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One of the world’s largest credit and debit card issuers, the technology giant, Mastercard, has recently launched what it calls the Smart Islands program in the region.

While over the last ten years, tourism growth has shown significant and steady growth with small and medium size enterprises (SME’s) throughout the area playing a critical role in the economic ecosystem according to an Engagement Bureau press release, ‘only a tiny portion of companies in the region accept electronic payments.

Today, out of the total of 1.4 million merchants in the region, only 10 per cent of those are accepting electronic payments’. When you consider our principal tourism markets and the overwhelming use of cards to settle almost every type of purchase transaction, this is a staggeringly low percentage, especially when you take into account, often there is a foreign currency exchange element taking place.

Independent research clearly shows that tourists’ are far more likely to spend money where making payments are convenient and secure.

On launching the initiative, Jimena Elia, Director of Market Development for Mastercard Caribbean stated, ‘innovation is in Mastercards’s DNA’ and ‘we are excited to reveal this multi-layered technology that can help expand the tourism industry’s earning potential and build the Caribbean’s resilience to natural disasters by developing smarter islands built on cashless societies’.

To me, at least, it is a no-brainer for our Government to partner with commercially driven organisations like this, to better track tourism spending and allow them to collect taxes, where they are due, rather than continuing to haemorrhage valuable foreign exchange, which frequently evaporates unrecorded offshore, where little or no national benefit is extracted.

Or perhaps the article explains it in better words – ‘The data and tourism insights that the Mastercard Small Islands Program provides can help Governments and Destination Marketing Organisations (DMO’s) define a country’s ideal tourist, enabling more efficient marketing investments with higher ROI (return on investment)’.

Years ago, sadly without success, I lobbied for a Barbados branded credit and debit card, where all purchases paid for by our visitors, both on-island and the means to get here (airfares), earned points or miles which could be re-deemed on their next visit. Just by using this particular card as payment, the holder would also qualify for additional discounts or benefits, like the island-wide 30 plus lunch

re-DISCOVER restaurants offering 10 per cent reduction or a fixed price dinner at another 20 eating options. Of course, it could be similarly used at all types of accommodation, car rental, activities, attractions, shopping, dining and all other possibilities, increasing the likelihood of visitors returning and building destination loyalty.

With an increasing myriad of choices, brand loyalty has become an increasingly critical part in the marketing of products and services to retain existing clients.

After all, enticing a returning client is less expense than finding a new one.


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138 responses to “Adrian Loveridge Column – Acceptance of Electronic Payment a Must”


  1. Silly Woman
    Not going down the path u have chosen where distractions on your part can be used against the woman efforts
    No venturing there
    It is a tactic usually used by those who have their own agenda which in this case to defend Oblong head Kerrie Symmonds


  2. Silly Woman
    Not going down the path u have chosen where distractions on your part can be used against the woman efforts
    No venturing there
    It is a tactic usually used by those who have their own agenda which in this case to defend Oblong head Kerrie Symmonds


  3. I simply ASKED Mariposa to please explain how, by Symmonds saying “In my judgement it required nothing other than to direct them to the fact that the law does not allow it and encourage them to properly clothe themselves,”…….

    ……. can be interpreted as “telling the woman it’s not her business” or, according to the resident critic, “Lord Perfect Pantomath,” “reprimanding a decent citizen for drawing to the attention of a group of tourists that nudity is not allowed on Barbadian beaches?”

    @ Mr. Skinner

    RE: “A naked tourist woman picture gets taken and a government minister steps .
    Priorities………………….my boy priorities.”

    Are you suggesting that, having seen the video, Symmonds held a press conference to comment on the matter or was he approached by the press to make a comment?

    As it relates to the issue with the nude mentally challenged lady, should the minister of health have held a press conference or should the press have contacted him to make a comment?

    I heard the RBPF’s public relations officer Inniss admonishing those people who video recorded the lady. The time they used to video record her could have been better used to assist her or call for assistance.


  4. Artax
    I dont have to explain nuttin
    Suffice it to say that it got your attention which might have been my intent


  5. Mariposa Kerrie is a bigable lawyer and a Cabinet Minister too, you think that he needs to be defended by silly women like me?

    And tobesides sometimes I vote for his party, and sometimes I vote for your party.

    So what is your problem?

    Go away, do!


  6. @ Mariposa

    Back tot the BU rubbish. I am retired so have nothing more important to do most days, so reading BU helps the time to pass.
    The question is, with the neurological problem that forms apart of the Bajan Condition. Cut out the moral claptrap. Let us take it step by step: is: is being nude on Bajan beaches a criminal offence? Yes or no?


  7. Once opinions conflict with yours it is rubbish. Poor you.

  8. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Artax
    I’m saying not suggesting. The minister stepped in. How ,when , where is of no consequence. I think this whole issue is being overblown just because it’s a tourist. That is my point.
    I notice nowaday that all the problems are being transferred to the public and the press. The press has chosen to be less active these days; the central bank Governor is now being asked questions that should be properly asked of the MOF. Suddenly accountability is no longer an issue. That’s where we are : the more things change the more they remain the same.
    A man ruthlessly exploits workers and that is only capitalism. Standard in big countries so we must adapt. Nonsense. A tourist woman is told that we don’t appreciate her crassness and a local is reprimanded.
    A few months back tourists used racial slurs at a local and we pretended they didn’t mean it.
    The Duopoly Rules


  9. The laws of barbados forbids nudity in public places
    But reading some of the comments one would believe otherwise


  10. The laws of barbados forbids nudity in public places
    But reading some of the comments one would believe otherwise


  11. @ Mariposa

    You may notice the usual voices and anonymous lawyers are not saying if the act by the nudists was illegal, or even better, the actual legislation that covers it.


  12. Silly Woman so what if Oblong Head Symmonds is a lawyer
    Lawyers in barbados reputation left much to be desired

    Stupse


  13. @ William

    The minister’s intervention sends a clear message. Barbados is a vassal state, prostituting ourselves for the tourists’ dollar. We are world class, punching above our weight…


  14. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 3:13 PM “The question is, with the neurological problem that forms apart of the Bajan Condition.”

    So you are a neurologist now too? Diagnosing patients without even seeing them first?

    Some people with the Bajan Condition think that there is also a Mad English Condition.


  15. @William Skinner February 3, 2020 3:34 PM “A man ruthlessly exploits workers and that is only capitalism. Standard in big countries so we must adapt. Nonsense. A tourist woman is told that we don’t appreciate her crassness and a local is reprimanded.”

    Actually it was multiple naked tourists, male and female. Not just “a tourist woman.” I am not sure if the BU intelligentsia finds male or female nudity more offensive.

    But nobody is saying tht the people were right to be naked in public. It is understood that in Barbados public nudity is forbidden.

    My problem is with the SHARING, PUBLISHING, BROADCASTING of the photograph.

    Once the woman had chastised the naked party.

    Why did she have to photograph them?

    And why did she need to SHARE/PUBLISH/BROADCAST the photo?


  16. If the woman genuinely wished to protect Bajan, especially Bajan children s from public displays of nudity you would think that the last thing she would do would be to broadcast the photo on social media.

    What if a child had picked up the telephone of a parent, guardian or elder sibling and unexpectedly saw the photo?

    How would her action have protected minors from public displays of nudity?

  17. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Silly Woman
    Everyday I see photos of people stabbed shot murdered and they are all Bajans. We take the pics and they go viral. I see horrific pics of people dead in the road after accidents. I see poor peoples’ dilapidated houses and living conditions on the front page. I don’t hear about the affects on our children.
    The woman should have said: Kindly put back on your clothes and I just live up the road and I can bake a sweetbread for you and show you real Bajan hospitality. I am not trying to offend you all because without you coming here our economy will sink.
    She will be praised and given the Pride of Barbados Award next Independence Day.


  18. @ William

    Have you notice no one is saying if the tourists had broken the law? The point is, it is highly likely that was a deliberate act by those tourists. It appears as if they set out to make a point.
    You will soon get tourism officials calling for at least one beach to be set aside for nudists, and we will have nudists conventions, and the president will make speeches about Barbados as the spiritual home of nudists. Cocktails on the nudist beach. We are world class, we punch above our weight.
    Barbados has lost its moral moorings.


  19. @William Skinner February 3, 2020 5:39 PM “@ Silly Woman. Everyday I see photos of people stabbed shot murdered and they are all Bajans. We take the pics and they go viral. I see horrific pics of people dead in the road after accidents. I see poor peoples’ dilapidated houses and living conditions on the front page. I don’t hear about the affects on our children.”

    You do know William that it is possible to block people on your phone, so that you do not see the obscenities that other people choose to PUBLISH. I had to tell one of my own relatives not to send me such things. She did so one more time and got blocked. i still have a land line. She can still talk to me on my land line. She can still visit, I can still visit her. But I will not have any smart phone communication with her. She knows that I still love her. Just didn’t love the violence and pornography she sent to me.

    If many more of us would take the power into our own hands we could solve the problem.

    The fault is in us dear William, the fault is in us.


  20. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 5:51 PM

    Hal’s question: Have you notice no one is saying if the tourists had broken the law?

    My response: Yes the tourists broke the law, as I have said multiple times today.


  21. I wonder if some of the BU old goats beginning to lose it.

  22. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Hal
    The untouchables , Sir. He who pays the piper…….. We go all over the world and live by the rules. You are correct.
    Almost all 50/49 murders were on the web. There was a video with a woman and a dog etc.
    Just recently a gas station shoot out in real time…..
    Peace.


  23. @William Skinner February 3, 2020 5:39 PM “The woman should have said: Kindly put back on your clothes and I just live up the road and I can bake a sweetbread for you and show you real Bajan hospitality.”

    No. I would not advise anybody meeting 4 naked strangers for the first time to invite them to your home.

    No, no.


  24. @Archer

    “of just how foreign exchange earnings “evaporate.””

    Are you a BU BLOG reader on a regular frequency, the obvious answer is No, because if you were you would not have to ask this silly question. Troll through the recent, say 10 months of BU articles and the answer to your question may become more obvious, by the way the sun rises in the West and sets in the east each day.


  25. Wily Coyote

    Since it is such a silly question, why don’t you answer it? Not with insubstantial, content-free statements, but with evidence.

  26. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Silly Woman
    Love that response LOL


  27. Pls remind the blog where you said the tourists had broken Barbadian law MULTIPLE times? I am not talking about hints. While you are at it, plse state the law they had broken, the way you said the woman had broken the Computer Misuse Act.
    If they had broken the Act, as you imply, what should the woman have done? Ignore it? Call the police? Whisper to them kindly to get dressed? What was her civic responsibility?

    @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 5:51 PM
    Hal’s question: Have you notice no one is saying if the tourists had broken the law?
    My response: Yes the tourists broke the law, as I have said multiple times today

    But nobody is saying tht the people were right to be naked in public. It is understood that in Barbados public nudity is forbidden.(Quote)

    Nobody is arguing with the woman’s right/duty/civic responsibility “about the law which prohibits nudity” That was her FIRST action.(Quote)

    The tourists were wrong to be naked in public even if on a secluded beach. although I have seen Ninja man naked on Broad Street during high daytime more than once and I certainly did not loudly chastise him.(Quote)


  28. Why don’t you google it. Every Tom DICK and Harry knows that public nudity is illegal in Barbados.


  29. David speak for yuhself .not every Tom dick and Harry ever heard of Barbados

    @Silly woman
    You and Symmonds should keep wunna back handed comments about the lady to wunna self and deal with the law
    Maybe Parliament needs more ministers like her who knows how to get things done without taxing people to death

  30. Dishonest Bajans Avatar
    Dishonest Bajans

    You and Symmonds should keep wunna back handed comments about the lady to wunna self and deal with the law
    Maybe Parliament needs more ministers like her who knows how to get things done without taxing people to death
    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    THESE ARE THE PEOPLE WHO ARE PART OF GIMME THE VOTE AND WATCH MUH FUCK UP THE ISLAND ALONG WITH OUR BUDDIES THE DRUG DEALERS AND MARK MALONEY THE FORMER ENEMY OF THE STATE AND NOW MAJOR CRIME PARTNER.

    2020 MORE CRIME, MORE MURDERS AND MORE FLEECING OF FOOLISH TAXPAYERS.

    I AM CONVINCED THAT BAJANS LIKE A LOT OF BLUBBER AND DEADWEIGHT.


  31. Please note that I have never done anything to phuck up Barbados nor any other place. Please note that I have never met any drug dealers. I don’t know why they don’t come around me, perhaps because I have NEVER taken, bought nor sold any illegal drugs. I admit to having smoked a single tobacco cigarette in 1972. I’ve never met Mark Maloney. I have no desire to meet him.

    I am not responsible for any of Barbados’ murders. You will note that they are done mostly by YOUNG MEN. I am an old woman. Don’t blame me for the bad behaved men. I did not raise any bad behaved YOUNG MEN. I won’t take any responsibility for their bad behaviour. You will have to ask the daddies how their youth get so.

    I don’t like being over taxed.

    i have NEVER been a member of any political party.

    I’ve NEVER got a political pick, never wanted one.

    I’ve never got a political contract, never wanted one.

    Just an ordinary Bajan.

    Love this place.

    Don’t love its faults though.

    But then I don’t love my children’s faults either.

    Didn’t like my parents’ faults either. may they never-the-less rest in peace.

    P.S. for Ewart: I am NOT responsible for the prostate cancers of our men either, including the prostate cancers of my closest most beloved male relatives. Love them very much, how can I force a man that is 60 pounds heavier than me to go to the doctor once persuasion has failed?


  32. @Hal Austin February 3, 2020 7:34 PM “Pls remind the blog where you said the tourists had broken Barbadian law MULTIPLE times? I am not talking about hints. While you are at it, plse state the law they had broken, the way you said the woman had broken the Computer Misuse Act.”

    I suggest you follow David’s advice and Google it, or better still consult and PAY an attorney for a professional opinion.

    And at this hour you really ought to be in bed and fast asleep.

    Run along now.

  33. Piece the Legend Avatar

    To the Royal Baygon Police Force of Barbados

    It is stated that

    “…I heard the RBPF’s public relations officer Inniss admonishing those people who video recorded the lady.

    The time they used to video record her could have been better used to assist her or call for assistance…”

    Wunna RHs should really keep quiet bout videos doah!

    Whu bout the video where on uh wunna was supposedly tekking man and some beach?

    Or the one recorded by Nazzim Blackett’s family when wunna was trying to kill him in District A police station?

    Wunna RH investigate either of them yet?

    Or wunna arrest Innes or Alex Tasker yet?

    Well until wunna do wunna RH job Shut To RH Up!

    Criminals in Uniform!


  34. Th Bajan Condition at play again. Answer the question and top trying to deflect it to nonsense about bed time and Googling answers. You made a statement about having said the naked tourist had broken the law. When did you say that? Plse cut and paste it.
    These tricks may work in the Bajan rum shop, but not with me. I am more disciplined. Had to be as a black man in a hostile environment.
    Answer the question, when did you say the nudists had broken Bajan laws and which law? How should the woman have responded. Pls answer in simple, plain English and not Bajan gobbledegook.


  35. Ewart Archer February 3, 2020 7:19 PM

    Do as I suggested in my original post and go do the research yourself you moron. Not worth trying to explain the intricacies of Forgien Leakage to an educated RH like yourself.


  36. @Wily

    What happened this morning? Treating the gentleman very scruffy?


  37. @ Piece the Legend February 3, 2020 10:02 PM

    Be careful you don’t attract the wrath of the politically-compromised Green(e) giant boy and his sidekick who allowed himself to be taken down the rabbit hole looking for the Guy Fawkes fella mayers.

    As we both know, the laws of Spirituality always trump the laws of corrupt man.

    It’s just a matter of time when those above will overrule those below.

  38. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU

    Citizens are becoming restless and irritable. What do you think is the cause? I have noticed it for over 12 months now. Do you think it is only the youth that have suppressed anger? Sign of the times ,my man!


  39. Topic hijacked again!!! Oh ye of little concentration faith.


  40. The topic is only hijacked if others follow. You get this when some of the regulars are ignorant about the subject matter. Instead of commenting on another blog they play bully.


  41. Wily Coyote

    You are a typical West Indian.

    You don’t know what you’re talking about, but you’re full of yourself. Too bad we don’t have world wars any more to get rid of people like you by volunteering you for dangerous assignments.


  42. Is BU a conversation or a tutorial? Conversations move on, tutorials stick to the topic.

  43. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    The Ministry of Tourism and Mastercard conducted an information session about the Mastercard Bank-in-the-Box initiative for small entrepreneurs and vendors this morning at the LESC. It will accept both Mastercard and Visa. The IDB is supporting the programme. It was launched successfully in Bahamas and they’re seeking feedback and insights in order to serve Barbados. They are seeking a local banking partner. The fixed cost is currently US$100 in Bahamas for the card reader but that can vary based on the type of card reader. In addition there will be a card reader maintenance fee and an issuer annual membership. The per transaction fee is likely to be about 4.5%.

    My fear (expectation) is that the local clique of banks will sabotage the whole initiative.

  44. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    As long as the fee is not outrageous, I think this is a good start. This should have been enacted years ago. Still, better late than never. Moving towards a cashless economy is the way to go, not just the hospitality sector alone.

  45. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    The government takes a lot of heat for the poor performance of Barbados in ease of doing business, but a big portion of the blame needs instead to be laid at the feet of our local banking sector.


  46. @PLT

    Regulators are there to tell banks what to do, not to take orders from the banks.

  47. William Skinner Avatar

    @ PLT

    Pray tell what is the role of the private sector in facilitating business. What real purpose is the local private sector playing in national economic development ?

  48. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Hal Austin & @William Skinner

    The Mastercard Bank-in-the-Box initiative for small entrepreneurs and vendors has been running in the Bahamas and Bermuda for quite a while and it was rolled out in Jamaica a year ago.

    But in order for Mastercard to launch it in Barbados they need a local banking partner.

    However the local banks do everything they can to inhibit and sabotage the growth of financial technologies that benefit entrepreneurial individuals or companies because it threatens their profits and they collude rather than compete. They have managed to put up ecommerce roadblocks for the past two decades that have done great damage to local businesses. I can sit at my computer in St Philip and open an ecommerce enabled company bank account in Delaware in less than an hour. It is impossible to walk into any Bajan bank branch and do the same.


  49. @ PLT

    I have said before, and I say again, our big problem is incompetence. It s not corruption or conspiracies. Gross incompetence, from top to bottom. The dishonesty comes after.

  50. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Hal @ PLT
    Who really runs our country? We seem to give the political managerial class and the corporate class a free pass every single time. Now we are blaming banks. Last week we were blaming the Central Bank Governor? What do we really pay taxes for the government to do?
    We have consultants more than one minister in the ministry of finance. We have more than one minister in Highways and transport. Just last night I heard on the news about a thirteen member Standards Board. We have the largest post independence cabinet etc . Yet everyday we are hearing about bottle necks and the inability to get anything done.
    The Duopoly Rules

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