The climate developing countries have to manage affairs of state appears to be very challenging at this time. Barbados the former colony can no longer expect to hide or be protected by England. There was a time we benefited from preferential trade treatment which seemed fair in a dog eat dog world where the ‘strongest’ always has the best chance to navigate challenges.

In a post 54th independence period sensible Barbadians are forced to reflect and to ask – where do we go from here?

Some debate whether the decline of the Barbados economy (and society) started in the 70s, what is for certain is that the decline accelerated after the 2008 global recession. The structure of our economy with an over reliance on services made us extremely vulnerable to significant slowdown in the world economy. Unfortunately we have been unable to patch the vulnerability which has been exposed again by the Covid 19 pandemic.

Reading many comments on BU and listening to commentary elsewhere, it has become painfully obvious despite the dark challenges facing Barbados there are unrealistic expectations the leadership of the country has not address. Barbadians for many years have enjoyed a reasonable standard of living supported by deficit financing in the post Barrow period. There is nothing wrong with spending more than you earn but it is a practice which cannot be sustained. Successive governments in the last four decades have borrowed heavily to pursue national budget objects. We can continue to quibble about who to blame and see where that get us.

The blogmaster is palpably aware from walking among Barbadians on a daily basis that many are suffering from a form of ‘Alice in Wonderland Syndrome’. At a household level commonsense would dictate that supporting a lifestyle of spending more than one earns will lead eventually to a problem. Why do Barbadians expect a different outcome if successive governments continue to engage in reckless financial management? We have spent billions on education, should citizens possess the awareness to translate it to a strident lobby against the establishment to ensure realistic policy decisions are implemented? What about other key stakeholders in civil society like media houses/practitioners and NGO groups?

In the 54 Not Out blog there is a cursory discussion about local media. We have a David Ellis who has been the standout media person in Barbados over the years but a single journalist will not do it. Also we do not have the columnists of the past who provoked deep thought in the population the likes of Oliver Jackman, Gladstone Holder, Leonard Shorey to name only three. Active NGO groups are important as well because interest can be more forcefully represented in numbers. We are at a place in Barbados all problems must be solved by the government. To move forward we must implement a fit for purpose governance model. The reactionary approach to managing our affairs will not deliver meaningful long term results. We fail to plan, we plan to fail.

This morning as the blogmaster sips from a cup of peppermint tea alone with his thoughts, it is clear the country is suffering from a ‘fatigue’, especially wrought by the post 2008 period. This was compounded by a severe policy prescription that has decimated the hopes and dreams of the middleclass forced to witness a manhandling of nest eggs in the most unprecedented way. Finally came Covid 19.

The unprecedented times in which we live demands a degree of planning and collaboration between stakeholders in civil society never envisaged. The blogmaster is unable to reconcile conversations emanating from the mouths of key actors given what the national imperatives should be. Propping up a lifestyle fuelled by conspicuous consumption must be addressed. Calibrating our educations system to produce citizens who can compete to support themselves. Dismantling sub cultures and replace with initiatives to nurture national pride. The forgoing should positively impact crime. Last but not least the environment. We have to care about the space in which we have to exist.

No more tea…

Discuss for 15 marks.

267 responses to “Message to Barbadians”


  1. @ David,
    Another day; another loan!


  2. @TLSN

    If the economy is stuck in the mud because of COVID 19 it seems the government is trying to use concessionary funding to hedge our bets. We are in survival mode.

  3. Carson C Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C Cadogan

    More money that the poor people, who get the less out of the economy, has to repay.

    Will BLACK PEOPLE ever get out of our bondage?????

  4. Carson C Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C Cadogan

    More and more debt, the Barbados Labour Party Govt. keeps adding to our strangle hold debt. Debt have to be repaid. Not by the WHITE BAJANS AND INDIANS.

    Only by us.

    This is the woman who said on the campaign trail before the 2018 General elections that Barbadians have too much debt and she was going to reduce it. Nice way to reduce it.

    That is a joke!!!

  5. Carson C Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C Cadogan

    MIA AMOR MOTTLEY must really think that lending agencies and Govts. are stupid.

    She is busy writing off MILLIONS UPON MILLIONS of dollars for the WHITE BAJANS AND INDIANS instead of collecting them for debts owed to the Govt. coffers, our money. What little taxes they pay, vat revenue, rents to Govt. ,loans to Govt. ,duties to Govt. She is so happy being the first female PM, with money from them, that she is willing to look the other way.

    But loan agencies are seeing what is happening. Borrowing or wanting to borrow and then not paying back the correct amount. The people are not idiots, She giving away money to the 3% of the Barbados population and then going cap in hand to these agencies when she should collected what is owned to the Govt. coffers by these people.

    That is why she can get money only from the CDB where she wants to take over.

  6. Carson C Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C Cadogan

    Look how they are treating poor people.

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/12/04/shocked-employees-meet-closed-gates/


  7. Repeating myself…

    @CCC 7:50 a.m.
    “The people are not idiots, She giving away money to the 3% of the Barbados population and then going cap in hand to these agencies when she should collected what is owned to the Govt. coffers by these people.”

    I still have not figured out ‘money in Barbados’.

    One minute in search of funding, the next minute lucrative contracts and generous donations to some and then ecstatic when receiving a loan of any amount.


  8. Another day; another loan!

    Yet the BLP apparatchiks are braying as if going cap-in-hand to the international financiers is some sort of economic policy wizardry.

    #financialilliterates

  9. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    If only we would pause to think. I will take my advice.


  10. One day coming soon these loans would bite them in the arse
    Govt would be remembered as visionless
    Like beggars on international financial doorsteps
    Having no growth plan to help repay the mountain of collected plan from borrowing
    Oversized cabinet
    Million dollar consultants
    Giving tax breaks to the big corporations
    40 thousand unemployed
    Having no plan to rebuild funding for NIS
    While workers beg rogue employers for their just fues2


  11. Another day; another loan!
    WE HAVE BECOME A NATION OF BEGGARS
    WE KNOW WHAT NATION’S HAVE A LEADER THAT IS AN EMBARRASMENT, WHO CREATED JOBS AND IMPROVED HIS ECONOMY. BUT WE CANT ADDRESS THE FIASCO AT HOME, WHERE THE CARING MAM IS AMERE LOUD MOUTH BEGGAR.
    Another day; another loan!
    WE HAVE BECOME A NATION OF BEGGARS


  12. How much does America owe the Chinese?

    Come to think of it – how much does Trump owe? And to whom does he owe it? We know it is not American banks. They don’t lend him squat!

    But to all sane people,

    Ain’t nothong we can do but borrow in the short term. We have to focus on the medium to long term.

  13. Carson C Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C Cadogan

    But we were told by MIA AMOR MOTTLEY on the campaign trail in the run up 2018 General elections that the county has too much debt and her Govt. was going to bring down?

    How do you square that with the continuing raising the debt levels by this same woman????

    Don’t forget these loans have to be repaid. Are we willing to imprison our children and grand children with this unsustainable debt???? Should not we be earning our way instead of borrowing so much all the time????

    What about the the Billions of dollars on local Banks?????

  14. Carson C Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C Cadogan

    MIA AMOR MOTTLEY has the biggest Cabinet in the History of the Caribbean.

    Can they only borrow money?????

    Are they unable to come with ideas to EARN money???

  15. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    What part does the WHITE BAJAN AND INDIAN owned Barbados private sector play????

    If any.

  16. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    Only buy and sell is all the Barbados private sector can manage?????


  17. How much does America owe the Chinese?
    WHO CARES? HOW DOES THAT AFFECT THE PRICE OF CHEESE OR ANYTHING ELSE IN BARBADOS?

    Come to think of it – how much does Trump owe? And to whom does he owe it? We know it is not American banks. They don’t lend him squat!

    WHO CARES? HOW DOES THAT AFFECT THE PRICE OF CHEESE OR ANYTHING ELSEIN BARBADOS?
    SOON NO ONE ELSE WILL BE LENDING BARBADOS MONEY TOO, EXCEPT CHINA. IN EXCHANGE THEY WILL BE EXPORTING MORE OF THEIR INFERIOR PRODUCTS. (C.F MICHAEL RAY’S POST IN BARBADOS TODAY.) TO BARBADOS

    Ain’t nothong we can do but borrow in the short term. SO THEN BEG ON FOR WE ARE INDEED A NATION OF BEGGARS AS I SAID WITHOUT FEAR OF CONTRADICTION

    We have to focus on the medium to long term.
    YOU MEAN WE SHOULD PAY OUR DEBTS INSTEAD OF ADDING MORE DEBT BY BEGGING


  18. Even some of the borrowed money was squander on blowing up buildings
    Removing Nelson at over twenty thousand dollars something that only needed a bulldozer and few heavy hands to make light work
    Taking ownership of Ram business in order to make space for the rich Hyatt
    Yet to see a toffee paper on that closed in space
    Squandermania at large at taxpayers expense


  19. @ Donna

    It’s true there isn’t anything we can do, but borrow in the short term, which inevitably increases public debt. Debt used for productive purposes, which is basically debt used to finance public projects that would earn revenue for the government, leads to an increase in economic growth.

    Regional territories are confronted with an inability to service debt payments in the prevailing economic environment. The pandemic provides an opportunity for a united approach, under CARICOM, to seek support from the international community for access to concessional financing and grants.

    Perhaps those individuals who are ‘talking’ about “going cap-in-hand to the international financiers,”beggars on international financial doorsteps” and “another day, another loan,” may want to provide the forum with their alternative plans on how government could raise revenue in the current circumstances.

    I remember a time when the forum was told, ‘where are your solutions?’


  20. In any language , when you do the same thing over and over , and expect different results , you are mad. Jamaica has been in the IMF for forty two years. The current agreement we have with the IMF is supposed to fully blossom by 2033. This forecast was Made before COVlD. This means that chances are , we would not be back to pre COVIID levels even if the economy suddenly improves tomorrow.
    In other words, no Alice in Wonderland feelings can alter this fact.
    Unless we find oil, once we continue, with these tried and failed policies, we will be nothing more than an economy in name only.
    Peace.


  21. Barbados took a decision to enter an IMF program BEFORE Covid 19 struck. Of necessity forecasts must change.

  22. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    Why wasn’t this discuss with the people????Are these poor people only there to place an X?????

  23. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    Give their own solutions so that the Govt. can steal them as their own???

    Plagiarism.

    Bear that word in mind.


  24. Artax,

    Agreed.


  25. RE I remember a time when the forum was told, ‘where are your solutions?’

    WHEN I WAS EMPLOYED TO GIVE SOLUTIONS…….I GAVE SOLUTIONS
    IT IS THE JOB OF THOSE WHO SEEK TO LEAD THE COUNTRY, OR WHO ARE LEADING THE COUNTRY, TO PRODUCE SOLUTIONS.

    I HAVE NO INTENTION OF GIVING ANY SOLUTIONS TO BENEFIT THE WELL PAID LEADERSHIP OF BARBADOS


  26. I, I, I a reminder of the Iman- Denis Kellman.

  27. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    That is so true.

    The Barbados Labour Party Govt. are being handsomely paid for their solutions, let them lead. Come up with their own solutions, if they have an original thought in their heads.

    It is more than telling people “”any idiot can play cricket””.


  28. @Mariposa

    There is a lot of economic illiteracy on BU as usual. This government has increased the debt to GDP ratio by a massive amount since May 2018, with no clear idea of what it wants the money to do.
    BOSS, it magical policy, was simply to pay the salaries of civil servants; so we have had the rather perverse policy of deducting money from civil servants pay to pay them at the end of the month.
    This government has not come up with a single progressive economic policy since it came to power: and it has a bigger army of consultants than Caligula – a finance minister, two junior ministers, three consultants, and a $27000 a month short-term consultant, plus civil servants.
    It has had a CoVid economic council, with eight sub-committees, tasked with reporting back in four weeks. It is months now.
    The government is a bad joke. What is worse, is that it is not held to account. Opposition parties should be throwing all these failed policies back in its face everyday; they should be monitoring every speech, every promise, is failure.
    Our media should be reminding them of their failure every day; instead of howling, and heckling and booing, BU should be amplifying all these failed policies and remind the nation that this is the worst government we have had since 1966. For the media to help, they must stop going to the same people to hear the same nonsense everytime. They need new and informed voices.
    Some people come on and talk crap abut economic growth as if they know what they are talking about, leaving the simple questions unanswered. Where is this growth going to come from? Tell us in simple terms.
    In her Queen’s Speech, the president made noises about a post office/credit union bank. What ever happened to that idea? When is the government going to publish a White Paper, a discussion document? Or is it going to go straight to a Bill? Is there going to be a national debate about the catastrophe that Arthur committed when he got rid of the BNB?
    We badly need a grown up conversation with people who know what they are talking about, not those looking for cheap laughs or trying to score party political points.


  29. Reduced revenue and higher credit defaults have led to a $317.4 million loss for FirstCaribbean International Bank Ltd.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2020/12/04/fcib-losses-317m/


  30. CIBC beats expectations despite profit slide to $1.02B

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/cibc-earnings-1.5826553


  31. Ain’t nothong[sic] we can do but borrow in the short term. We have to focus on the medium to long term.

    This is exactly the type of defeatist, problematic, clueless thinking that has become endemic. Everything is now “because of the pandemic”. Yet many are flourishing “in spite of” the pandemic. The medium term is tomorrow’s short term.

    Perhaps those individuals who are ‘talking’ about “going cap-in-hand to the international financiers,”beggars on international financial doorsteps” and “another day, another loan,” may want to provide the forum with their alternative plans on how government could raise revenue in the current circumstances.

    Buddy, stick to your pay grade.The 50-year old economic dogma in your UWI text books can’t help you in 2020+.
    You wouldn’t recognize a creative solution if it fell on your head.


  32. @ Dullard

    Brilliant. Maybe now you have said it they will listen. Crap in, crap out.


  33. Hmmmmm……..

    There was a time when Barbadians were being encouraged to put country first and not ourselves….. to offer solutions rather than criticize.

    So, I guess under the current administration, ‘patriotism’ has been replaced with ‘plagiarism.’

  34. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    “”Patriotism is the last refuge of a Scoundrel.””


  35. @ Carson

    Great. Plse count me out of the reactionary patriotism, my country first, my country right or wrong, hand on heart and singing the national anthem, saluting the flag, rubbish.
    Where did this all come from? I understand it in the American context, because without such nationalism there is no Great America..


  36. “You wouldn’t recognize a creative solution if it fell on your head.”

    That’s probably true and it shouldn’t surprise you. After all, you never fail to remind us how we’re all ignorant people living on a 2×3 island.

    But, you know something, I was thinking you seem not to have anything else to offer, other than criticism, day, after day, after day….. ad nauseam. But, it has now occurred to me that a creative solution from your daily dose of criticisms probably fell on my head and I couldn’t recognise it.


  37. @ Artax
    I presented my views on how to stimulate the economy at least four years ago on BU. I have also presented views since COVID. I am not known for only opposing going “ cap in hand to the IMF. My position on the IMF was fashioned before Barbados even entered its first agreement.
    I have often said that we cannot restructure our economy without reforming the educational system. I can produce my paper to the Task Force on Unemployment going back to 1987.
    Quite recently here on BU , I wrote about bringing cooperatives into the primary school and using such an activity to incorporate IT.
    The reason we are still in the debt trap and perennial poverty is because we refused to listen to the visionaries of the 60s and early 70s. We banished them from Barbados and the Caribbean and remained tied to socio economic models, that have us talking the same thing over and over.
    I compliment you on your perseverance but I am of the opinion that COVID has only exposed the soft underlying problems in our economic planning. Either make a quantum leap and throw out worn and failed policies or languish for another forty years. Simple as that. We have to pump millions into small businesses and stimulate the economy. Throwing millions into one sector and providing scratch grain to all the others will fail.
    Peace


  38. I’m happy to know you’ve NOW realised ”Patriotism is the last refuge of a Scoundrel.”

    Because, it was only just over 2½ years ago, you and others were on BU shouting ‘patriotism’ in response to criticisms of the previous DLP administration.

  39. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    I never used PATRIOTISM. you must be mixing me up with someone else.


  40. William Skinner December 4, 2020 12:18 PM #: “I can produce my paper to the Task Force on Unemployment going back to 1987.”

    @ Mr. Skinner

    You should.

    Contributors should be able to learn from each other. Instead, there are certain contributors who prefer to target and ridicule specific contributors, while defending silly statement of those who sing in their choir.


  41. @Artax

    Agreed.

  42. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Artax
    I think that many of the contributors are too tied up in party politics. I have been fortunate , and I think , @Hal had the same experience , of being exposed to some of the island’s most articulate and visionary brothers and sisters of the 60s and 70s.
    It’s sometimes surreal to hear and read some of the reactionary drivel that passes for public discourse.Its often embarrassing.
    There are some of us , who actually take these discussions seriously because our children and grandchildren have to call Bim home even if some are not born here.
    With all the good intentions, we are in a sorry mess and it can only be corrected by bold imaginative leadership at all levels.
    Like everybody else, I wish I could come here and pretend otherwise.
    To quote Observer:
    “ When duty calls/ I put the world on pause/ I am patriot for the cause.“
    I have no doubt that you are as well a patriot.
    I have always warned my friends don’t judge the world by how you are living. There is a lot of difference between a citizen who is unemployed; socially and economically broken and one who got up this morning and had three different choices of cheese and juice in their fridge.
    And that’s all I try to say.
    Continue the good work, my Comrade.
    Peace


  43. RE Contributors should be able to learn from each other. Instead, there are certain contributors who prefer to target and ridicule specific contributors, while defending silly statement of those who sing in their choir.
    MAN YOU SEE THIS ON SSS EVERY SUNDAY MORNING
    ITS THE BU WAY
    YOU ACCEPT IT AND MOVE ON


  44. @ William

    Like you I have been waiting for years for serious discussions about social and economic issues directly affecting Barbados. Sometimes we drift in to silly discussions about Trump, or long, irrelevant details about which meeting passed which resolution or, a BU favourite, Googling and trying to get cheap laughs.
    @William, we have government that is woeful, to my mind objectively the worst we have had since Independence, and all people can find to talk about is that one does not like the president or that we had the lost decade. Some even find time to talk about Stuart’s physical appearance.
    In the meantime, Barbados had a 49 per cent share in LIAT, the business failed and the country came under enormous pressure from Gaston Browne; it was decided to give the shares to Antigua at a peppercorn price.
    Now Antigua is claiming that Barbados should pay redundancy to all the former Barbadian employees. This is an agreement that was agreed by our brightest and best and, clearly, has allowed a loophole to go through in which the despicable Browne can hide.
    The nation should be told who negotiated on behalf of Barbados; who wrote the agreement; which minister cleared it; and was it cleared by Cabinet.
    In other words, we want to name and shame the incompetents who put us in a position to be bullied by the leader of Antigua. Now t ht is a serious discussion for BU, one the voters of St George North should have been told about.


  45. I have said time and time again that none of these small islands would never make it as singular nations
    COVID should have brought home that realisation however no leader in the Carribbean basin had the nerve to standup against the raging tide of self imposed economic destruction and say that the path necessary for economic survival can only be done collectively
    Party politics would continue and just maybe the straw that broke the camel debt laden back
    I for one would like to see a United combined nation of small islands
    Producing and buying amongst themselves which could help stabilize their economies while in earnest a preventive measure of stopping them from sucking on the nipples of international financial institutions looking like beggars at the front doors


  46. This talk about “offering solutions” (whatever the hell that means) and “too much criticism” (whatever the hell that means) is absolute nonsense. The duplicitous Blogmaster has put this narrative out there and naive bloggers – unsurprisingly- have bought into it.

    It is an old school trick used to deflect and silence criticism and dissenting voices.

    @David
    Tell your paymasters that it is their job to come up with solutions. That is what they get paid to do.

    Let me be clear. The Dullard is here to comment NOT to “offer solutions” (whatever the hell that means).

  47. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Hal
    Serious discourse evaporated around the mid seventies. We have Brasstacks and BU. I personally am thankful for both. And I mean that.
    @ Mariposa
    Check today’s papers or go to mahoganycoconut.blogspot.com and you see a very positive development in CARICOM / CSME.


  48. Well guys, if you have a magic wand to transform our economy in an instant, please produce it.

    Lots of ideas about how to transform our economy have aready been offered. None of them can be completed in the short term. The problem is that we talk rather than implement. The thing to do is to start and be serious enough to follow through.

    How are we going to reap the results from a transformed educational system in the short term? (And I too have had ideas on this for YEARS.)

    This is why I say we have to borrow in the short term and shoot for transformation, beginning right now, and continuing in the medium and long term.

    I have plenty of ideas on how we can do that also. But I am at a loss as to short term solutions.

    I am not defeatest, just realistic. Actually, I have been ridiculed for being too optimistic. Now I am being ridiculed (through Artax) for being defeatest.

    You guys are terribly confused.

    And somehow again I get the feeling that Wiliam Skinner is again snidely misrepresenting my position.


  49. @ Donna

    As Dr. GP wrote, “it’s the BU way. You accept it and move on.”

    I hope you’ve noticed something in this forum, it’s not what’s contributed to this forum, it’s who contributed it.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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