion, it was agreed that government would retain ownership of the airport.

    https://gisbarbados.gov.bb/blog/civil-aviation-authority-to-be-set-up/


  45. Freehold ownership is different to a management deal. What is this PPI?


  46. Yes they will maintain ownership but that doesn’t mean it can not be leased under a long term contract to a private entity to run. I see this playing out as us continuing to own the property and operate customs and immigration, while the day to day operations will be contracted out under a 25 to 30 year contract so that the operators have ample time to get a return on capital for the expansions outlined.


  47. Don’t forget the British Government privatised Heathrow and 6 other airports years ago and they are all rum by a company called BAA limited. Not to be confused with the British carrier BA which was also privatised years back and is now operated by AIG who also operate Iberia Airways .


  48. A leasehold s different to a management deal.


  49. Why people that like to comment on everything always seem to be uninformed? A simple viewing of yesterday’s press briefing would provide all the info some are trying to make into a suspense movie.

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