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G4S has agreed to pay a minimum wage of $8.79 per hour, with a minimum of 40 hours per week. As part of the agreement, it seems that the Government must force their competitors to adopt a similar standard. It is important when setting government policies, that all perspectives be examined.

It is normal for large businesses to want to maintain their dominant market position. This is done in two ways; namely, offer better service, or damage competitors.

Those who choose the method of offering a better service, tend to view obstacles to their growth as challenges to overcome. They tend not to concern themselves with their competition. Instead, they focus on continually improving their quality of their service, by improving the management of: competent staff, quality input materials, and quality and low-maintenance equipment.

ARTIFICIAL STANDARDS.

One common method that dominant players use to harm their competitors, is to adopt an artificial standard, that has little to do with the quality of the service. Then they influence the government to make that standard mandatory for their competitors.

A minimum wage is an artificial standard. It has nothing to do with the quality of service. Paying someone a higher salary does not magically improve that person’s competence or productivity.

Established companies who compete on quality, normally reward their productive employees with higher salaries. Therefore, a minimum wage is not an issue for them. A minimum wage is an important issue for many newer companies, who have to compete on cost.

A dominant company can harm newer companies, if they can entice them to match the salaries of the dominant company. But new companies are not normally that stupid. They would never agree to such madness that would immediately make their companies uncompetitive.

Uncompetitive businesses normally accumulate high debts. This then leads to the closure of the business, and the dismissal of all employees – who then earn no wages whatsoever.

When the government meddles unnecessarily in the commercial market, the results are normally disastrous for everyone – employees, employers and the Government. A high minimum wage is a win for the dominant business, and the unions who represent entry level employees. It can be political abuse for everyone else.

POLITICAL ABUSE.

Entry level positions are not designed to be permanent for an employee. They are designed to give all employees an opportunity to demonstrate their competence and productivity, so that they can earn a higher salary.

Employees who have qualified for a higher salary, but are underpaid, are being robbed by bad employers. Unlike our physically enslaved fore-parents, we have options. Good employees can leave bad employers and offer their services to a competitor, or they can start a rival business.

Employees demonstrate their mental enslavement, when they stop trying to be better. In my opinion, one of the most tragic sights, is to see a person comfortable in an entry-level position for their entire careers – and being lauded as a loyal employee.

High minimum wages allow bad employers, to keep employees in entry level positions for longer periods. It can also make employees comfortably mentally enslaved. So what is the solution?

THE SOLUTION.

Government may mandate a minimum wage with the following attributes:

a) it it high enough to prevent mentally enslaved workers from being exploited;

b) it is low enough to allow new businesses to be competitive;

c) it is low enough to give entry level workers an incentive to qualify for higher-paying positions.

Grenville Phillips II is a Chartered Structural Engineer. He can be reached at NextParty246@gmail.com


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179 responses to “Grenville Phillips Speaks : Difficult Conversations – Barbados’ Minimum Wage”


  1. While we talk about “minimum wage”, Sagicor just appointed a new CEO. They DIDNT APPOINTED A BLACK MAN OR WOMAN.

    Don’t mind how hard you work they will never appoint a Black man or woman to a position of power. We must always work for peanuts in these companies.

    when they need someone to head these companies some one from the other races they look to , never to us.

    Is his benefit package going to be $28 million a year????


  2. Is the topic about minimum wage or maximum wage? You are aware a maximum wage is suppose to target those Black people you are always railing about? What size is your brain?


  3. Barbados is going through its worst economic crisis in 200 years. And what are our apologists of the deep welfare state doing? They demand higher costs for the hard-pressed businessmen.

    We don’t need a wage floor, we need a wage ceiling of a maximum of USD 10 per hour for all employees on the island.


  4. That is why the employers cant pay a “minimum wage” one person in the companies gets too much money. His one salary could pay 100 other wages.

    And that person is always from the other races and always a male.


  5. CC

    They have black men and women in Barbados that can run sagicor? Then tell them instead of waiting on a job that they know going to another to put their heads together and try to come up with their own

    Is it u that always talking about the money that sitting in the banks? So don’t come back talking about no start up money

    Stop encouraging the blacks to keep depending on another race for jobs etc . Instead encourage them to start their own / employ their own. And then encourage us to support them instead of the other races dominated/ top heavy companies


  6. Paying someone a higher salary does not magically improve that person’s competence or productivity

    Xxxxxxxx

    @ Grenville

    THIS IS BY FAR ONE OF YOUR WORST PIECES.

    WHAT YOU CALL A SALARY IS PEANUTS.

    WHAT PEOPLE NEEDS IS A LIVEABLE WAGE.

    BD$8 AN HR IS US$4. CALIFORNIA MINIMUM WAGE FOR EXAMPLE FOR ANYONE US$12 BD$24.

    FLORIDA MINIMUM WAGE IS AROUND US$8 BD$16 PER HR.

    YOU ARE LIVING TOO GOOD SO YOU DON’T SEEM TO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A LIVEABLE WAGE AND MINIMUM WAGE.


  7. @ Baje

    Well spotted. There is a difference between a living wage and a minimum wage, and it is based on the cost of living, nothing to do with firm’s revenue or profits.
    When you go shopping foods costs the same, whether you are highly paid or low-paid. Where are the trade unions?


  8. @C3%C
    and pray tell who is the capo dei capi at Sagicor? The numero uno is Dodridge Miller. Is he black? Or too oreo for you.


  9. The value of time determines relative prices of goods and services, investments, productivity, economic growth, and measurements of income inequality. Economists in the 1960s began to focus on the value of non-work time, pioneering a deep literature exploring the optimal allocation and value of time. By leveraging key features of these classic time allocation theories, we use a novel approach to estimate the value of time (VOT) via two large-scale natural field experiments with the ridesharing company Lyft. We use random variation in both wait times and prices to estimate a consumer’s VOT with a data set of more than 14 million observations across consumers in U.S. cities. We find that the VOT is roughly $19 per hour (or 75% (100%) of the after-tax mean (median) wage rate) and varies predictably with choice circumstances correlated with the opportunity cost of wait time. Our VOT estimate is larger than what is currently used by the U.S. Government, suggesting that society is under-valuing time improvements and subsequently under-investing public resources in time-saving infrastructure projects and technologies….(Quote)

  10. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    If I see a “minimum wage” in Barbados by any Govt. I will eat my hat.

    This is an idea which has been knocking around for DECADES NOT MONTHS. Each time it raises its head in Barbados the WHITE AND INDIAN controlled PRIVATE SECTOR rally against it . Using the same argument that they are using now as they fore parents did decades ago. This “minimum wage ” talk is nothing new , it might new to some. The 3% of the Barbados population don’t want any “minimum wage ” for the 97% of the Barbados pop[ulation. They will scuttle it when ever it appears.

    The last time the Barbados Labour Party was in power as they like to call it, they tried to introduce a “minimum wage” it was quickly shot by the 3 % of the population. The Barbados Labour Party quietly dropped it. The argument against it was the same as they are using now on Thursday December 17, 2020. Ask MIA AMOR MOTTLEY.

    Now in a time of Labour unrest this is being used to quiet the masses, But it will never happen.

    You can take that to the Bank.


  11. And in the same usa the minimum wage is still not a livable wage for some there some work two and more jobs


  12. @Tron December 17, 2020 12:06 PM “We don’t need a wage floor, we need a wage ceiling of a maximum of USD 10 per hour for all employees on the island.”

    That $20 BDS per hour applies to you too?

    For example if my little Susie is an anesthe·ist does she get $20 per hour too? Or would $12.50 BDS do?

    And since your great “friend” the Prime Minister is OUR employee, does she get $20 BDS an hour too, or perhaps $11.25 BDS per hour is plenty for her?


  13. Well written article by Dr. Derek Alleyne. I said already that the mention of the minimum wage issue by Mottley was a distraction in the talks aiming to find a resolution to the G4S-BWU impasse. It does not apply there since the security officers will all receive an hourly rate of $8:79 which is above the $8:00 per hour proposed in the last BLP manifesto. This is another example of a smoke and mirror government at work. Why was the minimum wage issue not settled just after the 2018 election when austerity intensified and before the onset of covid 19? During that period Mottley was shielding business owners. Now that businesses are hurting badly and there will be strong opposition to the introduction of a minimum wage (though badly required) by Mottley’s friends, she wants to be seen as the hero seeking to defend the interest of the most pauperized sections of workers against those strident voices. In the end the strong opposition to the suggestion will be successful, the measure will not be introduced in April next year and Mottley would have found the scapegoats to blame for low-paid workerd continuing to suffer at her hands. When will Barbadians become wise to Mottley’s creation of straw structures just to knock them down. The media can do Barbadians a big favour by periodically publishing a comparison of the wages/salaries of workers in various categories of employment including the Prime Minister’s package. All Barbadians will then see the true extent of the working poor and level of underemployment in the country. One thing Mottley persists with is playing on the emotions of Barbadians. Though this practice has served her well so far, it will be her downfall eventually.

    Copied


  14. Or perhaps we can go further and make a law that nobody including Granville, Tron nor the Prime Minister shall be paid no more than $166,400 BDS per year. That is ten times the proposed $8 BDS proposed minimum wage. And government contracts should be structured in such a way to ensure that Grenville and others like him have that as the maximum BEFORE tax income, and that this amount includes any benefits paid for by the employer. And so often the employer is the over burdeneed tax payers of Barbados.


  15. There are pros and cons to legislating a minimum wage. It is note a binary matter to solve.

    Dowridge Miller a black man is the head honcho.


  16. I smell an “its your fault if you are low paid and poor” in this essay. I smell a lack of compassion. I wonder if the people of St. George North smelled it too, and decided NOT to vote for Grenville.


  17. @John2 December 17, 2020 12:34 PM “They have black men and women in Barbados that can run sagicor? ”

    Yes.

    If there are black men and women in Barbados who can run Barbados, surely there are black men and women in Barbados who can run Sagicor. Don’t Sagicor’s dollars and get-it-done labor not come principally from black me and women?

  18. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    Not that the private sector cant pay a living wage, they don’t want to The 97% of the population must be always kept poor.

    look, an INDIAN will come down to Barbados from the poor areas of INDIA. When he arrives he is wearing a gong and two slippers on his feet and aplastic bag with clothes. By the following year he is living in a two storey house with a store in Bridgetown on his way to the privileged life.

    Black people working here hard for years and still catching the unreliable Bus service. Still does not have much. INDIAN children go Harrison Collage etc. and they are left behind.

    This country has money , but only for certain people. Take a look at Careenage and see all those yachts none of them owned by the 97% of the population.

    Now employers don’t want to pay Severance pay even though they can.


  19. @John2 December 17, 2020 12:34 PM “Stop encouraging the blacks to keep depending on another race for jobs”

    Maybe black people don’t “DEPEND” on the other races for jobs. Maybe it is the other races who depend on black people to get the work done.

    I don’t go out to work anymore, but when i was in the paid workforce i never conceived of myself as anybody’s dependent. i knew that i was exchanging my labor for their money. And that they were exchanging their money for my labor. It seemed to me a fair exchange.

    I knew that without me they couldn’t get the job done.

    The last place I worked they had to hire 2 people to replace the elderly me, and still they struggled.


  20. @Hal Austin December 17, 2020 12:43 PM “When you go shopping foods costs the same, whether you are highly paid or low-paid. Where are the trade unions?”

    i would go even further and say that low paid workers pay more of their wages when they buy the exact same items in the supermarket. Low paid workers pay much greater % of their wages for food.

    For example the average person has to pay about $300 BDS per person per month for food and basic cleaning supplies. For a worker earning whose take home pay is $1200 per month that is 25% of his or her income. For a worker whose take home pay is $30,000 per month the supermarket bill is only is 1% of his or her income.

    Anybody who in effect pays 24% more for an identical item IS SUFFERING.

  21. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    “Insurance giant Sagicor Financial Company (SFC) has announced that it will be getting a new president and chief executive officer for its Sagicor Life Inc. business come January 1, 2021.”


  22. @ Carson

    Govt must bar the same person from being chairman and CEO. It is perverse. The chairman is there to keep an eye on the CEO. The CEO is there to execute the board’s strategy.


  23. Carson C Cadogan December 17, 2020 1:54 PM #: “Look, an INDIAN will come down to Barbados from the poor areas of INDIA. When he arrives he is wearing a gong and two slippers on his feet and a plastic bag with clothes. By the following year he is living in a two storey house with a store in Bridgetown on his way to the privileged life.”

    “Black people working here hard for years and still catching the unreliable Bus service. Still does not have much. INDIAN children go Harrison Collage etc. and they are left behind.”

    @ Carson C. Cadogan

    You are spewing emotionally motivated nonsense.

    An Indian coming to Barbados “wearing a gown and two slippers” is able to achieve a house and store through assistance from his Indian ‘brothers and sisters.’ They ‘put him up’ until he establishes himself. More often than not, the store he rents belongs to an Indian, who works out reasonable terms of payment; the clothes and other items he sells are bought on consignment from other Indians.; they assist him with a housing; he purchases a vehicle on credit from one of the several Indian used cars dealers and when he, as we would say, ‘catches himself,’ he repays his debt.

    Perhaps you may care to explain to the forum, how Black people from the poor areas of GUYANA and JAMAICA are able to come to Barbados and, within a certain time range, are able to achieve more than Bajans who were “working hard here for years.”

    Maybe it’s through hard work?


  24. But a minimum wage of $6.25 BDS is not nearly enough.

    The last time i paid anybody $6.25 per hour was in 2001, and without fail I paid time and a half for anything over 40 hours. And paid NIS all that was due.

  25. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    So you are saying that BLACK BARBADIANS don’t work hard?????? Run WHITE BAJAN AND INDIANS companies for years and then get the rough end of the stick.


  26. Couldn’t pay me to work for these frauds and wannabe slavemasters in Barbados…that black face governments promote and encourage to keep Black workers poor.


  27. GP is actually right about struggling, small or new businesses being hamstrung by minimum wage requirements. And John 2 is also correct about minimum wage in the US not always being equal to a living wage. There are even teachers out there waitressing to supplement their income.

    It is a difficult situation. Minimum wage legislation is not always a simple solution. In days gone by people would have a side gig from home to survive. People would raise livestock, keep kitchen gardens, bake sweetbread etc., make pudding and souse. Now we come home and sit in front of the tv. Second “jobs” and sous sous and buying goods and services from our neighbours is how we progressed.

    Sometimes you have to work after work for a while. And sometimes you have to acquire skills that will allow you to rise. Nobody should be working as a server in Chefette for twenty years. That is for young people with no responsibilities.

    Honestly, I think we have become lazier than our grandparents.


  28. Never ‘said’ “BLACK BARBADIANS don’t work hard.”


  29. A reminder to logon to bma.com and support local, they will deliver in country as well.


  30. But we watch too much tv after we get home.

  31. NorthernObserver Avatar

    it is bma.BB not .com


  32. Thanks NO, multitasking.


  33. “Employees demonstrate their mental enslavement, when they stop trying to be better. In my opinion, one of the most tragic sights, is to see a person comfortable in an entry-level position for their entire careers – and being lauded as a loyal employee.”

    I don’t believe the above is a fair comment and Mr. Phillips II is being a bit too judgemental.

    I’ve known women who felt proud remaining Maids and men, Van Drivers, their entire working lives. They did not have any ambition or desire to advance to higher positions. They were comfortable with their wages and productive on the job, achieved homes and financed their children’s tertiary level education at UWI or overseas universities.
    A friend of mine, who has been a Clerical Officer for the past 25 years, told me she was not desirous of any promotion or felt compelled to further her education. She is married, owns her home and says she’s comfortable.

    I also know another lady who began her career in the civil service as a Maid/Cleaner and ended it as a Senior Accountant. She attended even classes, BCC and UWI…….. and worked her way ‘up the ladder’ from Maid to Clerical Officer, to Senior Clerk, to Accountant and finally Senior Accountant.

    An individual being “comfortable in an entry level positions for his/her entire careers,” does not necessarily means he/she is ‘mentally enslaved.’ Most importantly, we must accept the fact not everyone is ‘cut out to be’ an academic. Sometimes, it’s just a matter of what they believe are their priorities or if they’re satisfied operating within their comfort zones.
    Some of these people also hold the opinion success is based on achieving specific objectives in life, such as owning their own homes, car and being able to support their families.

    And, although Mr. Phillips II may think they’re unambitious, many of them are very creative and have found alternative methods of supplementing their incomes. They ‘work on the side’ as farmers, painters, masons, carpenters, mechanics, security guards or sell food and beverages on weekends.

    Bearing this in mind, what are the fundamental differences between George who spent his working life as a Van Driver, and was able to achieve a home, send his children to university, planned for his retirement and lives comfortably………..

    …………….. and Richard, who went from being an Office Clerk with 5 CXC to gaining a MBA and becoming the company’s CEO, and achieved similar objectives?

  34. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    I now remember something while talking about yachts in the careenage. Many years ago the Careenage was the home of most of the Black boat owners. They used to bring in their catches and we would go down there and buy our fish. There used to be droves of people there and the fishermen did a roaring trade there. The inter island traders used to bring in their Ships there as well. Every body was happy or we thought.

    The 3% of the Barbadian population and you know who that is, prevailed upon a Barbados Labour Party Govt. to move them from there, they persuaded the Govt. they were a security threat. All of a sudden. We quickly learned why they were a “security” threat. From the time the BLACK PEOPLE were force to moved, guess what???? We started seeing the WHITE BAJANS bringing their yachts where they are to this day.

    The Black people and their Boats were a “security threat” had to move ,but some how the WHITE BAJANS with their yachts were now there and were somehow not Security threats.

    The Barbados Labour Labour Party at work on the behalf of their Masters again. And these Masters were not people who looks like me.


  35. @ Carson

    You are on the ball. The cult of security includes not only the nonsense of G4S, but removing the schooners, which piloted inter-island trade, to the Port, on so-called security grounds.
    I remember those schooners, plying their trade between Barbados, St Lucia, Dominica, Guyana, Trinidad and Grenada, mainly. With names like the Barbados Pioneer and the Daerwood, they were a feature of the wharf.
    When the schooners arrived, men with push carts would be there off-loading and ferrying the produce to their destination, or to hawkers who sold alongside the bridge.
    You are also right about the fishing boats, which came in to the inner basis after the warehouses and lightermen were moved at the completion of the Deep Water Harbour.
    They were maintained by the Central Foundry and Barbados Foundry, and the dry dock; there were also small blacksmiths and coopers who made a decent living off that trade. That was who we were.
    With the cult of security and the nonsense about being world class, you will get someone in a shiny sit and bri-nylon shirt, and a certificate in book keeping, talking about smuggling and drugs and giving what s/he thinks is a plausible reason for making the wharf a non-productive site. Just go down Cavans Lane and see the waste right in the heart of the City.


  36. If you are able to meet your needs on the wages then there is no need for complaint, is there?

    I thought the trouble was that the wages are deemed to be insufficient to meet basic needs.

    If a person is content remaining at entry level and having a gig on the side, then that is fine. The problem is those who remain at entry level for twenty years, don’t want a side gig and expect to raise five children on entry level wages.


  37. Cuhdear

    You missed / talking around my point

    What I was saying to Carson is if you have the skill set and they won’t give you the big money job then WE should used those skill to start our own

    Another option would be to look for the same or similar job in another company
    But when you coming with the race ticket, I would prefer id WE start and support OUR own


  38. @ Carson,; it is the even if the police are in the front line; it is magistrates, judges, probation officers, teachers, employers, media – it is the whole society.
    Since the 1984 Police and Criminal Evidence Act, which came out of the Scarman Report, the police have done their best to continue the stop and search policy, which has nothing to do with stopping criminality, but with harassing black people – even their black colleagues.
    Sadly, some of the worst are black police officers.


  39. That would have to be the Bajans that left here and carried their Bajan Condition to the UK. It could only be a mentally enslaved Bajan policeman that would be the overseer for the white man.


  40. Dear All:

    The PM asked for difficult conversations on this matter from diverse perspectives. I have presented mine from my experience as an employer and employee (including at entry level positions). I presented the following solutions. Namely, that the Government may mandate a minimum wage with the following attributes:

    It is high enough to prevent mentally enslaved workers from being exploited;

    It is low enough to allow new businesses to be competitive;

    It is low enough to give entry level workers an incentive to qualify for higher-paying positions.


  41. @John2 December 17, 2020 12:34 PM “Stop encouraging the blacks to keep depending on another RACE for jobs”

    @John2 December 17, 2020 6:07 PM “But when you coming with the race ticket, I would prefer id WE start and support OUR own.”

    Please note that I was responsing to you, that you mentioned race first. i did not.


  42. SOME OF YOU ARE TOO PETTY AND STUPID FOR YOUR OWN GOOD AND LIVE IN A CONSTANT STATE OF NARROW MINDLESS,

    THE USA HAS 50 STATES WITH EACH SETTING THEIR OWN MINIMUM WAGE,

    IT IS SUPPOSED TO BE A MINIMUM LIVABLE WAGE DEPENDING ON EACH STATE COST OF LIVING.

    IT DOESN’T MEAN THAT SOME PEOPLE WILL BARELY NOT MAKE ENDS MET OR NOT SUFFICE.

    IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WHETHER A COMPANY CAN AFFORD TO PAY STAFF AS IT ASSUMES IF CAN’T MEET MINIMUM WAGE STANDARD THAT COMPANY SHOULD NOT BE IN BUSINESS WHICH I SUPPORT 100%.

    SO THE WHIMS AND FANCIES OF BUSINESS MEN OR WOMEN WISHES HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH IT OR WHETHER THEY CAN AFFORD TO PAY OR NOT.


  43. There is also something which some Americans call the mommy track.

    Women do a lot of unpaid care giving. They care for the country’s children, and provide care for the retured workforce.

    Unpaid work, but extremely valuable never the less. Unpaid work which keeps the economy and the society functioning well.

    I remember once a female collegue, unmarried and childless reprimanded me for leaving a meeting at 7. Told me that Japanese men don’t leave work until 9 or later. I pointed out to her that at that time something like 80% of Japanese mothers of young children were not in the paid work force [even now only about 50% of Japanese mothers return to work after the birth of their first child; the number is close to zero for those women who have 2 or more small children] therefore the fathers of their children could stay at work until midnight if they chose because somebody at home was doing the unpaid labor of caring for the evolving workforce (ie. children).

    So Grenville can talk but how often has he had to leave work, pick up the children, cook their dinner, supervise their baths or actually do the baths for the babies and toddlers, supervise homework. Read them a bedtime story. Then at some time in the evening drive to the home of his elderly parents to take dinner for them, or to visit to keep them company for a while, ensure that they have taken their medicines and that their home is properly secured from intruders, fire etc. I can assure you that if he had had to follow that schedule for 14 years as I did, he too would leave work at the end of the 8 hours for which his employer paid him. That is what i did, because for decades my work never ended at 4:30 or 5:00. My paid work ended at that time, but then my second shift of unpaid labor began.

    I’d like to remind Grenville ass well that the evolving workforce is not cared for and nurtured by structural engineers, nor by politicians, the captains of industry. The workforce is manufactured, cared for and nurtured principally by women, and in Barbados those women unlike in Japan, are not primarily housewives with one job to do. They are mostly women in the paid workforce. And sadly much too often they are women deserted by the fathers of this new generation of workers.

    Ask Grenville what he would do if his well paid work required him to travel frequently, sometimes 3 or 4 times per week and if the mother of his children had deserted her children.

    Where I sat a long time ago I heard a woman refuse an opportunity because her husband said that he could not plait their young daughter’s hair if she went away for a 3 week professional development opportunity. I don’t think that it occurred to him that he would have to give up his usual Saturday routine and drive the child to a salon, wait for her and pay somebody to wash and braid her hair. A job his wife had freely done hundreds of times. He could not cope with doing it 3 times.

    Heard a man gladly accept a much longer professional opportunity which involved separation from his infants both of whom were under 1 year old. He didn’t have to worry about the babies. The mothers would provide excellent care in his absence.

    So don’t insult this half of the work force by calling us lazy or unambitious, or mentally enslaved.

    Let me remind everybody that reproduction, childcare and eldercare are also WORK..

    No society has yet found a way to function without this unpaid WORK.

    No economy has yet found a way to function without this unpaid WORK.

    This discussion came out of the current national G4S discussion. Has anybody noticed that a lot of those workers are women? Has it occurred to anybody that they are raising the next generation of workers, while providing some care for the past generation of workers?

    So if a woman is “satisfied” to remain as a maid, or security guard, or cashier or whatever Grenville calls an entry level job, and if at the same time she raises a structural engineer, or accountant, or doctor or politician, or a judge or a Governor General do we still refer to her as mentally enslaved? Perhaps the woman knows exactly what she is doing. Perhaps she is knowingly sacrificing her own ambitions so that her children can achieve. I know a cashier right now whose child has recently been awarded a Barbados scholarship. Have any of Grenville’s children been awarded a Barbados scholarship?

    Lemme ask wunna a few questions. Has a Governor General of Barbados ever raised a Governor General?

    And except for Grantley Adams has a Prime Minister of Barbados ever raised a Prime Minister?

    And if not why not?


  44. People too like to sit in their positions of [often inherited privilege] and use terms like “mentally enslaved” to denigrate the difficult and essential WORK of others.

    Wunna really need to stop it.


  45. “IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WHETHER A COMPANY CAN AFFORD TO PAY STAFF AS IT ASSUMES IF CAN’T MEET MINIMUM WAGE STANDARD THAT COMPANY SHOULD NOT BE IN BUSINESS”

    To me, this was the main flaw in Grenville’s reasoning. Reducing it to the absurd every new business can survive if you paid your employees nothing.

    Then there was some educated guy talking about a minimum wage by sector. How many sector does Barbados have. How many people in each sector?

    These guys have the wrong idea of a minimum wage. It is not to put food in the belly of children, but it is the minimum that a business should pay. It is truly a minimum wage.


  46. We boast of our education,but it seems as if we are educated to the point of idiocy or wickedness.

    We run after solutions from other places and then we put our own twist on these solutions. A twist that neuters the remedy being considered.

    If a business cannot survive without paying people next to nothing, perhaps it should not be in business.

    Let me float this idea… There can come a point where working at a business and earning next to nothing can become
    too costly to an employee.

  47. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    OFF TOPIC
    “”State enterprises still lax on financial reporting””

    I thought that the Barbados Labour Party was going to fix this? They pass laws and everything to correct this this . And it it is still not happening. He should be ashamed. The Barbados Labour Party had a plaster for every economic problem when they were in the opposition. But somehow they are finding out it is not so easy when you get into Govt.. Two and half years gone and still in the same position of little to nothing being to advance the people in the country. It only happening for certain races who don’t look like us.

  48. Carson C Cadogan Avatar

    What the Barbados Labour Party does is to fool Black people that they are going to do more for them than they can do. Just lies all the time. They then find themselves hamstrung by their masters in the 3% people of the population of the Barbados .

    I knew it was wrong when some of the Barbadian population march hand in hand in town. The chickens and the mongoose don’t have the same interest but Bajans were lied to by the Barbados Labour Party and the Barbados Workers Union and Barbados Teachers Union and the NUPW in the interest of the 3% people of the Barbados population. And now they are strangely silent.

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