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. @ Vincent,

    Denman was her married name. Ex Queen’s College, her maiden name was Alleyne. Incredibly outstanding in the UK and sat on a number of committees and public inquiries; an academic and author.
    Retired to Barbados a number of years ago where she remained unrecognised, apart from returnees and visiting UK friends and lived in Rockley. She was a human rights specialist. Highly sophisticated and intellectual.


  2. @ John A

    Ringfence the NIS and launch a new long-term savings scheme. We need a Sovereign Wealth Fund. Think big. President Mottley is scared to.


  3. @ Northern

    On your second question that is a good one. I don’t know if we like it so, or many are just not concerned once the doors of the institution stay open. I am waiting to see what this government will do to make sure that government audited financials of entities like the NIS are brought up to date. What penalty will central government place on these entities if they don’t?

    I mean how can you come to us with a budget for more taxes and not even be in a position to know the true value of your total receivables and payables at the very least?

    I guess when you fall short you can always come back for more six months later in a mini budget so no big thing.


  4. @John

    Was there not legislation passed a few months ago tabled by Straughn to force SOEs to submit timely financials or incurred penalties.


  5. @ Hal

    I suggested ring fencing that and the central bank and get cuss for not trusting the government to do the right thing.

    I think both institutions need to be ring fenced for the same reason. Make sure they are free from tampering by local politicians for one reason or another. Between the unchecked printing of money and rape of the NIS, I don’t think any Bajan could say that both institutions should not be ring fenced.

    Will it ever get done? I sincerely doubt it as all ministers are still politicians .


  6. @ david

    Yes legislation was passed but no penalty for failure to do this was outlined.

    Basically it’s just another rule in a rule book full of unenforceable rules. Our problem is not rules we got NUFF but we enforce few if any.


  7. @ David

    For example government has been in power now over 1 year. When they came to power several entities had not filed returns for 5 and 6 years. So let’s say by October 2019 many are still not up to date, what will central government do about it? Will they ask for the resignation say of all boards that do not comply?

    My point is we set rules but when they are broken there is no penalty for breaking them.


  8. @ John A

    I really admire your perseverance. I have nothing but contempt for the incompetents who govern Barbados – the products of Barrow’s so-called free secondary and university education. Wasted money.
    They celebrate mediocrity. Have you ever heard them discussing idea? I really feel for the ordinary working people who cannot escape their mucky hands..


  9. @Hal

    Thanks, all we can do is keep trying.

  10. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    @ Hal,

    I am not going to disagree with you as I moved out of London sometime ago. Let us hope that the 400 nurses from Ghana will come with a different mindset then their sisters from the UK diaspora. All I can say was that the nurses that I encountered at the QEH were terrible.

    By the way Hal what’s going in London. There have been so many killings of late.

  11. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Apparently president Mia does not go anywhere without her CROOKS like Altman et al…they must be invited by her and her corrupt ilk to every cat fight involving Black people..as long as money and wealth are involved….TO STEAL…

    a word of warning, Africa is not the place for white bajan crooks, they are not AFRICAN DESCENDANTS..and they are certainly not descendants of BLACK SLAVES..


  12. @ Talking Loud,

    This is a monster created by the UK. They must deal with it.. Most of these kids are from care, and it has been so since the 1980s. I remember reporting on this in the late 1980s.
    By law there is very little parents can do. The elephant in the room are the teachers, who expel many of the kids for the most trivial of excuses. That needs an investigation.


  13. “@ John A

    I really admire your perseverance.”

    Add me to the list of admirers…. His efforts are Herculean but the task is Sisyphean…

  14. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Hal
    @ John A

    We have a habit of making mountains out of molehills. How could we not know how many nurses , police , teachers we would need at any given time.
    This shortage of nurses and police is a travesty. We seem not to study demographics , manpower needs or any future requirements. Most of this planning is arithmetical and should be executed by a well managed planning office.
    All of the BLPDLP mismanagement is coming to an embarrassing head.
    But we go around boasting that we fight above our weight and a few million borrowed dollars from the IMF is all we need.
    We are sending home Bajans and then importing hundreds to do work that we should be capable of doing from within our own resources.
    We also have a shortage of artisans in areas such as construction.
    Fifty years of collective mismanagement by BLPDLP.
    Duopoly Rules


  15. @William

    Part of the problem was when the QEH was legislated to a Board. Several nurses declined to switch. If the memory is correct it was close to 200. Maybe Artax can add the numbers and more detail.

  16. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Then there is walking dead Cheltenham who has NO SHAME…a sell out extraordinaire of his own people.he would sell ya ass for a dime….Africa would do well to beware the lawyers and ministers who love tiefin land and money from the elderly, especially old black women and their children..an stealing from the old and dying to give to white crooks will not go down well in Africa either…they need to know what kind of BLACK CARIBBEAN DEMONS FOR LEADERS THEY ARE DEALING WITH…

    On facebook people are laughing at the shocked expressions on Cheltenham and Holder’s face when the president started speaking about:

    human rights
    rule of law
    democratic accountability..

    all alien to crooked lawyers and teifing ministers….in Barbados

    Africa is trying HARD to get rid of their corrupt crooks, they need NONE from the Caribbean….

    be warned..


  17. @The0gazerts

    Thank you, I can’t help but feel sometimes we really don’t want true change. We want to talk about it though. Lol


  18. @ William.

    If We can’t get such basic issues dealt with as nurses and policeman, what you think our chances are of dealing with the taxation system and the foreign debt restructuring?

  19. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    Argentina debt crisis bacame a huge problem beacuse of ONE greedy MF vulture capitalist name Paul Singer. The system has set a bad precedent for this kind of behavior going forward. The international financial system should have rules in place to check these despicable subhuman vulture capitalist.

    I will take a loan from China anyday over any Wall street capital. Worst could happen, especially for those without natural resources, is swapping debt for a long-term/concessionaire on government asset. eg a Port.

  20. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ John A

    We will as usual continue to spin top in mud.

  21. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU

    The ministers/ cabinet appoint the boards. Boards everywhere have responsibilities among which is an annual report inclusive of audited financial statements. Do you honestly believe there is need for special legislation to ensure timely audited financials? If that is the case the uneducated class ascended at least three decades ago.


  22. @Vincent.

    In summary we pass new laws which state the old laws must be obeyed. Lol

    Lord sometimes I feel we are fighting a losing battle.

  23. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    The question was asked earlier about the number of certified accountants in Barbados. No one answered . There are over one thousand registered by ICAB. I do not know the relevance of the information. Quite a few are in the Public Service. That cannot be the source of the late presentation of audited accounts. When the number was 75 % less Audited accounts were timely. What is the real problem?

  24. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    As a |UK patient, I would rather have white nurses than West Africans – and I speak from experience.

    I never said anything about preferring white nurses, you clown. So much for your university education.

    Come on now, Hal….

    Sylvia Denman, who has died aged 86, was an academic, lawyer and public servant who worked hard to advance the causes of race relations and equal opportunities

    Sylvia was born in Barbados to Euleen (nee Alleyne) and Alexander Yarde, and went to school there at Queen’s college. Her academic career included lectureships in the UK (at Oxford Polytechnic, 1965-76, which became Oxford Brookes University), the West Indies and the US, where she was Fulbright fellow at New York University in 1982-83.


  25. Vincent the problem is that the boards don’t either understand or are capable of ensuring the financials are filed. Most of these boards are made up of party faithfuls who have no intention of rocking the party boat.

    There is also no penalty for these entities not filing. Maybe the PM should ensure that the boards of entities not filed on time will he told to resign.

    You think the public embarrassment would maybe make them be active board members ?

  26. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Hal

    @ Jeff

    I do not know the person but I know the family(s ) My sincere condolences to the Alleyne and Yarde families. May she rest in peace and rise in Glory.

  27. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A

    He/ She who appoints can disappoint. But ,like David, you playing idiot. Well I am a boss idiot.


  28. Vincent I have not heard that expression ” boss idiot ” for years! Lol

    You and I know the demand for change on this issue has to come from the PM. IT also must come with serious penalties for failure to obey the deadlines.

    Do I expect to see this change? No because as I said before every appointed minister is at heart a politician first.

  29. bajanfreeparty Avatar
    bajanfreeparty

    Educated to learn one thing and then do another, to pass ACTs to By-pass Laws , to make Fraud which is a crime Legal, To feed the Nation with False and Misleading Statements, To have a COP and DPP who just hold an office and pick up the dead off the streets, To have an AG , GG who are rooted in crimes,To Have a Person holding Prime Minister Office who is a Well Know Un-Charged Criminal by the same Criminal COP and DPP,To hold office to Black Justice, To Be fair and impartial, To take the Oath of Office just for a paycheck and to have Criminal Power cloaked in the robe of the law. A hunry man teaching people to Farm they shall be all dead when its time to eat.

  30. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    One of the ironies of public bodies failure to file audited financial statement or even a basic annual report, is that you have people from the private sector who sat on these same boards and say nothing. This kind of behavior would have never been tolerated in the companies they lead or own. Go figure. I guess government affair takes place in an upside down universe relative to ours.

  31. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    I would never serve on any government entity board whose audited financial status is so lacking.


  32. @fortyacresandamule

    You are aware those from the private sector sit on the SOE Boards for the fees and the padding it lends to their resumes/LinkedIn profiles?


  33. You also have to remember the board basically will forward its instructions to management. Management then has to make it happen. So the question then is what is the penalty to management if they do not follow through?

    The answer is very little because as you know it is practically impossible to fire anyone in the civil service or discipline them in any real way.

    So basically the problem continues as no government wants to get to the core and change it as that would upset the civil service and unions.


  34. @John A

    Why do we blame the elected politician if this is the case?


  35. @ David

    The government would have to enact change in the civil service employment rules to make it easier to deal with those who stand in the way of progress. That would mean clashing with the unions to get these changes implemented. How long have we been hearing about civil service reform, pray tell what reform has ever occurred?


  36. Having said that a strong board might be willing to push the issue to the point where government were publically embarrassed enough to act. Of course they would probably all be fired by the said government who elected them as board members first.

    Hence the wheel goes around and the vehicle goes no where.

  37. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Vincent it always amuses me that you guys pompasette verbally here so extensively on the behaviours of politicians and disagree vigorously with them but as soon as someone disagrees with YOU GUYS the personal broadsides are so sharp.

    Amusing hypocrisy!

    If to state that absolute default of a state financial contract is a LEGITIMATELY act and u call it irrelevant then you are being stupidly petulant and ignorant of basic rules of engagement.

    The bond/paper holders had all recourse to the courts to enforce their contract …

    The issue is NOT whether it was the right thing to do… It was a very aggressive negotiation ploy and they used it.

    You can disagree on the process but to call all the folks uneducated on finance and economics is irrational.

    Anyhow, glad to know all the knowledge of state financing resides here with you guys.

    Carry on smartly.

  38. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    @Hal Austin on 16 June, 2019 at 9:29 a.m. 3rd paragraph, last sentence “As a UK patient, I would rather have white nurses than West Africans”

    @Hal Austin on 16 June, 2019 at 4:20 p.m., 1st paragraph “I never said anything about preferring white nurses”

    The people who read BU have decided for themselves.

  39. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @David. LOL. I a very well aware of the benefits that a board appointment brings.

  40. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    Had the DNA done. 85% West African ancestry. 15% Irish from Rock Hall (St. Peter) plantation

  41. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    Professor Cumberbatch at 7:57 p.m.

    Thanks.

    But unfortunately for me I did not attend a British university, lol!!!

    Not UWI either.

    But I ain’t calling no names.

    However I spent my life working in a field which requires EXTREME attention to detail.

    I notice t’ings.

  42. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @VC
    So u provided wonderful background at 7.34and 42, then asked “what is the real problem?” and didn’t give an answer?

  43. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Yo President Simple…ya West African to ya bones…you go girl, do some more research..there is SO MUCH TO DISCOVER…

    don’t mind Mia and her WHITE CROOKS…they will stay right where they belong, goddamn thieves…trailing HER her every move, because that is what crooks like and that is what she likes….same crooks.that she can’t seem to shake off the lives of Black people on the island and it appears she don’t want to, but she is not carrying that nasty corruption into Africa…she can take that to the bank…goddamn disrespectful, even of her own MOTHERLAND…bad ENUFF that she has no respect for Black people on the island, the same African descendants, especially the most vulnerable women and children.

  44. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    When Africa has become SICK AND TIRED of the corruption..ya done know ya can’t carry none of that from the Caribbean to the East.

    https://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/240306/sudans-bashir-charged-corruption-appearance-april


  45. @ Jeff

    I made it clear I was speaking from the experience of a patient. I could have said I preferred the Indian nurses to the West Africans. That was specific not a generalised view, one shared by my fellow patients, and I spelt out the reasons why: aggressive, rude, etc. Implicit in that was that the other staff had all those qualities. I said may be it was cultural (not racial). Communicating is about context. Clarity is important, fi you do not fully understand then ask the question: what exactly do you mean? Don’t assume the operation of my mind.
    To repeat, I had the recent experience of spending a month in hospital with staff from around the world and by far the West Africans were the worst (Nigerians and Ghanaians); they were despicable. Not a single one stood out. At first I was impressed with the staff nurse, until she started to lie and fiddle records.

    This is what I said originally:
    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.(Quote)

    I followed up with a further explanation:

    What these nurses, like all people, bring with them is their culture. When they see a black person they relax and think they are dealing with someone from ‘home’ and old forms of behaviour come to the fore. This will end in tears..(Quote)

    I further added:

    Nor have I mentioned anything about nurses being black or lack of training (apart from good manners). Caribbean nurses are black too. I said African, and that they are rude, obnoxious, aggressive and unsympathetic. If you have not spent any time in a hospital with those pigs you cannot talk. Both black and white patients complain about them. May be it is cultural.(Quote)

  46. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Wuhloss……..all the world’s filthiest hypocrites,liars racists, thieves and criminals…THE CHURCH and the palace…are jumping on the cannabis MONEY TRAIN…

    “The Church Of England’s $10.5 Billion Fund Will Now Invest In Cannabis

    When Shavo Odadjian, bassist of the band System of a Down, told me he was launching a cannabis strain called “Church,” I could not help but find it funny.

    Weed and religion don’t go together, I thought.

    However

    It seemed that, step-by-step, cannabis and Christianity were getting closer.

    The Queen’s Cannabis

    Despite these small advancements, nothing (not even a big cloud of white smoke coming out of the Vatican) could have prepared me for the surprise I woke up to last weekend: the Church of England, the mother of the international Anglican Communion, led by Queen Elizabeth II, will be changing its investment fund’s rules to allow for investments in medical cannabis, which is now legal in the U.K. under certain circumstances – although actual access remains pretty limited.

    The fund in question, the Church Commissioners for England fund, currently manages about £8.3 billion ($10.5 billion) in assets – although the Financial Times reported assets of $16 billion, based on this report. As a closed fund, no new contributions are accepted; the fund currently destines all of its profits to financing the Church’s ongoing expenses.”

  47. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    Hal you too brought your culture from home in the Ivy. My mummy used to work in the Ivy, so she told me nuff, nuff stories. Have you considered that the West African nurses found you to be rude, obnoxious, aggressive, unsympathetic, a pig?

    You are reporting on the nurses’ behaviour.

    I wonder what the nurses reported about you?

    You have been called out on this blog by more than once by more than one person.

    I advise ya please don’t back pedal na more, becausin’ ya might fall offa ya bicycle and end up in the hospital for another month expecting people whom you regard as pigs to be sweet, compassionate, and sympathetic to you. Only a complete idiot would expect that life works like that.

    Take my advice next you are in the hospital humble yourself, be courteous to everybody, the consultant doctors, the nurses, the food servers, and the men and women who mop the floors. Treat the attending nurses as though they are your daughters or granddaughters and all will be well.

    Excellent manners is the grease which soothes social intercourse.

  48. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    I was in the QEH a few years ago, and the day after the surgery Dr. So and So said to me “why didn’t you tell me that you were the very close relative of my colleague Dr. So and So?”

    My response was “I don’t like to pull rank. I just want to be treated like an ordinary patient.”

    And indeed I was treated like an ordinary patient. Excellent treatment from everybody, the doctors both foreign and local, the nurses, the people who served the food, the good lady (a member of my church) who mopped the floor.

    Be nice to people, and chances are they will be nice to you, even though like me you are just an ordinary person.


  49. @ Simple,
    Here you go again. I specifically said ask any of the returnees and others their views (not just relatives). So it just cannot be me. By the way, some time ago you said your relative worked in Howells + Road; which is it, the Ivy or Howells + Road. I remember asking who for and you declined to say. I did not speculate.

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