Reproduced from the IMF Website David, Blogmaster

December 9, 2020
  • The Executive Board of the IMF concluded the fourth review of the IMF’s extended arrangement under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) for Barbados. The completion of the review allows the authorities to draw SDR 65 million (about US$94 million). Access under the extended arrangement has been augmented by SDR 48 million (51 percent of quota, or about US$69 million) to help accommodate the shock.
  • Despite the challenges posed on the economy by the pandemic, Barbados continues its strong implementation of the comprehensive Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) plan aimed at restoring fiscal and debt sustainability and increasing reserves and growth.
  • The prolonged global coronavirus pandemic poses a major challenge for the economy, which is heavily dependent on tourism, and is expected to have a large impact on the balance of payments and the fiscal accounts.

Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the fourth review of the IMF’s extended arrangement under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) for Barbados. The completion of the review allows the authorities to draw the equivalent of SDR 65 million (about US$94 million), bringing total disbursements to the equivalent of SDR 271 million (about US$390 million).

The four-year extended arrangement under the EFF was approved on October 1, 2018 (see Press Release No. 18/370). Including the augmentation approved by the Executive Board today, the extended arrangement is for an amount equivalent of SDR 322 million (about US$464 million).

Barbados continues its strong implementation of the comprehensive Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) plan aimed at restoring fiscal and debt sustainability and increasing reserves and growth. The prolonged global coronavirus pandemic poses a major challenge for the economy, which is heavily dependent on tourism, and is expected to have a large impact on the balance of payments and the fiscal accounts.

Following the Executive Board discussion, Mr. Tao Zhang, Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair said:

“The Barbadian authorities continue to make excellent progress in implementing their Fund-supported Economic Recovery and Transformation plan and have swiftly responded to address the impact of the pandemic . Prospects for continued strong program performance are good, but downside risks will continue to pose challenges in the period ahead.

“A primary balance target of minus 1 percent of GDP for fiscal year 2020/21, revised down from a surplus of 1 percent at the time of the third review, is appropriate to accommodate worse-than-anticipated revenue losses and support spending on public health and social protection. The new fiscal target is financed by additional resources from international financial institutions, including a second augmentation under the Extended Fund Facility.

“The fiscal accommodation will be compensated by higher primary surpluses in the medium term to ensure achievement of the long-term debt target of 60 percent of GDP. Medium-term fiscal adjustment will be supported by continued reform of state-owned enterprises (SOE) to secure space for investment in physical and human capital. Transfers to SOEs need to decline through a combination of stronger oversight, cost reduction, revenue enhancement, and mergers and divestment. Pension reform and introduction of a fiscal rule will also support medium-term fiscal sustainability.

“Progress in restoring fiscal sustainability will further be safeguarded by a new central bank law aimed at limiting financing of the government and strengthening the central bank’s mandate, autonomy, and decision-making structures.

“A strong recovery from the global pandemic will hinge on accelerating structural reform, including improving the business climate and promoting economic diversification. Strengthening resilience to natural disasters and climate change will be key to long-term sustained economic growth.”

252 responses to “Fourth Review – IMF’s Extended Arrangement under the Extended Fund Facility for Barbados”


  1. Let Bajans enjoy their recent delivery of financial crack cocaine supplied by the loan-shark cum drug-lord called the IMF in order to feed the hungry beast rumbling in their bellies called conspicuous consumption.

    Why are Bajan policy-makers constructing financially massive millstones around the necks of future generations just to satiate the materialistic desires of the current generation of Bajans?

    What do Bajans think the IMF would be exacting as its pound of flesh in return for the sweet life financed from the ‘borrowed’ easy money and which will soon be spent just as easy on the importation of mainly Chinese-made trinkets?

    If not an ‘official’ Devaluation of the Bajan Mickey mouse $ in these harsh Covid-20 times then it must be a speeding-up of the long-promised Privatization or Disposal of the too many SOEs which have been nothing more than fiscal parasites and political pork barrels.


  2. You don’t need a license to sell or grow herb that’s riduculous


  3. Natty Plant It

    Sexy Natty


  4. Me Breda Yu Ago Feel It

    When you’ve run out
    Of time for a feeling
    You’ve gotten used to believing in
    Love can run faster than you can
    Waste no tears
    Over what you are leaving,
    There’s a new love about to begin
    Love can run faster than you can
    Fall for what replaces
    The things you were leading to
    Love can take a turn
    When you least expect it to
    Me and you, me and you oh oh
    Love can run faster than you can
    Love can run faster than you can
    Take what you get
    Till you get what you want
    Don’t settle for
    What you know to be wrong
    When you’ve run out of time
    For a feeling
    You’ve gotten used to believing in
    Love can run faster than you can
    Fall for what replaces
    The things you were leading to
    Love can take a turn
    When you least expect it to
    Me and you, me and you oh oh
    Love can run faster than you can
    Love can run faster than you can
    Love can run faster than you can
    Love can run faster than you can


  5. Rastaman Chant, (Demo), (Studio Rehearsal), The Wailers


  6. @Tron
    given your connection to the supreme leader, I am sure you are aware of the completion of the first draft, of the Legal Tender Enhancement Act, to be known as ‘el-tea’.
    The primary consideration was to ensure all notes and coins were a reflection of a modern, and inclusive Barbados. And to ensure that the current Governor of the CB, has his signature on the bills.
    Some of the note highlights are:
    The $2 bill is to be removed and replaced with a coin. The coin will bear the symbols of the two duopoly parties, one on each side of the coin, to reinforce their dominance over Barbados.
    John Redman Bovell is to be removed, as no reference to sugar will be tolerated in any form.
    The $5 Bill is now to show an image of Sir Garfield Sobers, as few know of Sir Frank Worrell. Sobers legend is global.
    The $10 Bill will display the image of Nanny Grigg.
    The $20 Bill will now show an image of Rhianna. She is clearly the most recognizable Barbadian in the world. And while the image of Sir Jackman Samuel Prescod has appeared on several notes over time, he clearly appears as ‘too white’. Also for collectible reasons, it was deemed best to place Rihanna on this note.
    The $50 & $100 notes will remain unchanged.
    There will be a new $500 Bill, bearing the image of Mia Amor Mottley. This new Bill will also have a rainbow background behind our national coat of arms, to allow dual interpretations of ‘Pride and Industry’.
    All notes will increase in physical size by approximately 15%. And instead of being a variety of colours, all notes will now be blue at either end, with a yellow in the middle, in keeping with our flag. Also in this way, nobody will know how much money they have without examining it. This will also make it easier to rip off the Tourists.


  7. Don’t worry Miller, the citizen by investment scheme will save our region’s economies.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2020/12/10/wealthy-nigerians-buying-citizenship-overseas


  8. NIS will be tightened, says PM
    The Club Barbados Resort & Spa will now be paying severed workers rather than the Government dipping into the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) and laws will be tightened to deal with companies that make salary deductions but do not pay into the fund.
    This information was provided by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley last night as she addressed the latest industrial unrest related to security firm G4S. She also revealed some details about other industrial protests in the tourism sector and sounded a warning on the NIS deductions.
    She said that while the matter at The Club had been resolved with the hotel now agreeing to pay the severance rather than Government doing so, and that the problem at Savannah Hotel was being worked out, there was an – unnamed – establishment that was still having issues.
    “They have agreed that they will pay the severance but they want to pay over a long time but the Government is not in that. We are not in that. We are very clear, if you can find money to do certain things you can find money to do this too and it is as simple as that.
    “We are clear. The AG [Attorney General] and I spoke today with Cabinet about the other clauses that need strengthening in the National Insurance Act to ensure we don’t have this kind of cavalier attitude. The Act already provides for penalties for example where directors do not appropriately properly pay over the contributions deducted,” Mottley stated without going into details about possible changes.
    The Club’s initial protest action on November 17 in front of the Vauxhall, St James hotel had set off a chain of industrial action among hotel workers and later G4S, forcing an intervention by the Government. There was some public criticism of Government after it stepped in and said it would pay the workers rather than the hotel doing so.
    The Prime Minister said almost 30 hotels were on board for the $150 million fund to assist them during the COVID-19 shutdown in maintaining their properties and preventing them from running to ruin while closed down for months.
    “The Government is very clear that we are not going to engage hotels in seeking to prey on the severance payments fund . . . We get it that they have no cash flow but we equally get it that without the workers the hotel can’t offer anything . . . This country has been built on the backs of workers,” she stated In relation to Savannah, the Prime Minister said the management had been meeting with the Government and she called on owner Bernie Weatherhead to speak on the matter, saying he had become entangled in a situation with the banks, Resort Hotels and the workers.
    “He needs to speak to the country and contextualise his positon. In fairness, his position at Savannah became entangled with the offer to purchase as a result of a request for proposals. I believe there is a way out,” Mottley said, adding that some workers had received their severance while others were being rehired. (AC)

    Source: Nation


  9. Govt debt grows by $117 million
    An injection of cash into the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) will leave Government with about $117 million more in debt than it bargained for in the second half of its financial year.
    The Ministry of Finance has reported this in the mid-year review it has prepared for the first six months of the financial year (April to September 2020) as mandated by the Public Finance Management Act.
    Giving its projection for the period October to March 2021, the ministry said: “Approximately $578.2 million will be required to service existing debt obligations for the period October 2020 to March 2021 – $414.2 million for interest expense, $164.1 million for [debt payments].
    “This is approximately $116.8 million more than what was budgeted for the period, resulting primarily from the liquidation of approximately $167 million in Series F bonds held by the National Insurance Fund to provide the NIS with cash to meet the high demands for unemployment and severance due to COVID-19.”
    Bondholders
    The second half of the financial year which also see Government’s debt including $6.7 million to prepay bondholders holding $5 000 or less in restructured bonds, in line with the Government’s decision announced in the Throne Speech.
    Government also will issue about $44.9 million in Series F bonds, which it uses to pay arrears to creditors, including suppliers to state entities. Another $39.7 million will be spent clearing corporate income tax arrears, while $5.2 million will be to refund National Housing Corporation tenants due refunds of $5 001 and above.
    “Total revised debt expenditure for 2020-2021 is estimated at $952 million. This is approximately $41.1 million more than what was approved,” the ministry said.
    “The projected increase in expenditure is primarily attributed to the liquidation of the NIS bonds and the issuance of additional Series F bonds, which are repaid monthly, to settle arrears and prepayments to bondholders.”
    Debt restructuring
    Between April and September Government formally concluded the restructuring of its debt. This was when negotiations for the debt associated with HMP Prisons Dodds
    were concluded. Regarding other debt matters, the ministry’s report stated: “Government received a budget support loan of approximately $181 million from the International Monetary Fund, as part of its support under the Extended Fund Facility Programme. “On the domestic side, the issuance of BOSS bonds commenced in July to ostensibly provide workers with a mechanism for savings, while affording the Government of Barbados funds for capital works projects.
    “Additionally, Series F bonds totalling $8.4 million were issued in respect of the settlement of tax arrears and legal fees which predated September 2018. Approximately $502 300 in bonds were liquidated for bondholders facing predominately serious health challenges,” it said.
    Additionally, “as agreed during the domestic debt restructuring, the last overdraft facility total $2.5 million previously held by the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation was converted to a term loan to be serviced by the Government”.
    This meant that public debt outstanding at September 30, was about $12.48 billion, including external debt of $3.4 billion, domestic debt of $8.94 billion, external guaranteed debt of $54.9 million and Central Government arrears of $80.5 million.
    The public debt was below the $13.3 billion ceiling that Government agreed with the IMF.
    (SC)

    Source: Nation

  10. NorthernObserver Avatar

    “The AG [Attorney General] and I spoke today with Cabinet about the other clauses that need strengthening in the National Insurance Act to ensure we don’t have this kind of cavalier attitude.”[quote]

    I wonder if the PM was referring to clauses in the Act regarding FINANCIAL REPORTING? I would agree entirely, the cavalier attitude shown by the Board of Directors, and their failure to file the required reports, AND/OR, the failure of elected persons to submit those reports in Parliament, requires a significant strengthening in the Act. Not that it will make much difference, but it’ll sound good.

    If you have an hour to be educated on Golden Passports, this recently released piece is fun.
    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/10/16/is-this-really-the-end-for-cypruss-golden-passports


  11. @Northern Observer

    Being facetious so early on a Friday?

  12. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Why not?
    Don’t you find it ‘odd’ that in umpteen years, news of any kind on the NIS has been few and far between, and suddenly it gets mentioned twice in one day.
    Its actually sleepy time, so I’ll let JohnA and Artax take apart the numbers in the second article.


  13. Agreed.


  14. If the current situation does not cause the government and people of Barbados to wake up and do the right thing, then nothing will.

    I wonder if Ms. Mottley wants to go down in history as the leader who presided over Barbados’ descent into undisputed shithole status. She would have dreamingly clawed her way to the top of the heap only to awake and find that it was a dung heap.

    Miss Marple says that her ego is too big for that.

    Change is going to come. There is a silver lining in this COVID cloud.

  15. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Does this ‘injection of cash’ to the NIS, in any way conflict with the comments of the NIS Chair on another thread?
    I inspected the wicket, and it looks to be a spinners paradise.


  16. “the Prime Minister said the management had been meeting with the Government and she called on owner Bernie Weatherhead to speak on the matter, saying he had become entangled in a situation with the banks, Resort Hotels and the workers.”

    aren’t these the same crooks trying their best to make their way into the parliament, had a lot of talk about the robbery of visitors but failed to mention their OWN ROBBERY OF THE WORKERS IN BARBADOS and everyone else…and they don’t need guns, knives or face masks to do these daily robberies…..now it’s all out in the wash…they don’t pay anything they owe on the island, are well known as the biggest crooks, always known to be ENTANGLED in pay disputes because they refuse to pay who they owe..


  17. @Northern Observer

    Government paper is not cash.

    It always come back to timely actuarial reports being made available for market inspection AND the up to date production of audited financial statements.

    Nothing less will suffice Rh suffice Prime Minister Mottley!


  18. Miller…a collossal cockup, total mess, we can only spectate. Told them this was coming and they all laughed at us, sent their burnt Fowls to cuss us, now not even the fowls are coherent anymore and have to limit their attacks, while they’re all left scrambling to save the unsaveable…lol


  19. “Crane Palms
    This man have criminal records so I hope the police certificate of character applies to him too.”

    Wuhloss Miller…knowing the pattern of the corrupt who never check for criminal records of whites and other minorities, they just jump right in with taxpayer’s money to uplift crooks, but this is what is being said about Mia and Herbert’s Big Mike their “savior” of the maijuana industry…..lol….and on FB no less….fyah in ya wyah…someone asked for proof, so don’t be surprised if it’s all posted to that and other forums…..crooks attract crooks, ah keep telling them….while criminals records don’t stop people from exceling in more advanced countries, it does for Black people in Barbados, so let’s watch them still fawn over and genuflect to this dude.


  20. And this is correct, the intent is to keep the Rasta Community and the Black population at the bottom of the marijuana pile and disenfranchised, not able to benefit from the plant in anyway…..that has always been the plan as we said from day one, marijuana slave plantations for the Black majority and all the wealth benefits for the crooked sellouts and their partners in crimes against the people…they better be extra careful how they try to retaliate because of these revelations.

    “Cannabis Barbados
    t15rhSmponfsorecd ·
    Paul “Simba” Rock spoke his mind and made it clear the government’s proposed cannabis farming licensing fees aim to cut out Rastas and the average man from the equation and put us back on the slavery plantation as rich foreign entities reap all or most the profits. Read his after thoughts here.”


  21. Northern Observer

    I hope your aware that Scotiabank has devested itself of all Caribbean operations except Barbados and Guyana. Scotia Guyana is being taken over by the government as the foundation for a new Central Bank Structure. Barbados Scotia being sold to Republic is on HOLD until Barbados government settles the debt from the 2018 Sovereign DEFAULT. You should also note Canada’s other major banks have also devested their Caribbean operations. Caribbean is now viewed as caustic by legitimate banking operations.


  22. @Wily

    Your comment is not correct if you check their website.


  23. So is it true what they’re saying about Indar the Mouth on FB…about what goes on at his parties, yall will have to check it out yaselves….but i remember Teets the AG jumping out to claim that no one who has convictions can get involved in the marijuana trade, apparently no one except for white and other minority convicted criminals …a la Donville and the convicted Del Mastro out of Canada whom he contracted to sell Black people the sun via the solar that was invented in Barbados

    …these useless negros should be drawn and quartered AGAIN…


  24. “…these useless negros should be drawn and quartered AGAIN…”
    I believe the correct term is hung, drawn and quartered!


  25. @Wily
    Scotia announced the sale of 9 entities in the Caribbean to Republic. Guyana objected, as did Antigua, and were pulled from the deal, leaving 7. Republic then closed on those 7 remaining deals +/- a year ago. It was recently announced, Oct 2020, Scotia would sell Antigua to EC Amalgamated Bank Ltd. The RBC sale was of units in the EC Block, not including Barbados. CIBC was to sell 67% of its interests in the Caribbean to the Gilinski Group, in a highly leveraged deal. In Feb 2020, it was announced that “regulators” (although Central Banks were referenced) were reviewing the two deals. I have heard little since, and suspect given the pandemic, that neither the RBC nor CIBC deals have closed.
    As far as the debt renegotiation settlements go, it would be no surprise if Barbados was tardy in settling, although one feature of the IMF, is they usually force compliance, as part of their funding requirements. Hence why I asked where the information you supplied came from.


  26. Scotiabank exist in Jamaica, Bahamas and a few other locations.


  27. “I believe the correct term is hung, drawn and quartered!”

    i stand corrected.

    as written in another forum, they are indeed a clear and present danger to the lives of Africans everwhere, a reincarnation of the black faces who have sold out their own Black people over many centuries….many of whom are featured on FB daily, so that no one ever forgets that these treacherous beasts in human skin do exist.


  28. I forget to ask is the NIS exposed in the LIAT saga by any chance?


  29. Wunna better let me rephrase my question for the supporters.

    Has the NIS ever made money available to LIAT either directly as the entity NIS or indirectly in the form of a loan to the Barbaods Gov for the purpose of financing LIAT?

    After all the devil is in the details of the question and how it is phrased.


  30. One day they will say ‘Thank God ‘throwing shade’ crew.


  31. @ John A

    You asked an interesting and important question.

    If the ‘government’ financed LIAT directly or indirectly, through the NIS, either way that debt is unrecoverable and, with Mottley agreeing to write-off LIAT’s debt, wouldn’t that place the fund in a financially precarious position?

    In the event ‘government’ is asked to pay severance to the former LIAT Barbadian employees, I don’t believe it would be fair if such payments were made from our NIS.

    Perhaps those former employees should be seeking severance payments from Antigua’s NIS fund.


  32. @ Artax

    So many questions and so few answers unfortunately.


  33. We need greater transparency about the LIAT transaction.


  34. (Quote):
    So many questions and so few answers unfortunately.
    (Unquote).
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    It would be also very interesting to find out the answer to the question as to whether some part (or all) of the LIAT (1974) Ltd Pilots’ pension plan /savings scheme was invested in the CLICO Ponzi scheme; and if so, what has become of it.

    Has any of it been recovered as part of the liquidation of the assets of CLICO in the East Caribbean?


  35. @ David BU

    When did we ever have transparency and accountability concerning LIAT?

    It seems as though Barbados was LIAT’s ‘cash cow’ and successive prime ministers believed the Treasury belonged to them, so, they took delight in ‘showing off’ and spending our taxes ‘as they felt like,’ to keep the airline operating.

    We heard ‘government’ sold its 49.4% LIAT’s shares to Antigua for EC$1 (US$0.36¢) and wrote off its debt……. that was all…… ‘nothing more, nothing less.’ And, there hasn’t been any follow up on those developments by the media.


  36. Donna stated “If the current situation does not cause the government and people of Barbados to wake up and do the right thing, taken then nothing will.”

    The published revelations concerning the disgruntled workers throws a shadow on the Dickensian nature of the weaknesses of employment legislation in Barbados. Equally depressing was the illegal non-payment of NIS contributions on the part of employers.

    The payment of NIS funds to fund private minority companies is illegal and a violation of the people of Barbados.

    The government are incapable of doing the right thing. The misappropriation of our NIS funds was knowingly carried out under the BLP and the DLP.

    The onus now is squarely on the backs of Barbados majority black population; remaining mute and inanimate will no longer cut it.

    Unless they are prepared to put boots on the ground – and soon! We could soon be witnessing the onset of the extinction of Barbados negro population.

    The time for hanging, drawing and quartering may be the great leveller in our society bringing in one swoop our emancipation from tyrannical leadership and an oppressive minority.

  37. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @Artax
    in 2015 the B’dos AGeneral said the “investment in” LIAT was $150M at that time (though he had some questions)
    Gonsalves claimed the debt portion of the SVG writeoff was +/-EC$25M. Taxes; and fees due their airport.


  38. “The payment of NIS funds to fund private minority companies is illegal and a violation of the people of Barbados.”

    it’s been clear for years they’ve been doing something illegal and dirty with the pension fund..giving it away by the millions to those not entitled, and those whose right it is can’t have access….outright theft from the majority population to keep thieves afloat, now they’ll all sink given worldwide economic conditions and all the evil things they did to the population with the help of the black faces will be revealed…Covid really was the catalyst needed to expose wicked sellout governments.

    Miller…don’t know if you saw the Afra Raymond video, he spoke about a lot of the Clico crooks wheeling and dealing across the Caribbean, but i don’t think he mentioned liat and the crooks in Barbados won’t say a word, here is the video anyway,. you may be able to clean some info here.

    https://youtu.be/O6klV4lbWRs


  39. TLSN…i don’t think most understand just how serious the situation has become, they never took it seriously for all the years they were getting warnings on BU and on other forums, it may take something even more cataclysmic for them to react to this vicious government and its intent to destroy the black majority population mentally, physically, financially….and reduce them even further socially…we’ve really done as much as we can and humanly possible to wake them up before these traitors in the parliament finish them off.

    “The onus now is squarely on the backs of Barbados majority black population; remaining mute and inanimate will no longer cut it.

    Unless they are prepared to put boots on the ground – and soon! We could soon be witnessing the onset of the extinction of Barbados negro population.

    The time for hanging, drawing and quartering may be the great leveller in our society bringing in one swoop our emancipation from tyrannical leadership and an oppressive minority.”


  40. Employees also have a responsibility to check with the NI Department, either through its website or calling or visiting customer service, to verify whether or not their contributions are being remitted and payments ‘up to date.’

    They should also confront their employers immediately, if they come across a situation where their NIS contributions were not remitted.


  41. (Quote):
    The payment of NIS funds to fund private minority companies is illegal and a violation of the people of Barbados. (Unquote).
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    A very profound statement of truth contained in the above.

    Public companies, Yes!
    But not private companies where members of the majority ‘black’ population are shut out from investing and frighteningly similar to what is happening with the inchoate pseudo medicinal marijuana industry.

    Guess the constant raiding and pilfering of the workers lifeline have put paid to any financial Viagra schemes the Mal(m)oney man may have conceived to bring about his concrete erection for a white elephant called Hyatt.

    Let the private sector investor magnates risk their money in building that Lighthouse as a beam of profitability in a sunset industry where long-haul air travel will soon be severely restricted because of the need to impose worldwide limitations on carbon emissions caused by burning too much kerosene in the skies over the years.


  42. @Artax et al

    We have to continue to call for transparency every opportunity.


  43. Miller…that’s what is pissing me off and i refuse to expend more energy on this than necessary, Professor Reparations was invited to some virtual meet and greet with the European parliament and as you know i don’t give EU nor UK a pass for their wicked ass ways, but the Prof. is asking them to end colonialism in the Caribbean, mind you that is the very same colonialism i have been up and down the blog preaching for YEARS that still existed while all of them kept their mouths shut about it and many deemed me crazy, now Professor Shillary is requesting they put an end to it, but the problem i have is this… why can’t Mia and Professor Reparations etc end it all themselves as i’ve repeatedly cussed, pleaded, begged etc that they dismantle the racism, exploitation, thefts of Black people’s taxes and pension money, apartheid etc, THAT THEY ALL PROMOTE, because they make money from being goddamn traitors, so why do they need UK and EU to end it for them…unless they are asking them to remove the trashy, racist, tiefing criminal minorities off the island, which i also suggested for years on end.

    then there’s this…

    “But not private companies where members of the majority ‘black’ population are shut out from investing and frighteningly similar to what is happening with the inchoate pseudo medicinal marijuana industry.”

    This is the perfect opportunity for ENFRANCHISEMENT of the Black majority after they’ve been robbed repeatedly by the traitors in the parliament and minorities, they deliberately shut out the black majority from their own money for investment, and out of everything that could’ve of resulted in social and finanacial upward mobility for them and their children, the latest disenfranchisement of Black people Mia and her gang are responsible for….the marijuana trade rightfully belongs to the Black people, but what did the treacherous government do, gave it away to whites and other criminals, put them in front of the population who fund the island and am sure they fully expect to steal whatever money is there for startup capital……..so who are they going to blame for that, EU and UK too, i guess…


  44. Miller…Professor Reparations said that the Caribbean is one of the few regions in the world that’s still colonized, let that sink in…what i would like to understand is when did he find all of this out, how come he said nothing before, i know for a fact that the majority of the 40 million people in the Caribbean don’t know they’re still colonized and no one can tell me that at least some of the leaders didn’t know, many knew and kept it from the populations….while they pretend to be hot colonial shit, complete with faux titles and everything, a bunch or uppity, arrogant pretenders terrorizing their own people..

    ..for those interested in reading the article, it’s by Caribbean News Service, and it was an international panel dated Dec 2, 2020..when you read it you will see why i can’t understand how the Prof didn’t know that the same thing has also been happening to Africa for all this time, so this reparations gig they are all on is just as full of shit as they are themselves…and if i knew, they with all their letters trailing their names had to have known or at least suspected…..they better dismantle and completely destroy the crap that is destroying black lives in Barbados and the Caribbean and ask Elizabeth to come get her tiefing minority rejects from scavenging and mooching in black people’s lives like the thieves and parasites that they are…


  45. BTW…nothing goes better with Commonwealth than colonies, i spent time matching many words but those are the only two that fit perfectly….🤣🤣

  46. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @MTA
    did you watch of the Cyprus video by Aljazeera? They have some rather unique ways of funding construction using their passport scheme. One acquaintance terms it, “an indirect form of foreign aid”.


  47. @ NorthernObserver

    The Auditor General’s 2016 report revealed the Financial Statements indicated government’s investment in LIAT was $144,658,333. However, the statements did not disclose the contingent liabilities/assets government incurred in relation to its interests in the joint venture, and its share in any contingent liabilities that were incurred jointly with other venturers, as well as the method used to recognize its interests in jointly controlled entities.

    This means unless we see the NIS financial statements for 2016, we won’t know for certain if ‘government’ borrowed from the NIS fund to invest in LIAT. And, that department has been tardy in preparing statements. So, as we say in Bajan vernacular, ‘we’re back to square one.’

  48. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @Artax
    You know as well as I do, we aren’t getting any statements from the NIS anytime soon. And they have had, way too much time, to sanitize them. There are also a wide range of other “investments/loans” which may be similarly questioned.
    The cabal on the island is such, that nobody, and I mean nobody, is willing to take on the NIS. Not even the Unions.


  49. Of course we know Mia is fronting and lying her ass off…putting on a big lack of reality show because she got caught redhanded, the entertainment now will be watching them dismantle the colonialism, racism, exploitation, thefts from the people, apartheid etc, they already trying to pass the job to EU, well if ya can maintain, control, enable and condone all those crimes against Black people for 54 years, easy, ya had no problems being lettered, deputized slave masters wannabe, well ya can damn well dismantle the who evil system, since ya on the ground still perpetrating it voluntarily. EU and UK will only have make a few administrative adjustments, but the rest is up to the black face traitors in the parliament…with their lazy, sellout selves. Goddamn frauds…all these modern-era crimes against the people started in teh 70s…glad yall got exposed, demons..

    https://www.nationnews.com/2020/12/12/franklyn-says-lip-service/

    “Opposition Senator Caswell Franklyn says Government’s 2021 timeline for finally addressing the decades-old issue of a national minimum wage, is yet another example of the Mia Amor Mottley’s administration’s dim view of labour.

    Franklyn, who heads Unity Workers Union, said the protracted issue of a liveable wage for workers deserved the same level of immediacy which Government gave to hoteliers during their ongoing severance bind. He argued that since the 1970s, the issue of a national minimum wage had been used as a proverbial carrot and stick dangled before the Barbadian working class.

    “There has been talk of a national minimum wage going back to the 1970s when I was at school, but nobody has ever taken it seriously. It has been a talking point that politicians have used to make people feel good, and then they forget about them and this seems to me like more of the same,” he said.

    Referencing the speed at which Government implemented the temporary change to the Severance Payments Act, to extend the period of layoff before a person is entitled to claim severance payment from 13 to 22 weeks, Franklyn queried why the same urgency could not have applied to address the plight of low-income workers, whose meagre wages were especially unliveable during the current tough times.”


  50. Just look at this, both wicked governments have been mistreating Black workers in Barbados for decades, both them and the TIEFING, LYING SOCIAL PARTNERSHIP….who the population need to put out of business permanently….stop buying their inferior quality shit…..all of this proves how dishonest Mia is being to the people..

    “Workers are getting restless so the environment is one that definitely can lead to protest action, NUPW deputy general secretary Wayne Walrond told Barbados TODAY.

    Repeated efforts to have meetings convened to have several pressing matters resolved have all came to naught, he declared. The union “is not happy that management has not made a concerted effort to really sit down with us at the table and deal with these myriad of issues,” he said.

    A pay increase for SSA workers, delayed for “years” is the key issue, Walrond said.”

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading