Like I would imagine, along with thousands of other small businesses we have spent the last four months trying to find creative ways of meeting our financial obligations, without any source of earned income. Where possible we have deferred actual payments to essential services by using credit cards, but there eventually remains a day of reckoning

Our bank has ceased to issue and mail printed statements, while at the same time making it almost impossible without additional cost, to produce them online. From the last physical document received, it shows interest rates of 22.5 per cent annually for purchases and a staggering 25 per cent for cash advances. Under the current dire economic circumstances and considering the miserly interest paid on deposits, this appears to be an almost obscene scenario, when in many cases the banks have dramatically reduced services offered while maintaining pre-Covid-19 monthly service fees.

In some cases certain banks have also unilaterally closed branches, forcing thousands of regular customers to travel to often inconvenient locations, only to be met by staffing levels clearly unable to cope with demand.

Should we reasonably expect more?

With the majority of our banks forced into accepting substantial ‘haircuts’, perhaps the Government feels they have no moral authority to intervene?

While the financial institutes may counter by stating they have deferred loan and overdraft payments, have interest rates been reduced to allow many small enterprises to even stand a chance of survival, let alone recovery?

In our own case, we are completely up-to-date with all Government dues payable by us, but are still owed tens of thousands of Dollars in outstanding VAT refunds dating back from February 2013. To compensate for this deficit we were forced to take a short term unsecured bank loan at 12.25 per cent annual interest.  As and when and if we finally receive these monies, will the administration and its agencies add compensation to cover this added cost?

One thing for certain, is that with no immediate end in sight into anything approaching the return to normality of the restoration of airlift in terms of arrival numbers, we cannot simply rely on our overseas market to stop many small tourism players going out of business.

There still remains a substantial domestic market and while many will argue that this source is also under enormous fiscal pressure, it may currently be the only game in town. Once again, I make an passionate plea for Government to consider waiving some of the overbearing taxes levied on this industry, at least in the short term, so that when recovery is finally imaginable, we at least have sufficient players still in business.

72 responses to “Adrian Loveridge Column – For the Sake of Covid 19, Waive Taxes!”

  1. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @JohnA
    The proverbial rubber is about to hit the road for many.

  2. Cuhdear Bajan Avatar

    @Lawson July 31, 2020 8:43 AM “…I thought covid was almost non existent.”

    No. We have to look after the Covid19 patients coming in from Canada [4 last week], the United Kingdom, and the United States. We can’t let them die from neglect.


  3. https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/08/01/were-falling-behind-in-hosting-technologys-firms-expert/
    “We are in the right time zone, we’ve got the right climate, we are close in proximity to the US . . . so there are a lot of people who would be very happy to come here and to bring their business. This is something we can think about in terms of where we are going forward,” he said.

    Aren’t we going in circles? The same can be said off offshoring jobs and yet companies went to India.
    Intel was here and it ran out. Before, you run to point out the climate, sea and sand, I will tell you dozens of countries/islands can say the same.

    You just cannot run out with the same old answer for everything… And if you do find a solution, others will copy it.


  4. @ Northern Observer

    Are you happy with the structure of the board at Fortress? You have not said if you do. Have a good read on corporate governance by starting with the Cadbury Report then the Hampel Report.
    There is a reason why, unlike the US the UK does not have the same person as chairman and CEO of a publicly listed company. Look at the background to these reports and tell me if the chairman and his son as CEO is fine with you.

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @HA
    I am not a shareholder, so I really do not care. It’s a publicly traded family business. Why?
    I know the father stepped down from the Board of BMLAS once Fortress started. Never actually looked at the Board at Fortress. Since the “family” owns most of the shares, they’ll do as they like.
    The local stock exchange has so few listings and is so expensive, how they continue is beyond me. CS should be private and GEL should be trading in a hard currency.


  6. @ Northern Observer

    Forget the specificity of Fortress and your personal investments. Do you think it is good governance for a publicly listed company to have a chairman and CEO who are related? Yes or no.
    We have had this discussion on BU before and, as a result, I was accused of saying someone was not qualified for his position. I am not saying that and did not then. It is a governance issue.
    By the way, I like the idea of a publicly traded family business.

  7. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    It is not ideal.
    Exactly why it should go private.
    Then it would be nobody’s business?
    They have published 14 annual reports since the last from the NIS, so all isn’t wrong.

  8. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ John A
    Have you read or studied the profit margins of GEL , Cave Shepherd or Sagicor for the period 2008-2018 ? Do you have concrete evidence of multiple business failures during that period? Do you know that the CEO of SAGICOR earns almost 29 million BDS per year ? Do you know what directors of GEL receive per year ? Have you seen the balance sheet of Simpson Motors for the period ? Do you know anything about what Cheffete made?
    We going along with all of this nonsense about the “lost decade” and yet there is no real evidence that these high fliers in corporate Barbados suffered any great declines.
    Like Professor Howard said , we just running with crap we reading in the press without asking relevant questions. I am prepared to admit that with COVID things changed quickly and dramatically but the only people who experienced hardship in Barbados 2010 t0 2018 and since 2018 is the poor suffering black masses.

  9. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Hal
    You are missing the real point. Here it is:
    Two generations of Caves sold us pants,shirts and shoes. The third generation selling us investments. Say what you like about business models but Cave Shepherd made millions if not billions.
    Nobody carries pretty talk to the bank !!!


  10. Can anybody ask MIa what was her rush to get air transport into barbados from an airline that she was less than transparent to the people before she made the decision

    A read of trip advisor reviews tells a sorry tale of an airline interCARRIBBEAN who has a mirror image of LIAT


  11. You are a fan of TripAdvisor now?


  12. It is of my view that this gang led by PM has used the media very well to pull wool over peoples eye meanwhile using smoke and mirror tactics to shove down the people throat
    How is it once again that even when this govt is caught redhanded getting ready to implement policies that were not given due process in Parliament that govt continues on its merry way as nothing matters expect what they say or do
    Here is another case whereby transparency and accountabilty was totally avoided to make way for an airline that very few knows about its day to day involvement in aviation financially or its track record

  13. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @WS
    The flip side of your point, is that many of these businesses, found new business opportunities beyond Bim’s shores. Investing elsewhere. While we cannot separate the profit margins and operating costs of the ‘Barbadian portion’ of many of the larger firms, rest assured they were not as good as you might think. And why their focus is ‘ elsewhere’.


  14. @Northern,

    So, they invested elsewhere? So why can’t the average Barbadian invest overseas and also take their capital out, like these businesses that you mention, like the banks repatriating dividends etc?

    One rule for the Meades and another the Persians?

    We all lil people are supposed to keep our money on the plantation?! Disgusting.


  15. Mari, that is the same TripAdvisor that you uses to buse when people use it to show criticism of Sandals?

    And a next thing. When an airline meet all the relevant requirements it is given permission is given for it to service a country. So explain to we how interCaribbean is a GOVERNMENT POLICY?


  16. @ William

    I do not think I am missing the point. The Cave Shepherd retail model is flawed and has been for a long time. As to the Fortress money fund, it seems to me as if there are governance issues, which I have pointed out.
    Someone else talked about keeping money on the plantation. In the old days, particularly in the US, the company used to run the store in the town; so you got your wages in one hand and spend them in the company store.
    We still have the same approach in many ways: pension funds investing in the employer’s business; employees getting shares in the company as bonuses; etc.
    Fundamentally, the problem is one of policy failure by both DLP_ and BLP governments. I am not talking about actual policy implementation, since people will disagree on the process and the planned outcomes; what is important is starting a mature discussion and not juvenile heckling as if in a Dickensian gin parlour.
    I do not want to extend the discussion, or introduce a new argument, but for a dynamic entrepreneurial class to develop there must be innovative financial engineering, including shadow banks.
    Instead we allow foreign-owned banks to blackmail us, and the old plantocracy, including the Roebuck Street boys of old, to continue to block entrepreneurial progress.
    By the way, what has happened to the Clico-owned plantations?


  17. Here they go again trying to shoot the message and the messenger in effort to defend a govt whose implementation of policies are downright frightening ..maddening and unethical
    A few days ago media reports stated that blood samples were spilled all over the streets
    The question of how this happen still remains a mistery in that what ever necessary precautions that should have been taken before the transportation of those samples obviously were not done
    Govt has now taken to itself that barbadians are fools and would accept anything hence transparency and accountability does not matter
    The safety of this aeroplane and its day to day operations are necessary and should have been told to the people with clarity and understanding
    Govt way of doing things must be scruntized especially in thoses areas where public safety and security is at risk

  18. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @JW
    You will never get an argument from me that Barbadians should not be allowed to invest elsewhere.
    Wasn’t there talk about allowing them to hold foreign denominated bank accounts?
    The former GoCB has been pushing for dollarization. That would solve the issue?


  19. Let’s hope that Virgin Airways do not go bust anytime soon, leaving hundreds of holidaymakers stranded on our shores, during these troubled times.


  20. @bloggers
    If there is one thing that surprises me, it is when a Bajan decides to go silent.
    An uncomfortable truth and silence ensues..
    https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/08/07/us-citizens-advised-to-reconsider-travel-to-barbados/

    That should have been a hot topic.


  21. Why should it be a hot toppin?

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