Posted as a comment by Greene to the Government Using Throne Speech to Signal Fresh Guard

(minor edits by the Blogmaster)

Over the years and with experience, I have found that humans don’t analyse events properly and thoroughly. They come up with excuses and not the proper aetiology for why events occur. Thus they solve for the wrong problems or don’t learn from past events making the same mistake over and over- a recurring loop so to speak.

Take for example the so called lost decade between 2008 and 2018 where it is often bruited about without proper analysis that BIM lost its way. Because that was the period BIM’s economy plunged in line with the economies of most countries- a period roughly between 2008-2016 known as the great recession, a PM who was not a great communicator when not on the campaign trail, and where the populace believed that Govt MPs got rich beyond the salaries of their offices.

However, if the period prior to this is examined, you would find that on the face of it the economy was travelling at warp speed in line with but lagging the tremendous economic growth that visited the rest of the world. We had an effervescent PM perhaps because of the economy and he enjoyed great political freedom and gravitas, MPs got rich over night with little push back from the citizens because everyone was in an economic state of euphoria. This for the most part was the period between 1994-2008.  There were many scandals from the GEMS project to Greenland to Hardwood to the Kensington Oval redevelopment to the Barrack Building to EDUTEC not necessarily in that order and that is only a few. What really marked that period for me was there was no attempt at building a sustainable black economy. Government’s capital projects were mostly, if not all routed towards the traditional money class Bajans who do not reflect the racial make up of most Bajans.

I have always contended that that period signalled the no return point for BIM. The desecration of the West Coast, the sell off of Government lands, the borrow and spend policies by Government, followed by the borrow and spend habit of the population at large, the rise of land prices and other prices with no comparable rise in salaries, the stupid mantra of land is only an asset and the push to make BIM a first world country built on credit and piss poor laws and enforcement thereof, were a milieu for disaster.

It was a slow burning crisis that just needed a catalyst to set events in motion as BA Turner theorised in his 1978 seminal work called Man-made Disaster as distinguished from natural disasters although it is arguable whether there is a difference. He posited that all disasters have an incubation period where latent pathogens go unnoticed or if noticed excuses are created, erroneous analysis made, or cultural habits prevent proper fixes

All the signs were there of system failure- huge national and personal debt, corrupt politicians, a population spending beyond its means, weak legal infrastructure, dilapidated island wide physical infrastructure, a failing unreformed civil service, an uncaring and expectant public, an unchecked criminal underbelly, and a greedy private sector.

Then entered a deep recession as I mentioned above (2008-16) and the flaccid DLP regime after Thompson. It failed to arrest the slide if it could have. It is my contention that would have called for a PM and Cabinet with huge cajones to effect systemic changes that were needed and long overdue, an understanding civil service and a pliable private sector and public. None of that was present and none of that could have been, given the heady days of the previous years and the expectations that those days would continue and hence the deep disappointment that they didn’t.

That the DLP didn’t recognize this pending disaster or if it did, did nothing, is what Turner (1976) called rigidity in organisations, inability to handle multiple issues, ignoring warning signs, and a tendency to minimise problems that often negatively impact disaster mitigation. And so the DLP was blamed for the drastic economic slide of Barbados and was soundly embarrassed at the polls. It did not win a seat and won 1 or 2 constituency voting boxes.

Returning to Normalcy
The present Govt headed by MAM labelled that period the lost decade and every ill that BIM ever suffered was located there. No attempt was made to differentiate the period of PM Thompson from the period of PM Stuart and none was made to examine whether they inherited any problems from the previous administration. Perhaps because some of the new MPs were in Cabinet in the 1994-2008 period, it was enough to give Bajans a place to direct their anger at the failings of the DLP. As Drubek (1994) contends, the politics around accountability substitute systemic failures for individual guilt. And as Boin (2005) points out, even when this is known, leaders spin this information to assign blame away from them-selves.

From deliberately defaulting on the debt repayment, to BERT, to BOSS, to BEST and the rest, MAM and the BLP have sought to return to normalcy, if normalcy can be defined as the period between 1994-2008. They have been diverted partially but not entirely by; COVID, legal missteps (ACOP bungling and the failure to pass Anti Corruption law in the Senate), and policy issues (Ministry of Education numerous faux pas).

That leads into the question of capability to solve problems. Capability in government often relates to political leaders and government department possessing the technical and financial, organizational and policy wherewithal to respond to the matters at hand (Cigler, 2007). Effective response may be hampered by lack of delegation, spotty decision-making and inadequate communication (Paton and Jackson, 2002). Furthermore, apathy (political and public) to pending problems, budgetary restraints and organizational dysfunction militate against disaster planning and response (Drabek et al., 1981). It is a matter of argumentation whether such issues depict the present BLP under MAM

To the very present
So here we are after a Throne Speech that inter alia, sees BIM becoming a Republic next year, civil unions for gay couples, and a host of financial manoeuvrings which are yet to be digested fully by the public. Suffice it to say the prospect of civil unions is an easier sell than gay marriage, and becoming a Republic are the topics occupying the minds of Bajans. Some ask whether this Thorne Speech hullabaloo was a reset or more hot air from a PM who loves to talk but delivers very little in terms of substance. I will state definitely I don’t see a reset. Moreover, the question that remains is, are we in a recurring loop?

209 responses to “Explaining the LOST DECADE”


  1. Good post.


  2. @Hal
    I second that.

    Just observing


  3. If I may say, I believe that Yardbroom, Old Onion Bags, Bonnie Peppa et al, would have been very pleased with the quality of this post.


  4. “Suffice it to say the prospect of civil unions an easier sell than gay marriage, and becoming a Republic are the topics occupying the minds of Bajans. ”

    that’s the intent, while your mind is being occupied with all that STUPID SHIT for the next 3 years…your people are being victimized and ROBBED, check out Caswell’s article, when the fcuk are yall going to wake the hell up…steuppsss.

    some of you like too much dumbass pretty words…


  5. Lost decade can niw be summed up as ten years of prosperity to two years of social decay and households sitting on the precipice of poverty waiting to fall over the cliff
    Cant imagine if this govt is given another 8 yrs what a hell hole barbados would become
    Kunckleheads smoking weed especially amongst the youth whose job proposals are lacking
    Same sex unions along with uprise in violent crime
    All which would make the lost ten years look like a sunday school picnic
    Anything that is lost as OSA so aptly stated is the blp a govt that has blatantly used smoke and mirrors to find the way


  6. Quite true – all of it! And no reset yet. As I said, pothole filling but no new road.

    A reset requires more than a throne speech. It is a process that requires an awakening. It requires some truth telling, pretty much as you have done here REPEATEDLY AND ELOQUENTLY and a twelve step programme in every constituency.

    It requires self-examination, acceptance of the part we each have played and a realization of what we need to do to break out of the vicious circle.

    Actually, the day we renounce the monarchy we should also take down Nelson and use the ceremony to reset. Adrian Greene would be a good man to call.


  7. Great article. Thanks for the memory jog. One is worried.


  8. Same sex unions have always been here though not recognized legally. Weed is being smoked even illegally.

    What we need to get rid of are the yardfowls on both sides who will read a post such as this and miss the point completely.

    Such yardfowls enable the politicians to continue to bask in the “glory” of their “achievements”. Without these yardfowls the politicians would be stripped bare and realize that they are naked.

    Yardfowls give the politicians cover.


  9. Well written article which asks the same question many of us have and thats ” where is the beef?”

    It was a well delivered speach by the GG, who I will admit is one of my favourite GGs (Cuss me if you want i dont care) but it lacked “The beef”, the detailed plan of implementation that is needed to move it from a dream to reality. The diversification of the economy was also absent in any detail. I would of loved to of heard of a massive green house project for instance, being undertaken by the state on state land, then leased to small farmers and co ops for food security. Or the use of some of the state owned un-arable land being used for solar farms. It is that type of pro active thinking that in my view was missing. I keep asking a question that nobody wants to touch and its this. How will the state and private sector exist in an ecomomy that is 25% smaller a year than budgeted for? It is the answer to this type of question that we need to hear. The gay thing and the republic talk good for Brasstacks, but it will not put food on the table or give any unemployed bajan a job.


  10. @ John A

    The speech was too long, contained too many irrelevant issues and, had no real new policy proposals. The civil union thing is also another of her do not explain, do not apologise things.
    What does she mean by same-sex civil union? Will the civil partner become legally the net of kin? Will s/he have inheritance rights? Will s/he be entitled to a work-related pension?
    Will the civil partner be allowed to legally adopt? Will hetero-sexual couples be allowed to enter civil partnerships? If a couple want to separate, divorce, will they have to get legal authority to?
    If all these conditions are met, will a civil union be a de facto marriage?


  11. The throne speech is more of a policy statement. The details of implementation would not be included.

    I suggest you read Adrian Greene’s Sunday Sun column that explains the role that culture plays in putting food on the table and creating jobs. Some of you compartmentalize life. It does not work that way. It is all interrelated.


  12. It was too long. It was too short. It had no details. It had too many details.

    It had no new policy. It borrowed from Britain. It stole from BU.

    It was a speech. It did have policy and some details. We must listen for the later details and closely watch the implementation.

    P.S. If she stole from BU is that a good thing or did she steal a roll of crap?????


  13. Don’t know why everyone is still dwelling on that stupid ass speech, it was a show of pomp and bullshit to distract…it means nothing, ask them about it in 6 months and they won’t even remember half the LIES THEY TOLD or the false promises they made……..just don’t forget to remind them that they inadvertently told the truth for once in their lying lives and can’t take it back now….all the PMs, ministers, senators etc, except for Caswell, Barbados has ever had, lied to the people..they were and are all frauds…..colonial agents, pimps for the palace, still carrying out the will of slave masters…


  14. A+ for precisely and correctly (in my opinion) mapping how Barbados arrived at this stagnant state.

    The answer to your question is unfortunately YES, and the reason is simple. Focused and sustained actions to solve real problems and fundamentally build an economy are missing.

    Too many important positions in the civil service and in the cabinet are filled with theoretical people only who have never ever really built any thing in their lives. Therefore the required entrepreneurial skills needed now en masse to be creative and build a nation are lacking. The core problem can’t be hidden or plastered over anymore with the next loan or foreign reserves (most silly metric ever) top up.

    That’s the difference with the Singapores etc of the world. A significant number of doers and those who can and have done it in those places versus career talkers and those who can only dream of doing it in our backyard. (Don’t start me on that too many lawyers and economists who really create nothing argument again because the evidence is overwhelming…it keeps coming back to that reality)

    Let’s entertain ourselves with the sideshow politics….if only it solved real problems and pays the bills

    It’s not only Barbados by the way. The USA is slowly losing its competitive edge to China and other 9/9/6 cultures (google it) because at the end of the day real work has to be done to build and sustain economies

    With all of that gloom though it CAN be changed or fixed. The longest and toughest journey starts with the first step.

    Assuming you really want to take the journey


  15. And the journey must start at the beginning. What is keeping us from being what we need to be to do what we need to do?

    That is the question that must first be answered.


  16. Even Britain recognized the Throne speech for what it is
    A revised version of the same ole sh.it
    Chihuahua braking at greyhounds
    What a belly laugh the British had over a cup of afternoon tea


  17. @ BAJE September 15, 2020 6:56 PM

    “MIA MOTTLEY IS FIRST LESBIAN PRIME MINISTER OF BARBADOS

    JEROME WALCOTT IS AN OPENLY HOMOSEXUAL BLP MINISTER”

    YOU HAVE A BIG SEPTIC-TANK.

    Since you’re an expert on PM’S and associates sexual orientation preferences. Can you elaborate on Errol’s, who established the boys elite academy in the 1960’s on Paradise Beach Estate BlackRock main road St. Michael. David and Leroy, your buddies and most Luscious Toffees were initiators at said establishment. The BU community would like your first hand knowledge on them too. Get it right the first time….


  18. See what i mean, but at least we will hear who is hiding in the closet, stuck in the closet, pretending they are not closeted…and that is exactly what Mia wanted, everyone distracted with the salacious gossip about other people’s sex life and not the workers who are being robbed their severance pay..

    Hal…ya must be salivating…


  19. WURA,

    The PM stated that the right to severance pay will not be affected.


  20. Thar is not what Caswell is saying and I have more faith in what he says, he also says laws will have to be legislated to make “not affected” a reality..

    i don’t trust KNOWN LIARS…


  21. Am more concerned that Bajans are still in that colonized mode where they would much prefer to gossip about people’s sex lives, the marijuana she is criminalizing Black people over, and the every few years talked about going republic that they all forget al about soon after, along with talking incessantly about someone stealing a salt bread or a nail clip and none of these brainwashed creatures will never ever think that they should be STANDING UP FOR THEIR OWN HUMAN RIGHTS….or that of their fellow Bajans, all of whom are being demoralized and dehumanized by a sell out black government….

    even Hal got the gossip fever and he is not even on the island, the Bajan condition….


  22. Maybe something is wrong with me. I see Barbados as a country with problems that can be fixed, no worse than most countries.

    I see politicians no worse than the average country who need active and engaged citizens to keep them in line.

    I see an unacceptable justice system that is being worked on.

    I don’t see devils around every corner. I see flawed human beings who need to be called to account.

    I see life – messy and in need of work as it always was and is.

    It is a challenge that never goes away.


  23. An exercise in gaslighting.


  24. Caswell is probably right and he can certainly be trusted to ensure such laws are passed.

    We shall keep on it.


  25. Enuff,

    And I don’t cook with gas. My stove is electric.


  26. @ Dirt-Shitter

    I DON’T CARE WHAT ERROL BARROW OR HIS DLP COLLEAGUES WERE.

    NONE OF THE PEOPLE YOU MENTIONED WERE/ARE IN MY CIRCLE.

    I ALSO NOTE DLP DID NOT TRY PUSH THROUGH SAME SEX CIVIL UNIONS NOW LIKE YOUR CORRUPT AND TWISTED BLP MATES.


  27. The issue of the lost decade is an interesting point as it shows what happens when wages are stagnant but inflation goes along as usual. Forget the politics and stop and think on it for a moment.

    So you started the decade working for $2000 a month and you ended it working for the same thing. In the meantime an item that cost $10 at the start of the decade now at the end cost $13 due to compounded inflation. So in real terms we are 30% poorer at the end of the decade than the beginning. Now we know no one can give any of us a 30% increase in salary to level the inflation animal, so we can live at the end of the decade the way we did at the beginning so what do we do?

    Well we cut out the mid week chefette and the friday ice cream and we try to balance our expense to income flow best we can. In the meantime if we all do this the economy contracts. Then when we think there is hope, along comes Covid and takes another 20% out the ecomomy in tourism losses so we are we now?

    Well you lost 30% due to inflation and stagnation and then you lost another 20% due to covid so to get back to ” the good old days” you have to make some major changes to the structure of the economy and quickly, before we get even poorer as a people in real terms.

    As i said it was a good article which we should all stop and think on especially those in power.


  28. DonnaSeptember 16, 2020 5:36 PM Enuff, And I don’t cook with gas. My stove is electric.

    ++
    Whuh deng! You got solar or you got shares in Emera?


  29. DonnaSeptember 16, 2020 5:31 PM Maybe something is wrong with me. I see Barbados as a country with problems that can be fixed, no worse than most countries.I see politicians no worse than the average country who need active and engaged citizens to keep them in line.
    ++++
    Mean like both the US and UK who have serial liars at the helm?


  30. Lost decade can niw be summed up as ten years of prosperity to two years of social decay and households sitting on the precipice of poverty waiting to fall over the cliff

    xxxxxxxxxx

    @ Mariposa

    MY FRIEND.

    YOU LIKE YOU BEEN SMOKING THE WRONG THING FOR WAY TOO LONG.

    ALL @Greene HAS EXPOSED IS THE LONG ONGOING CORRUPTION OF BOTH BLP AND DLP FOOLING THE SILLY MASSES LIKE A MERRY GO ROUND FOR MANY MANY YEARS.

    THE ONLY REAL CHANGE BARBADOS NEEDS IS TO ONCE AND FOR ALL BANISHED THESE TWO INEPT CORRUPT PARTIES SOLELY CONCERNED WITH FEATHERING THEIR NEST EGGS AND THEIR MAINLY WHITE BENEFACTORS.

    BETTER TO START WITH A NEW OR CLEAN SLATE OR IN THE NEXT 30 YEARS SOMEONE WILL SPELL OUT THE SAME AS ABOVE ARTICLE AS BOTH BLP AND BLP LOVE PLAYING MUSICAL CHAIRS HEARTILY LAUGHING AT THE STUPID VOTING PUBLIC BEHIND CLOSED DOORS WHILST GETTING WEALTHIER AND THE VOTING MASSES POORER WISHING FOR THEIR PRAYERS TO BE ANSWERED BY BLP OR DLP IN VAIN.


  31. BETTER TO START WITH A NEW OR CLEAN SLATE OR IN THE NEXT 30 YEARS SOMEONE WILL SPELL OUT THE SAME AS ABOVE ARTICLE AS BOTH BLP AND DLP LOVE PLAYING MUSICAL CHAIRS HEARTILY LAUGHING AT THE STUPID VOTING PUBLIC


  32. Considering solar but my electricity bill is not at all high.


  33. Crusoe,

    Two of the worst serial liars right there. Nobody here can match them.


  34. Talk about a lost decade is nonsense and purely BLP political propaganda.
    Why? It can be reasonably argued that every decade since 1492 have been lost, at least for Afrikan peoples brought here against their will.

    These types of missives from the mouth of the Mugabe are merely aimed at giving the yardfouls soundbites to repeat ad nausium but for sensible people it presumes that the next ten years can’t be any worse when in truth and in fact they is a much better chance for that outcome as compared to the last ten.


  35. Has, there


  36. Seems like tourists from the UK may become more of a threat than an opportunity.
    http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/world-news/20200916/uk-ration-covid-19-testing-amid-failures


  37. @Greene

    So far the DLP post May 2018 has not made any improvements to how it communicates with the public. The BLP on the other hand has invested heavily in its communications team and use of digital media.

    A word to the wise should be sufficient.


  38. @Greene

    So far the DLP post May 2018 has not made any improvements to how it communicates with the public. The BLP on the other hand has invested heavily in its communications team and use of digital media.

    A word to the wise should be sufficient.

    Xxxxxxxxxxxxx

    SO THEY ARE BETTER COMMUNICATORS TO A VOTING PUBLIC WHO ARE FAR WORSE OFF.

    MY PRAYERS FOR 2020 AND BEYOND IS THAT LOCAL BAJANS STOP EATING SHIT WHILST BEING FOOLED AND BELIEVING IT TO BE CHOCOLATE.

    2020 CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC, TIME TO BE INDEPENDENT THINKERS INSTEAD OF FOLLOWING HYPE AND FAILED EXPECTATIONS BY BOTH BLP AND DLP FALSE PROPHETS.


  39. @ Greene
    A well written and balanced piece.


  40. The numbers do not lie.

    The junk credit ratings do not lie.

    Infrastructure crumbled.

    If government is suppose to be a continuum then the buck stopped with Stuart and his eager 11.

    The DLP won the government at the start of the global recession and when islands and other countries were on the road to recovery a few years later Barbados was sliding.

    The Lost Decade is a brand the DLP earned.


  41. Donna
    I was referring to the main post not yours. I repeat an exercise in gaslighting by the sympathetic Dem Greene.


  42. yes the buck stopped with Stuart but it did not begin with him. you have missed the point. one has to understand where and how a problem arose. first to find the source of the problem, then to identify it, then to find solutions to fix it.

    if you keep looking at Stuart as the problem you will never discover the aetiology of the problem and therefore never solve our systemic issues and we have a lot. besides ineffective Stuart and the DLP along with the deep recession at the time were the perfect storm (the catalysts) that put events in motion. the matter was incubating for a long time even before Arthur but it reached it zenith under Arthur. it just needed some precipitating event to roll off the cliff.

    nevertheless it is ironic that we are looking to the said same very people under whom i argued that we reached the boiling point to solve issues that they had a big hand in creating.


  43. Enuff,

    I knew that. I was agreeing with you.


  44. David

    When you trap yourself with these dead end ideas uttered by Mugabe in an emotionally charged political moment you basically leave yourself with no room to retreat, consider other possibilities.

    We know that it will take a few more years before you start to see that the next 10 years, after 2018. will be far worse than the previous 10.


  45. David BU you took the words out of my mouth.This joker Greene and his cronies Austin, John A , and Mariposa aka ac think the speaming to 5 year olds.From the time as Mr Athur called them wild boys took over it was all downhill.They were led firstly by Mr Thompson as finance minister who clearly was disaster with his first budget draining the life out of the economy with onerous taxes.After his death Mr Stuart presided over 23 yes 23 downgrades to junk bond status.The only shining light in that period was Mr Sealy who did a good job in tourism.Anybody living here who thinks those 10 years were not lost are living in la la land.The redwash 30 to nil is evidence of what people in general felt about them in 2018 not wanting to see none of them.Personally, i do not see the Dems returning inside 15 years especially when led by either of in my view two political losers in Mr Pilgrim or Ms Depeiza.They cannot even win a seat far less lead a party to victory.Therefore Greene save the empty talk you are impressing your Dem friends only.


  46. @Enuff

    No point missed. Stuart assumed/won the government and was mandated to arrest the decline you identified in the same way you expect same from Mottley.


  47. @Pacha

    This blogmaster fears no labels.


  48. i expect nothing from Mottley but a recurring loop.

    and yes to Stuart and he did not, but as you put it the decline did not Stuart with him. he was merely one of the dramatis personae. arguably Mottley played a bigger role than Stuart in getting us where we are today.


  49. It does not help to whitewash the lost decade of economic terror. For ten years the country has rotted, all roads kaput, shit in the streets and on the beaches of the south coast. Government jobs only given to relatives and DLP members. The population insulted. These are the facts. Some even say that the DLP government has promoted racial prejudice against blacks. I do not explicitly agree with this assessment, but I will put it up for discussion.

    Our current government is very different. It has done the only right thing in 2018, namely declaring national bankruptcy, which should have been declared as early as 2013. After that our government pushed through important reform projects. I know, not enough, but that is due to the Taliban conservatism of the population and their lack of enthusiasm for work, but it is not the fault of our government.

    Just imagine if the DLP had remained in power in 2018. By autumn 2018 at the latest, the currency reserves would have been exhausted and Barbados would have slid into uncontrolled devaluation. I know some would welcome that, but certainly not the masses. But it would have been even worse. The DLP would have (if I follow the present DLP president) totally sealed off Barbados from March 2020. Not even medicines would have made it to Barbados, thousands of Barbadians would have been stranded abroad and tourists in Barbados would have been locked up and abandoned to impoverishment, perhaps for years. Surely Prime Minister Stuart would have gone into hiding. Instead of him, the American Inniss would have talked foolishly and Big Sinck would have excelled with even stupider sayings.

    Fortunately, this is only a nightmare. We have to thank God that Mia Mottley rules over us and uses the crisis to promote the popularity of our most beautiful island. Next year, in the coming presidential republic, we need a ruler with an iron fist. Only one person in Barbados can accomplish this task. And that is Mia Mottley.


  50. No labeling, just reality

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