Many issues of the day continue to question our ability to govern. One of them is the health of the National Insurance Fund (NIF). If you listen to the politician while in Opposition, it is a fund under stress. If you listen to the same politician on attaining the office of government, the NIF is described in more positive terms.

For the sober in the crowd there are the actuarial reviews to consider. Successive governments have been unresponsiveness to public inquiry about  releasing the reviews for public consumption in a timely manner. Of equal concern has been the inability of successive governments to ensure the timely release of audited financials to parliament.

Generations of Barbadians have contributed to the NIF to give currency to the tagline – it is our lifeline.  Auditor General report after report detail bad investment decisions taken by successive governments of  National Insurance Scheme (NIS) motivated by pampering and pandering the old boy network. The “investment” of USD60 millions in Clearwater Bay referred to loosely by Barbadians as Four Seasons is one example.

The NIS is one of a handful of state owned entities that should be ring-fenced to protect against the incompetence of the political class.  Judging from all reputable sources of economic data, the inability to adequately govern a 166 square mile, less than three hundred thousand people located in an idyllic geography should be evidence enough.

Prime Minister Mia Mottley and the Minister of Education Santia Bradshaw have signaled in recent weeks that major reform is coming for the education  system. The issue of revamping the  system has been discussed for decades by the more progressive minds. The inability of our leading lights to manage the NIS and the other entities that combine to ensure well functioning organs in the society is an indictment on the current system of edcuation.

Successive NIS Boards, NIS Investment Committees and the ancillary services have been managed by “educated” Barbadians.  The performance of the NIS like the judiciary, like the BWA, like the transportation system, like the waste management system, like the PSV sector etc etc all point to the inability to convert significant investment in education in the post Independence period.

The Barbados Labour Party (BLP) since wining office in May 2018 has aggressively pursued economic strategies to address an economy in free fall.  Interestingly, we have not observed the same urgency to address challenges with the NIS. In fact Prime Minister Mia Mottley hinted that the hesitation to address the NIS problem is rooted in the enormity of the solution required given the future obligations of the fund.

This week it was reported that millions of  Brazilians protested against President Jair Bolsonaro’s plan to privatize the pension plan. The story attracted the attention of this blogmaster because one senses that Barbados will have to implement draconian measures to protect the NIS for the many sooner rather than later. Already President hBolsonaro as suspended several benefits to Brazil’s low income, disabled and senior citizens. Only a few years ago Brazil was considered the emerging economy from the Latam region.

Related links:

Brazil: Bolsonaro to Suspend Senior, Disabled Benefits Programs

Brazil: Millions Protest Bolsonaro’s Neoliberal Pension Reform

The message to Barbadians is that we cannot continue to do the same thing all the time and expect a different result.

BB = P+G (E*SOEs +NG-S)

 

 

232 responses to “Rise of the Uneducated Class”


  1. I’m going to start again and make an ultraliberal statement:

    We have to privatize the NIS to take it out of the thieving hands of DLP politicians. The best would be to settle the NIS in Bermuda or the Bahamas. Far, far, away, from everything that looks blue, doesn’t walk upright and can’t eat with knife and fork.

    We also have to privatize education because it is too expensive. We have produced too many lazy and useless academics at the expense of the state, who do nothing and are superfluous.

    Hence my proposal to charge school fees for secondary education and to privatise tertiary education entirely.

    We need a second wave of emancipation and we need to free the Barbadians from the hole in the mud called the welfare state.

    Everything that comes from Barrow is bad and must be destroyed. We must erase every memory of Barrow and his party.

    Another 10 days.


  2. We are in much more danger from the hordes of the miseducated classes than the uneducated

    At least the uneducated can rely on their innate sensibilities

    Those sensibilities are trained out of the miseducated.

    These instincts gravitate the uneducated towards land ownership and real assets. Building things with their hands and minds. Employing the miseducated sub-humans.

    Whereas the miseducated continue to walk around thinking that all other things should be added them because their have a head full of brain space carrying somebody else’s thinking.


  3. Major reform of the Education system? Never mind the Crime statistics but schizophrenia seems to be on the rise, the previous Gov’t sent home Nigerian nurses, now this Gov’t bringing in Ghanaian nurses, it is party to 23 and me and we are kith and kin to Ghanaians. Wunnah can’t say that wunnah haven’t been warned but the Gov’t is sending signals that it’s time to eliminate the Nursing component at BCC since we have been advised that Bajan nurses are failing the exams at alarming rates.

    Looka I aint got nothing against our Ghanaian sisters some of them may discover that we made some subtle changes to kenkey and remade coucou. BTW Guyana embarked on a program of training nurses to serve NA and the wider Caribbean wuh happen to those nurses or is Caricom so much lip service?

    This stop Ghana, next stop The Philippines, did someone say India?


  4. @Sargeant

    You maybe aware the plan by government to man two polyclinics 24/7 has been derailed/delayed because one of the grouses from the BRNA is that there are not enough nurses to man the two clinics.


  5. @David

    Are the nurses’ concerns justified? If they are and part of the Gov’t’s proposal to bring in nurses is to staff the 24-hour polyclinics then it shows the Gov’t hasn’t thought the plan through otherwise it ought to have known that there were not enough (almost wrote enuff) bodies to cover the shifts. I am also reading that it plans to bring in up to 400 nurses, if the shortage of nurses is so acute that those numbers are required, we are in a whole heap of trouble.

    BTW 400 nurses? That is a part of the budgetary plan, right?

  6. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    “We have to privatize the NIS to take it out of the thieving hands of DLP politicians. The best would be to settle the NIS in Bermuda or the Bahamas. Far, far, away, from everything that looks blue, doesn’t walk upright and can’t eat with knife and fork.”

    So yall BLP CROOKS planning to TIEF…..the whole NIS pension fund and domicile it offshore…BUT EACH AND EVERY ONE OF YOU REPULSIVE THIEVES SHOULD GO TO PRISON.

    anything to rob ya own black peopke, every stinking trick, mischief and lie ya can devise to rob ya own people…

    Was that CLICO CROOK…Haynes’ idea.

  7. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    Ah Pacha…it cannot be said ENUFF….

    #LOUDER…

    “We are in much more danger from the hordes of the miseducated classes than the uneducated

    At least the uneducated can rely on their innate sensibilities

    Those sensibilities are trained out of the miseducated.

    These instincts gravitate the uneducated towards land ownership and real assets. Building things with their hands and minds. Employing the miseducated sub-humans.

    Whereas the miseducated continue to walk around thinking that all other things should be added them because their have a head full of brain space carrying somebody else’s thinking.”

  8. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    What SCAM IS THIS BLP CROOKS..

    “I see NCB Capital Markets (Barbados) Limited to buy out the more than half-billion dollars debt owed by businesses to Government. It is ready to bank $170 million on Government debt. It is a Jamaican-owned investment firm which is specifically interested in purchasing from creditors the four-year Series F bonds created by the Mia Mottley Administration to reduce arrears due to suppliers of products and services up to the end of September last year.

    (Barbados) Limited. This entity says Barbados but it is Jamaican-owned. I see trouble. And businesses supposedly owe more than half-billion dollars but this company is only looking to offer les to help, about $170 million. Hmmm. Trouble I say.
    Chat Conversation End
    Type a message…”

  9. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    Wuh looka look..president Mia and her shitehound consultants..

    “Despite its tough response, the investors’ committee said it wanted to continue to have “good faith discussions” in hopes of reaching an agreement that would benefit all parties involved.

    But it issued a warning that if Barbados tried to impose a “unilateral offer” based on either of the now-rejected “scenarios” this would “likely place economic reform efforts at risk, to the detriment of the country’s financial stability and well-being.”

    The committee is advised by Newstate Partners LLP and Arnold & Porter.”


  10. @Sargeant

    A good critique. It definitely is an indictment on the BCC nursing program. Hopefully Minister Bostic will fill in the blanks soon.


  11. No Jeff Cumberbatch column today.

  12. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Outside of their being INFORMED in THIS ERA of their very RICH AFRICAN HISTORY which is CRITICAL TO HEALING THE DAMAGED AFRICAN MIND…the centuries of ACCURATE black history maliciously kept from the black population and more recently kept from them by their nasty black leaders….BLACK BAJANS only need to have THEIR LAND and INFORMATION on their best interests and ACCESS TO THEIR OWN TAX MONEY AND PENSION MONEY….to be able to move forward and progress to generate WEALTH FOR THEMSELVES AND THEIR FUTURE GENERATIONS.

    ….nasty black corrupt leaders be DAMNED….and be gone.


  13. David

    We get up every Sunday mornings to read what Cumberbatch has to say.

    Maybe our disappointment could be assuaged by re-runs.

  14. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    This is the WHOLE article…please inform those Bajans who are clueless to what is REALLY happening because they are being fed wholesale lies by a corrupt government…they will need the information to make INFORMED DECISIONS regarding their own well being and that of their future generations….going forward..that is why the majority blacks are ALWAYS LEFT BEHIND..they DO NOT HAVE ACCESS to accurate information…

    https://www.broadstjournal.com/post/foreign-lenders-accuse-barbados-negotiators-of-not-acting-in-good-faith?fbclid=IwAR0LeSM9HrMSJo8D23XJcXq1w2Rg6DnYqpb5ltAZ5uCq8oKHgwbJ849_wYU

  15. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Happy Father’s Day to all and also to the many mothers who take on the roles of FATHERS.


  16. @ Sargeant,

    On this day in particular – Father’s day. You have hit a raw nerve.

    It is highly irresponsible of this government to be looking at recruiting 400 nurses from one country in a single swoop. It would be more prudent to commence with one-tenth of that number to see how they bed in. Is there a universal professional entry level for nurses to work internationally?

    Only today on Aljazeera news there was a report of a doctor from Pakistan who infected over 100 children with aids by the use of contaminated needles!

    Recently, I had the misfortune to witness first hand the nurses at the QEH on a certain ward. I can tell you that fifty percent of those nurses had no right to have been in possession of their uniform. Their rightful place should have been confined to working in concentration camps. Such was my disgust at what I saw on that ward.

    If a nurse is unprepared to be empathetic, civil and helpful then they have no right to be in the profession.

    As for your comments regarding CARICOM and Guyana, I would say don’t go down that route. Caribbean citizens are pretty much the same in their mindset.

    I would say to Mia that it is good idea to recruit nurses from other black countries to whom we may share a common heritage. However she should avoid recruiting nursing professionals from the Philippians or India as these nationalities will not be able to integrate into the local culture.

  17. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Pacha
    Who therefore are the educated.?Those who have certificates and degrees? Are they educated or “certificated “? We need to define educated in broader terms.
    For example : Is a mechanic who sits and explains the workings of an engine to a group of experts any less educated than a PhD student who sits and explains his thesis to his “peers”?
    Is a historian who presents his thesis to his “peers” for their review anymore educated than one who does not? Elitism and eleven plus thinking pervades everything and classism while attacked still seems to be the path. This is our greatest challenge.
    Whereas I agree with your submission it still reveals we are a long way from accepting the simple fact that schooling and holding diplomas are essentially qualifications and that person is only “educated” in the very narrow sense.
    Quite frankly to your way of thinking, it is more than obvious that the most independent and to some degree successful blacks in this country , were those who were deemed uneducated. Hence your point about the uneducated developing themselves financially and otherwise is taken.
    While I welcome the promise to abolish the eleven plus , I hope that an integral part of the reform will be to radically redefine what we consider to be education.


  18. =====Not a B thinmg or a D thing, but a we thing================
    Why do I find this title to be repulsive.
    I am here struggling to figure out why I find it in some sense to be Orwellian.
    How many classes do we have in Barbados\
    educated/mis-educated
    uneducated
    .
    .
    .
    and somewhere down the pecking order is the yardfowl.

    If you read BU carefully, there is always some dividing line being drawn somewhere.
    We don’t just have secondary schools, we have secondary schools and seven newer secondary schools.
    We have those who get bail and those who end up being lost in jail.
    A few articles in the past, some label themselves as the political class. leaving the majority of us as ordinary yardfowls

    We had over 50 years of the BLP and DLP classes and all we got for it is
    a ruined economy,
    enrichment of a selected minority,
    thieving that is out of control,
    abuse of the poor and weak in our system of injustice,
    land theft,
    scams masquerading as government projects,
    old talk representing itself as leadership,
    and the list goes on

    We must beat this bell incessantly. Our leadership seem to lack the will and inability to learn or to change course.


  19. A good point William. It reminds that Google, Microsoft and other top performing companies look pass paper qualifications.


  20. I was expecting to see an article outlining the expectations, life and death of Bitt-coin.
    Where did it go wrong?
    What became of the sand box?
    Is is now a litter box?
    But it seems as if omniscience died as well.


  21. A hearty good morning to all of Barbados
    Hope you have a better day than what I will have —- Going to pick-up MIL at noon.
    Have a great day Barbados


  22. @ David June 16, 2019 6:05 AM

    “definitely is an indictment on the BCC nursing program”

    From time to time I teach at BCC. I wouldn’t say its an indictment. I don’t deal with the nursing section but I deal with a different part of the health section. My last stint there, I found that the class was up to scratch and keen. Prior to that stint, I found that the students required lots of remedial teaching ( spelling, English. subject and verb agreement: I would correct using a red-ink pen giving examples of the correct way: Reminded me of when I was at elementary school Obviously something went wrong at elementary school for them. If you do not understand English ,how are you going to understand science?). You have to understand that there maybe persons working in government, who are sent on courses at BCC ( who ,one wonders how they ever got into the government service in the first place). One has to work with them and bring them up to scratch. Some of them really do excel and some do not. I hope you get my drift. In the food industry the mantra is bad raw materials in result in a mediocre end product coming off the production line


  23. @Dr. Lucas

    Notwithstanding what you have stated the proof of the pudding is in the eating. We have been unable to supply an adequate number nurses.


  24. It is a B thing, It is a D thing, It;s we thing

    One can understand the need for governments/companies to have secrets. After all, in a competitive market, having inside knowledge would give an ‘opponent’ an advantage.

    But unnecessary secrecy seem to be embedded within all of our organizations, both government and private. Little is explained to us and to add insult to injury, we are told we are just ignorant. As an example, no-one/no-company understands or is capable of doing restructuring. We are told that A and B are qualified, but when you look at their resume or work history it appears to be weak; their history appears to have gaps; and the prosperity/activity of their company can be questioned. Our heroes/saviors often appears to be inferior to some of those they rescue. This is the propagation of the “inferior superior” (to misquote a fellow blogger).

    How is it that no matter how diverse the activity/topic we see the same lame explanations emerging? The advent of the internet and the power of Google’s search engine have changed anything, but yet we get the old cloak of secrecy and the same explanation “You all are too ignorant to understand”. Over fifty years of free education, hundreds of citizens serving in positions of power throughout the world but always “You all are too ignorant to understand”. Is our education worth anything?

    Instead of trying to correct the situations when a serious challenge emerges, they wrapped themselves in the flag and patriotism, they try to intimidate by using the word treason; and at times they want to choke internet access. And, of course, we have the foolish few, who act as if we are still following the politics of the past as they chant the silly mantra “Four legs good, two legs Bad”.

    It is almost as if it is our leaders very nature is to be dishonest. Give them a clean page to write their names on (with expectation great) and they resort to the old playbook of trickery and skulduggery. The old dog cannot learn new tricks.

  25. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Mr Blogmaster you are doing a NationNews!

    Years ago when that publication was birthed I recall they often used “scandalously” styled headlines to titilate…and continued in that vein over the years … and here you are mining that same vein 🤣…uneducated class, really!

    That grabs eyeballs much more than the more accurate Uninformed Class fah sure!

    But to the substance….your long standing thesis that failures at our key agencies like NIS “is an indictment on the current system of edcuation” is just not based in FACT or reality: a failure of execution cannot be blamed on the education system. Nor can a need for upgrade and improvements mean that what existed prior simply FAILED!

    That’s just NOT logical… if that is held as valid then the market crash of 2008 would be an indictment of the US finance education system failure or the abject laxity of US Intel not to identify and thwart the election inteference of their nation would be indicative of a failed training/education program!

    Is the woeful Brexit negotiations calamity a failure of British education !

    The “educated class” as you like to call them also include folks like you bro and your resident progressives like Skinner or the Goddess and Walter and the Bushman and the myriad others who show great nous here…in sum, our education system HAS INDEED WORKED …. sometimes too damn well, as our administrators have artfully been able to beguile and betray our sensibilities over these many years, not so !

    The fact that they also effed-up is a function…methinks, that our moral code FAILED….but then again that can’t carry a continuous salacious headline, grabbing handle can it.

    Thus I suspect you will persist with the absolutely misguided, illogical assertion that the education investment has absolutely failed. Alas!

  26. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    “@ Pacha
    Who therefore are the educated.?Those who have certificates and degrees? Are they educated or “certificated “? We need to define educated in broader terms”

    Those are the HIGHLY MISEDUCATED…so dumbed down and uppity…that they know not that they know not. Plus…they CANNOT STOP TIEFING FROM THEIR OWN PEOPLE…NOT EVEN TO SAVE THEIR OWN MISERABLR LIVES AND UGLY WORLDWIDE REPUTATIONS. They are MARKED and you should ask them why.


  27. “You maybe aware the plan by government to man two polyclinics 24/7 has been derailed/delayed because one of the grouses from the BRNA is that there are not enough nurses to man the two clinics.”

    One must question how thorough is the planning?
    Are plans developed in silos without input from all the required parties?
    Is it trial and error, with the plan of getting it right, eventually?
    Problems created, problems solved?


  28. It appears that Barbados would be a good place for Ghanian nurses to emigrate to.

    The current salary scale is stated below:

    Certificate nurses – They earn GHS 700 monthly.
    Diploma nurses – GHS 900 and above monthly.
    Degree holders – GHS 1600/2000 per month.
    In conclusion, it easy to note that nurses in Ghana are not well paid and clearly need a raise. To be a nurse in Ghana it is basically more of passion than for the pay.

    1 GHS = 19 CENTS USA

    2000 GHS = 370.53 USD


  29. @ David

    The high failure rate is due to the quality of the inputs. Check out the failure rate: it has a direct bearing on the number of persons graduating. and the number of available nurses.


  30. @Dee Word

    Have a reread of your missive.

    We have a situation where systemic risk is in play across sectors including government. This has to be called out for what it is. An abdication of the educated class to diagnose, analyse/evaluate and implement. What is at the core to manage these components you ask? You guessed it!


  31. @Dr. Lucas

    To be clear you link the quality of the inputs to what?


  32. @Dee Word

    We have to bring the pragmatic definition of education into to play here.

    [slideshare id=51187545&doc=pragmatism-150802113416-lva1-app6892]


  33. The blatant rape of the NIS fund had nothing to do with education but everything to do with a minister who intended to get to elections at all cost without rocking the boat by doing his dam job

    The fact that the governor of the central stood by and watched it happen had nothing to do with him being uneducated, but everything to do with him hanging on for his own self serving purpose. He could of said no count me out then resigned and gone to the press.

    The massive cost overruns on government projects had nothing to do with those involved being unable to add, but everything to do with a lack of oversight.

    99% of our problems that have us at the door of the IMF have nothing to do with our education system, but everything to do with many pursuing their personal agenda at all cost, with no regard for their consequences.

    If we looking for something to blame for where we are today we need to find another scapegoat and not blame the educational system.


  34. It this where our Education system have Barbados

    Barbados External Creditor Committee, a investors’ group which holds about 55% of Barbados’ US$1.5 Billion in foreign debt, and includes regional and international financial institutions, pension funds and central banks, as well as individual bondholders has accused Barbados of ignoring its so-called good faith proposals re-negotiating its foreign debt.

    In a terse press release issued on Friday the Committee said Barbados had ignored a revised proposal that it had “in good faith” on 17 May 2019. The lobby group said that, instead, the Government of Barbados had released so-called “restructuring scenarios” that ignored its suggestions during negotiations over the past several months.

    As a result, the Committee said it could not “take seriously” Barbados’ commitment to negotiate “in a consensual manner” a new payment plan for its external commercial default, and would not support or recommend to its members either of the two options which Barbados had recently put forward informally. It said the government need to “reengage in good faith negotiations.”

    Under the first option or so-called “scenario, the government would give creditors new bonds worth two-thirds of their original principal, with interest payments made twice yearly, at 3.5 per cent in the first two years, and 7.5 per cent per annum until the 2033 maturity date.

    In the second “scenario, outlined in Friday’s Nation newspaper by Shawn Cumberbatch, the bondholders would receive the full face value of the restructured bonds but interest payments would be fixed at 3.5 per cent per annum until 2044.

    In its update to creditors, the government of Barbados defended the offers saying “Both scenarios are at the limits of what is compatible with the debt sustainability framework that underpins the EFF (Extended Fund Facility,” that is, the IMF loan.

    The investor group accused the government of misrepresenting it, stating that “Contrary to what has been stated by the Authorities in the ‘Creditor Update’ released on 11 June 2019, the Committee’s last financial proposal was designed to meet all of the Authorities’ objectives…”

    It said this included giving Barbados the ability to reach the 60% debt-to-GDP target by 2033 under the IMF loan – however, with a one-year margin of error – while providing greater cash flow relief for the creditors.

    The Committee also claimed that its proposal would have improved Barbados’ ability to re-access the international capital markets over time.

    The Committee added that Barbados’ statements regarding maintaining inter-creditor equity were irrelevant, saying in effect that comparing the domestic debt agreement finalized in late 2018 to the terms presented to external commercial creditors was essentially like trying to compare apples with oranges.

    The investor group said “Domestic investors were subject to a local law regime designed to force the implementation of that restructuring,” noting that this power did not apply to “the New York and UK law instruments represented by the Committee.”

    It also noted that over half of the domestic debt re-negotiated was held by state-owned entities of Barbados, and Barbados is able to offer “additional accommodations to private sector domestic investors that by nature are not available to international investors.”

    Despite its tough response, the investors’ committee said it wanted to continue to have “good faith discussions” in hopes of reaching an agreement that would benefit all parties involved.

    But it issued a warning that if Barbados tried to impose a “unilateral offer” based on either of the now-rejected “scenarios” this would “likely place economic reform efforts at risk, to the detriment of the country’s financial stability and well-being.”


  35. Before someone jumps to the conclusion that I am saying our education system is not in need of serious review that is not the case. I agree it needs an overhaul but it can not be blamed for many of our failings in terms of where we are today.


  36. @xDavid

    Output

  37. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Let’s parse your well crafted sentence also…You said: *We have a situation where systemic risk is in play across sectors including government. This has to be called out for what it is. An abdication of the educated class to diagnose, analyse/evaluate and implement. *

    Is there uncontrolled risk management in the private sector or primarily and principally in the govt sector?…. I suggest the private sectors gurus manage their processes well (notwithstanding the TnT sell off; they make much wealth from us, don’t they)!…. Who provided the foundational educatation for them… same one that educated our govt sector folks, not so!

    We cannot honestly say that successive govt’s have NOT diagnosed and analysed/evaluated our problems… No way!

    I wholeheartedly agree they have NOT IMPLEMENTED properly….but that’s execution… That’s a function of indifference, spite or malfeasance and normally has not a jot to do with EDUCATION!

    The sewerage running in the streets: The diagnosis and evaluation was done years ago by competent Bajans and sewerage processing plants were constructed and sewer lines connected (remember Propa Pork originated from that severe dislocation in Black Rock; I too was decimated businesswise, so I recall that only too well).

    The more recent problems were NOT about diagnosis or analysis…but about continuous improperly implemented maintenance and a detailed investigation would likely show that funds were subverted … that’s corruption David NOT lack of education or understanding what needed to be done!

    I could go on endlessly…so let’s agree to disagree.

    Yes our education processes need to be updated but the previous education investment has bourne tremendous results … courupt public officials DO NOT negate that!


  38. @ David

    Input is linked to output.


  39. @ William,

    Experts predict d that by 2030 (11 years from now) 85 per cent of the jobs young people will be doing do not yet exist. That is the power of artificial intelligence and digital innovation.
    Sometime ago Dr Sucker Byer raised the issue of the future of work; it was also mentioned by Ronnie Yearwood; to this day our great media have not thought the subject fit for discussion. Is our educational system fit for purpose?
    President Mottley is a former education minister, but as I have said before, she has no stomach for details, for policy. She likes headline announcement s, punching above our weight. Policy takes up too much time and, for the disinterested, can be boring.
    Take the issue of importing 400 Ghanaian nurses to work in our health service. It is a lunatic idea. Just ask black nurses (and patients) who have worked in, or been in hospitals, with West African nurses. Talk to the returnees. As a |UK patient, I would rather have white nurses than West Africans – and I speak from experience.
    The other issues are: what proportion of the total health service pay roll will the 400 nurses be? Does that mean on some wards there will be a total or majority West African staff? Will this change the culture of the hospital and will that be a good thing? Of course we need good relations with our West African cousins, but this is not the way to go about it.
    The fundamental issue is the failure of our educational system. That is where the problem starts, not by lowering standards or importing stop-gap staff. But the problem goes far beyond nursing staff; it goes right to the heart of all our institutions, as @John A has been saying for a number of days.
    We must also see this importation of Ghanaian nurses as part of the narrative the President has been telling the nation about the size of the Barbados population, and the bogus argument she uses to justify it (about Singapore, Suriname, Guyana and elsewhere).
    Had she thought long and hard about this she would realise that radical demographic change will change the nature of Barbadian society forever – unless that is her intention.
    As usual, she does not put forward a comprehensive argument, but the only legitimate argument to justify this is the flawed economic one of increasing productivity. As I have already pointed out, increased productivity will come from technology and output per capita per hour, not bums on seats.
    After nearly 13 months, this government is yet to tell us what it is vision is of a future Barbados, apart from having a world-class women’s football team.


  40. Sir William Skinner
    WARU

    The ‘educated’ are yet to be defined in terms of a serious block for national development.

    This article was initially talking about the uneducated

    We introduced the miseducated as a more troubling social construction.

    Maybe we could properly locate them amongst the unschooled who have achieved personal independence as a perquisite for a broader interdependence and as rooted within an ancient Afrikan epistemological tradition.


  41. @Dr.Lucas

    Understand the point you are making.


  42. @Dee Ward

    Sorry to chatter your argument but we have no private sector that adds significantly to moving the GDP needle in a sustainable way. The private sector is a taker i.e. it depends on government NOT an enabling environment/framework, it does not create. Look at the pie chart, the largest chuck is distributive/retail trade. What does it tell you about the ability to create/manufacture?

    #education


  43. @Hal

    well said. i cant speak to your experiences with West African nurses but this idea about growing the Bim population by external inputs ought to scare every bajan. that is why i mentioned it in my bullet points as to what i would do about the murders.

    nothing scares bajans like talk about replacing them but it has always been a BLP plank. in the 70s Tom said he would like to see Bridgetown become a cosmopolitan place.

    yeah MAM jumps from political topics without fully fleshing out the technical points to fulfill the policies. she sounds good but it is all superficial


  44. @ Hal

    I would go further on the NIS issue and say that the “educated” people who are in charge of the fund will not in anyway try to touch it in a serious restructuring, but will instead look to put a patch on a rotten main.

    If that fund is ever valued by an independent entity that takes into account the worthless paper it holds, buildings it has that were built at cost that are way in excess of today s market value and other issues the fund has, the on book adjustment that will be made will be massive.

    Also remember the fund has a serious cash flow shortfall from this year, resulting in it’s billion dollars in paper being cut from a yield of roughly 7% to 1%. That is a yearly loss of $60 million dollars there alone. How will it be addressed?

    We will probably not get pension to 70 and don’t be surprised if the total monthly contribution between worker and employer doesn’t reach 30% of insured earnings as well.


  45. @ Greene

    That is true I still waiting for an explanation in English as to what “Establishing a sandbox for digital currency to play in” means. I asked for an outline of the governance protocol and the cap level for its influx into the system in relation to current local currncy supply and ain’t hear a man squeak on it yet!

    Wait I lie one blogger tell me I don’t like Abed. Lol

  46. Freedom Crier Avatar

    SO MANY ISSUES YET WE ALWAYS SEEM TO MISS THE ROOT CAUSE!

    ROUND AND ROUND THE BU MULBERRY BUSH WHERE IT STOPS DOES ANYBODY KNOW?

    Tron seems have an Idea…

    Tron June 15, 2019 6:53 PM “We need a second wave of emancipation and we need to free the Barbadians from the hole in the mud called the welfare state.”

    FREEDOM CONCURS 100% YET NOBODY WANTS TO CALL A SPADE A SPADE!

    Personal actions, needs, responsibilities, and beliefs are the attributes of the Individual. You cannot be socially liberated, while being economically enslaved. You cannot own yourself if your personal responsibilities are collectively bound together through political power and the Government. —we do not have collective minds or a collective conscience….

    Unless you are willing to shoulder your own burdens and buy your own services–you are NOT willing to be free. If you wish to use political power to commit so-called “charitable” donations to others for what you determine as “rights” to receive monies for Individual needs and responsibilities—you ONLY implant a NARCOTIC for corruption, degradation, dependence, public ownership of human beings, and servitude….

    You cannot separate government from your body and your conscience if you at first do not separate it from your personal consequences and responsibilities…

    SOCIALISM IS SOLD TO THE IGNORANT BY DANGLING THE CARROT ON THE STICK, BUT SELDOM DO THOSE STARING AT THE CARROT SEE THE GREED FOR POWER SHINING IN THE EYES OF THOSE WHO HOLD THE STICK!

    Socialism is ALL about the 5% controlling the remaining 95% and throughout history, it has ALWAYS resulted in tyranny, suppression, misery, and eventually death to those whose desire for the carrot left them blind to where the carrot will lead them…

    Make no mistake, a prison can be in a prison without needing the bars. When you hand all the power to a small group, they will continue to control more and more aspects of your life.

    IT’S ALL ABOUT CONTROL…

    With Socialism the 5% will control every aspect of your life..

    OF COURSE, EVERYTHING WILL BE FREE… AND, ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS SURRENDER YOUR FREEDOM…

    https://memegenerator.net/img/instances/65081535/socialism-mirrors-prison-free-food-free-shelter-free-clothes-free-education-but-no-freedom.jpg

  47. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Hal
    Almost forty years ago, we were training nurses , from Namibia. They were staying at the YMCA. Today we are importing nurses from Ghana.
    One of the first people to call for a larger population was Dr. Clyde Mascoll. Later on Ronald Jones joined the chorus. Today the PM is embracing Jones position.
    Once more the confusion of policy is clearly evident within the duopoly.
    There is an all out mission to turn the country into a replica of Singapore.
    Both major parties are obviously delusional.

  48. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    David, you do not shatter my argument in the least…you are however, opening a fresh line of enquiry about the GDP mix.

    Suffice to say you are being ruthlessly harsh (and very simplistic) to condemn that “we have no private sector that adds significantly to moving the GDP needle in a sustainable way.”

    Our tourism plant is I believe 90% private sector controlled. But let’s not meander into number crunching for its sake…

    The simple fact is that our nation has lost much of its manufacturing due to our high cost of living…. I mentioned Intel last evening and although that was way back over 30 years since they left we have seen the same reasoning for other departures of operations into TnT, other islands or Central America in more recent times.

    Thus most of our manufacturing is for local consumption and with the size of our market those businesses are quite relatively small and reflect comparatively lowly on a GDP table…. HOWEVER, you cannot dismiss Windmill or WIBISCO or any other manufacturer as a non-creator because on a small revenue stream!

    Thus what I grasp from our ability to create/manufacture is that we are too small a market to thrive particularly in this day and age of low trade barriers… so why then are there not more Bajan originated regionally spread manufacturing firms, you may undoubtedly retort… I have no idea, other than we have not been able to create better mouse-traps than those of our regional cousins!

    I don’t blame that on education.

    As I said, let’s agree to disagree.


  49. @Dee Word

    Raising the tourism flag is the best you can do in the context of an education discussion and the inability of an educated country to create and manufacture read produce to add diversity to the economy? Our ability to create cannot be limited to a Barbados space. Think big man!

    Wheel and come again please.


  50. @ William

    I can see the appeal of Singapore. It makes for easy thinking, Bajan politicians do not like too much thinking. And, most important, Singapore gave up democracy for economic development. Is that a price Barbados is willing to pay? I can see the attraction to President Mottley.

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