A reckoning for social justice is unfolding in Barbados. Unlike the USA earlier this year where it was prompted by police brutality and death, in Barbados the reckoning has been prompted by labour unrest.

Working Class Inclusion in the Social Partnership

In an address on World Day of Social Justice on February 20th 2020, the Minister of Labour Colin Jordan spoke on the topic “Closing the Inequalities Gap to Achieve Social Justice”. In that address he stated, “social justice connotes an environment where there is equity and fairness, no one is marginalized, exploited or discriminated against, there is no poverty, there are equal gender opportunities, and there is no infringement of human rights” and “social justice will be achieved through a variety of means including education, awareness-building and legislation.” Sad to say, the minimum wage was overlooked and not included. A few months later, in June 2020 the Minister brought legislation to discriminate against the already exploited working class of Barbados.

On December 14, 2020 after months of social unrest, the Minister stated that the Government will revisit the changes made to the Severance Pay Act which reduced the length of time persons can apply for severance and revisit employers’ refusal to pay severance. However, also at the heart of this serious matter is the fact that the government and a ‘social’ partnership made a bad decision against one class in society which could have plunged the island into its worst labour relations crisis since the 1930’s Riots. Until it is changed, the BEST Program is an epic failure which will affect the entire labour force not only Tourism workers. The idea that such a decision was accepted by government and the social partnership is a matter of grave concern. It is a clear indication that the social partnership is a limited interest group serving its own interest and that it has the propensity to make its self-interest government policy.

In order for there to be meaningful change in terms of labour legislation going forward, the social partnership must be a broad based interest group which includes representation from the working class. Co-operatives and NGO’s must also be represented.

Historical Origins of the Minimum Wage

To have any discussion on wages in Barbados, one must start with three things which are the distribution of land and capital and the labour force that supplies labour. All three have been determined historically during slavery when the white upper class owned the land and the capital and the black working class were the source of labour. The black working class went from no wages to extremely low wages as the planters had an abundance of labour to choose from. The disparities between the profits of the planter class and wages of the labourers came to a head in 1937 and riots erupted. A low wage of about 30 cents a day was being paid.

Today ownership of the means of production (land and capital) has basically remained unchanged in Barbados. Even with the advent of credit unions little has changed for the working class. Constrained by the lack of Capital and land, the working class has been unable to impact the wages that they earn even with the support of the labour unions.

The minimum wage is a wage at the subsistence level. At present, the minimum wage is $6.25 per hour in Barbados. It is the demarcation of poverty line when compared to the high cost of living. In essence, the minimum wage has kept the working class in poverty.

The Living Wage

A living wage is a wage that is high enough to maintain a normal standard of living. It takes into consideration the cost of food, transportation, rents, mortgages, utilities, clothing, self- maintenance, healthcare, education and the payment of taxes.

According to Oxfam the introduction of living wage is beneficial to a society when:

1. Increases in wages are long overdue.

2. It is used to address long standing issues in class/race inequalities.

3. It is used to reduce poverty.

4. It is used to fuel economic growth.

Government maintains a basket of goods that are under price controls. For decades that basket has remained unchanged even though taste has changed in the population due to a large consumption of imported goods. Control of what the working class eats has shifted from the planters to government if it determines what your wages can buy.

Government New Minimum Wage by Sector

Government has stated that it will introduce a new minimum wage structure by sector as opposed to an across the board minimum wage. For this to make an impact on the livelihoods of the working class, the following must occur:

1. There must be a best practice used to determine the valuable of types of labour. This may also negatively impact labour relations.

2. Government must invest in agriculture to increase locally grown crops to substitute for imports.

3. Government must provide subsidies to agriculture.

4. There must be an across the board price freeze to combat inflation.

5. Rents for the working class must be fixed or subsidized.

6. Food for the working class must be subsidized i.e. there must be 2 different price structures in the supermarket, one for the working class and another for everyone else.

7. There is a special interest rate for the working class.

8. Access to capital for the working class.

9. Subsidized transportation for the working class.

10. Land purchase and building materials are subsidized for the working class.

Conclusion

Getting back to the Minister’s address on February 20th, 2020, he failed to include the minimum wage of $6.25 an hour as part of the social justice environment that he described. Perhaps it was an oversight on the Minister’s part but that minimum wage has been responsible for the exploitation and discrimination of the working class of Barbados.

The government of Barbados has a choice, either subsidize the working class or provide a living wage. The question that government needs to determine is if it really wants to positively impact the lives of the working class in Barbados by taking the measures outlined above when it introduces the new minimum rate structure or if it will not be easier to provide the working class with a living wage which reduces government’s effort and cost. The new minimum rates structures on their own will not work unless they equate to a living wage.

Going forward it is hoped that the government comes to terms with the fact that representation from the working class is included in the social partnership and that there is acknowledgement that a minimum wage has failed largest class of the population and that a living wage must be legislated as it is in the best interest of all Barbadians.

180 responses to “Another Heather Cole Column – Social Justice for the Working Class”


  1. WS
    “As for Comrade Prescod, he has been politically neutered.

    So the squatters in the Belle, as you mentioned, appeared post Comrade Prescod’s removal from Cabinet?🤣🤣🤣 PS your comrade hates the word squatters so don’t use it. You need to update your facts and analysis of many social and economic issues in Bdos, including the erection of houses on land without the land owners’ permission aka squatting.


  2. 3-degree busy waiting on his stimulus cheque, trying to find the large number of extrajudicial killings he claims have occurred in Barbados and telling people that if you’re not getting at least US$8/hour in Bim it is peanuts because that’s the minimum in Florida. #imaginehelecturedpeoplechildren🤣


  3. @ Enuff
    I merely said the Comrade was politically neutered. I think he said in Parliament that it was because of the “ white shadows”.
    I don’t know much these days at all. But I did see some government units that were a bit tight. I also read about some houses being built with no cupboards etc.
    Man , even the squatters complaining that the houses offered to them by Duguid are too small .
    Going forward ,I will wait on you before venturing into any discussion about housing policy. Happy to learn that all corruption in this department has been cleaned up. Good job !
    Peace


  4. @ Enuff

    KEEP SUCKING THE 2 WHITE MEN BALLS YOU CHAIR IN YOUR”MARKETING MEETINGS”.

    THE 2 X 3 ISLAND HAS NOT HAD RECORD MURDERS UNDER BLP THAT IS A FIGMENT ON MY IMAGINATION.

    I ENJOY FREE MONEY AND MAKE NO APOLOGY.

    MAYBE MIA NEEDS TO START GIVING FREE MONEY TO THE BLACK LOCALS INSTEAD OF THE WHITES.


  5. William,

    One Caribbean would indeed be lovely. I do love Caribbean people, each with their own strengths that would complement each other. It would be a tremendous accomplishment. We would have been much further along in self-sufficiency if the Federation had stuck, I believe.

    Unfortunately, we no longer have a revered Windies cricket team to help you. I think the bond is more tenuous since its demise.

    I fear this time that YOU are chasing butterflies.

    But I hope you catch them!


  6. 3-degree aka 2-pseudonym
    I don’t work in marketing. You’re so bright, you changed your whole name but repeated the same language and phrases used under your other “name” to insult Donna and Artax. You find de extrajudicial killings yet? Shiiiite imagine if you had 4 degrees?🤣🤣🤣


  7. @ Donna
    “I fear this time that YOU are chasing butterflies.“
    That certainly brought a smile to my face. I have been told that now almost every day for forty Five years. It remains the only solution. It’s the only struggle worth my dedication.
    Peace.


  8. @Pachamama December 19, 2020 2:46 PM “You can easily spend 700 in a supermarket for 3 or 4 bags.”

    This has not been my experience.

    i don’t think that i have ever spent $700 in one go.

    But typically I buy no alcohol nor tobacco nor preserved meats. Typically no canned fruits nor vegetables either.


  9. @enuff
    since you understand this compulsory acquisition process, what is this about ‘beach accretion’ and more land in the Hyatt/Ram land deal?
    https://www.barbadosparliament.com/uploads/bill_resolution/fd44c573f827d31c6653bd08b38db34c.pdf

    and on land and squatting, who were the owners “Belmont” of the recently acquired lands in Gemswick. Was that heirs of the Bulls, the man who was the aeroballistics expert?

  10. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @enuff
    So the GoB agreed to compulsory acquisition of lands from marriott at Harrismith (Sam Lords?), and then decide to abandon that acquisition, and we are told
    “The Resolution……….published in the Official Gazette as Resolution No. 4/2020 on the 13th day
    of February, 2020”
    Only problem is the last Gazette published for the public to view on the Barbados parliament website is Jan 30, 2020.
    WTF is going on with the publishing of the Official Gazette???


  11. We have a few hypocrites on this blog who like to quote Professor Howard when it suits them.

    Minimum wage has serious implications
    CERTAIN OFFICIALS in the Barbados government, as well as the Barbados Workers’ Union (BWU), seem to think that a “national minimum wage” is a simple economic concept. They are wrong.
    On the contrary, a national minimum wage or sectoral minimum wage has serious micro as well as macro-economic implications.
    I repeat my view that a national minimum wage, though socially desirable, requires in-depth research, particularly into the structure of wages and job classification, productivity issues, and the nature of the present and continuing threats to the survival of certain businesses in Barbados. Research must also take into account the hiring practices of employers.
    My argument here is that a national minimum wage, or national sectoral minimal wages, should not be implemented in the context of our continuing deep economic crisis and uncertainty, which will continue into 2021. Further, in our present crisis, a national minimum wage makes no sense when government officials cannot reveal what the “true” unemployment rate is.
    My “uncertainty” analysis is supported by a view of the IMF’s Louise Levonian, executive director for Barbados, that risks are high and tilted to the downside, implying an uncertain economic outlook. I share the view that Barbados will take another two or more years to return to positive economic growth. This is not an environment for minimum wage legislation.
    Meanwhile, in the context of uncertainty, rather than focusing on a politically sanctioned national minimum wage, Government’s economic policy should be devoted to making sure that severance payments are paid, and that the country increases economic output wherever possible. Generating output is necessary to decrease this “unknown” very high unemployment rate in Barbados.
    – PROFESSOR MICHAEL HOWARD

    Source: Nation


  12. Now we have the official privatisation of our beaches. With accretion, ownership goes right up to the edge of the water and remains fluid(pardon the un) with the movement of the flow of the waves. Is this how it it interpreted in Barbados?
    Was this one of the controversies that led to the removal of Comrade Prescod?


  13. @ Hal
    You had asked me when I suggested to you that you refrain from from some actions. I thought I had replied but in reviewing my posts from yesterday, I realized I didn’t.
    It was in relation to responding to the anti/overseas Bajan posts. I had also suggested that you refrain from using some language and terms that are pretty rough.
    I lightly said you were hard ears because I had expressed such to you before. You responded that your mother likened you to your father and that you were considered hard ears.
    In a later blog , I said that your mother at least did not call you hard headed.
    That was about it- if my memory serves me correctly.
    Peace


  14. @ William

    I thought that was what you meant, but did not want to anticipate it. You may notice, I am not part of the overseas versus stay at home argument. I think it is silly. I talk about Barbadians (Caribbeans people) as one, no matter where they live or were born.
    In fact, one of my arguments regarding athletics, my favourite sport, is to sing the praises of Jamaica; no matter which Western country you find outstanding athletes, usually you find people of Jamaican descent – Canada, the UK or US.
    The only times this overseas/stay at home argument has any legitimacy is in the interpretation of experience, what I call Plato’s Allegory. For example, when I refer to the possibilities of journalism, I am speaking from a totally different experience to the readers and staff of Barbados Today or the Nation.
    For example, in the UK journalism has produced a prime minister, a leader of the Labour party, at least one chancellor, a number of junior finance ministers, fund managers, analysts, professors, a leading constitutional expert, etc. Every year there is a survey of the top jobs for graduates and the BBC comes top every year.
    But this is not really an overseas/stay at home argument, it is equally inter-generational. I left Barbados a long time ago and sometimes find it difficult understanding the precise meaning of some words used on BU.
    For example, cussing, or terms such as have the last word, etc. But I have the same difficulty with understanding the youths in the UK, often young men and women who grew up in your home. But that is what a dynamic language is all about.
    In London we have a new English, called estuary English (after the Thames); cockney is now a minority language in London. When I was a little boy in Barbados people from St Philip and St Lucy had distinct accents and colloquialisms. That is how language develops.
    Finally, as I have said before, I refuse to let anonymous cyber bullies intimidate me. It did not happen when I was a youth, and it will not happen now. Of course, I am prepared to have a civilised debate. What I do is ignore the mentally challenged and try to debate with the rational.
    My main concern now is that I am keen to sign up for a new course, but CoVid-19 and 20 are seriously restricting my opportunity. BU is the equivalent of reading one of the free newspapers we get at the tube station; you read them then chuck them in the bin. Totally meaningless. It is the ordinary people I am interested in.

    .


  15. @ Hal
    You are more than correct re the different language patterns in Bim. As you know,the Modern High had hundreds of students from rural areas. I was fortunate enough to develop several long standing friendships from student days. The differences in their language patterns excited me to no end and I can actually tell which parish a person is from with some accuracy by just listening to them.
    Have you ever looked at social patterns in Christ Church. I think it’s our most diverse parish: fisher folk, hotels, whites, farmers, the airport, industrial parks , oldest government units outside of the Pine, I think.,Absolutely fascinating.
    As for BU, I still welcome it as an asset to public discourse but I have finally accepted that it’s not my blog and I really have no further intention of making suggestions as to its direction. However, I will continue to engage the best way I can.
    Sometimes less is more.
    Don’t forget it’s Christmas and when you fire , fire one for me. Make it quick and stiff. These days I am only trying to reach contentment before capacity.
    If I had been told fifty years ago ,that my people will be in the papers with dilapidated housing, complaining about water supply , jumping up and down when their garbage is collected Or a few buses are bought, I would have ignored such a prediction. If I had been told that they would be in the papers begging for their own NIS and severance benefits , I would have ignored the soothsayer. If I had been told that my people in 2020, would’ve been earning less than 300 dollars per week, I would have thought it a joke . But all of these things are happening and it is very shameful that thirty black men and women , sit every Tuesday in a Parliament pretending they are representing the poor and down trodden. But that’s who we are .
    Be vigilant.


  16. But…..only the stay-at-home Bajans are suffering from the Bajan Condition and are understandably avoided by your returnee friend.

    You talk a roll of jobby! (That still means human solid waste.)

    You are fooling no-one, certainly not this “cyberbully” who will call you out whenever she seeds fit.

    You think you can slide insults past us every damn day and we are to say nothing.

    Good luck with that!

    William Skinner thinks you are the same man you were years ago and that blinds him to your nasty attitude. But your butt kissing Baje/Fake Observing has been exposed as a fraud.

    But…. enough of your misery for the day! Drop as many nasty remarks as you like until tomorrow!


  17. @ William

    Your first two paragraphs were brilliant. It is a part of our cultural history only Elombe Mottley is working on. There were lots of historical sociological reasons for those developments, including the fact that we did not travel from our districts, far less from the country in those days. We only travelled out when we went to excursions.
    My family came originally from St Philip and I remember teasing a cousin of mine just to hear him speak Philipian. I have a friend in London from Marchfield I still tease to get him to speak it now, even though he has forgotten most of it. In those days you could almost tell the streets individuals came from from their accents and use of words.
    As to Christ Church, in my youth that was part of the country, we only met them when they came to town at the end of the crop to spend their bonuses. Always in white pumps. We only knew it by driving through to the airport. Now I am more familiar with parts of the parish.
    As you say, it is the most metropolitan part of the country, outside St Michael. That is because they had the big sugar plantations to build on as the sugar industry failed.
    What I also notice about the built up part of Christ Church is that there is no sense of community; people are polite enough, but not over friendly. It is rather strange.
    The older communities, such as the Pine, Waterford, Deacons, were developed after 1944 with the clearing of the Bridgetown slums, which developed after the abolition of slavery and the freed slaves rushed to the City. It was Grantley Adams’ most outstanding social policy initiative.
    Funnily enough, after the abolition, the Garrison became the major prostitution district; how history repeats itself. In those days Nelson Street was upmarket, with families such as the La Touches, Fernandes, Cobhams, Duncans, et al living there.
    In fact, when I call for the bulldozing of the City slums, I am in fact just calling for our politicians to face the challenge that Adams and his colleagues did in the early 1950s. They fail hugely. Apart from the ABC highway, every major infrastructural project in Barbados was carried out pre-independence.
    By the way, do you remember stick licking, goat racing, the bum drum, etc. Another reason why I called for Elombe Mottley to be hired as a cultural policy consultant. He is brilliant.
    @ William, this can be a very interesting conversation.


  18. Lose the daily gratuitous insults of ALL BAJANS (as oppposed to individuals) and the conversation will be sweet.


  19. Hal’s post are the same in terms of content, whether long (constipated) or short (diarrheal). He is describing people on BU who call out his BS “mentally challenged”. Ask him to expand more on why journalism has produced a PM etc? Or how many are black.


  20. @Hal
    Brittons Hill, Burke’s Road to be exact was the Mecca of goat racing. The goats were named after race horses. One of the most popular race horse owners promised me a goat , when I was about eight years old, which I never got!
    I have an older brother who was legendary in Brittons Hill , as a “ jockey” he was like lightning.
    Goat racing was an exciting local product that was never developed ; it could have raised millions in foreign exchange. Could have been on the level of dog racing.
    Read recently that in the “ new cultural” thrust, government will be looking seriously at Road Tennis. I suggested this on BU about two months or so ago.
    Barbados’ real charm is its quaintness and the idiosyncrasies of our people. It was built on hard work and basic decency toward each other. The primary school, not the university or high school , is the bedrock of its success.
    Only yesterday , I read of a Barbadian, who had achieved greatness. He mentioned his primary school teacher Ms. Riley, from St.Giles. I had a professional relationship with that fabulous lady.
    When I say I know my culture,I am not trying to impress. I had a poor but fun filled boyhood. I remain steadfast that while I welcome development, I cannot forget the poor honest black folks who raised and condition my thinking to this day.
    We are now culturally going backwards; we need to be careful or our country will become nothing more than a cultural wasteland , for the enjoyment of those , who want a tropical break from their own cement jungled societies.
    I welcome night racing. I used to be able to name and identify every race horse in the paddock. However ,I have been privileged to see a beautiful race horse named Blueprint and an equally beautiful race goat named Blue Sales. I also saw a great race horse named Blue Sails.
    Peace.


  21. @ William

    I too remember Ms Riley. I think she taught me in class one and class two. Teachers make an impact on people that they often only realise in their later years. I treasure those St Giles days more than I treasure any other educational institution I have ever attended.
    As to goat racing, I remember the Armstrong family from the PIne, a father and two sons; they (the sons) were as fast as lighting. Every bank holiday we had goat racing. It is only by looking back on our childhood that we realise how rich in terms of culture they were and at the risk of boring people, one reason why I enjoy Elombe’s labour of love.
    I always say it is not romantic to look back on those days with excitement and joy. Lilliputian cricket, cricket with young breadfruit, knitted balls, tennis (hopping) balls, anything that was round, even gar balls.
    As to road tennis, we have been playing that Bajan game for over 60 years and it still has not even progressed in Barbados. I raised this once on BU and someone came on talking about the two opposing organisations etc. Somehow we always seem to miss the key points.
    To talk of your culture is not to impress, only silly people will think that. It is to share the wonderful life you lived as a youngster, in those pre-TV days. Now all young people do is play dominoes.
    @William, you are a good man. Pity you drink rum and went to Bay Street. Growing up I had a fond relationship with Villa Road, but part of the cultural memories of being an Ivy boy is our fun with the boys from the Pine. Next time you meet our mutual friend ask him about the Pine.


  22. @Heather
    Just a few days in the past, we were talking of pooling our money.
    I was searching for a post where you were trying to organize funding for land
    Unable to find it here


  23. ‘No meeting’ with NIS and Cliff workers
    By Michelle M. Russell
    Last week, I discussed, among other things, the strike action taken by 60 former employees of the Cliff Restaurant which they staged at the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) headquarters on Monday, December 14, 2020. I implored NIS to act in good faith and make good on the assurances for severance payment it made to these workers. I have since received written communication from the acting Director of NIS, Mrs Jennifer Hunte, regarding the allegations made by the former Cliff workers. With permission, I have reproduced some of her comments below: “Please be informed that . . . an internal check revealed that there had been no meeting with management of the NIS and workers of the Cliff, and that no such commitments had been given as appeared in the . . . media.
    Attempts by NIS to contact the spokesperson for the Cliff workers who appeared in the (media) proved futile, as he could not be reached at either the contact number or the email address on file at the NIS. This gentleman should be asked to provide the date, time and the names of the members of management with whom he spoke. I also attempted to contact the two other employees pictured with Mr Farley in the media article.
    They were copied on the email to Mr Farley at the email addresses provided on their severance claims.
    Steps to be followed
    “The application for severance payments is governed by a legal process and the NIS Severance Section provides advice and assistance to eligible employees so that they may fully comply with respect to the required communications to their respective employers and the steps to be followed.
    The response of the employer further influences the process. The submission of an application form by the employee does not determine his payment date. A payment cannot be made if the required prior steps have not yet been completed.
    “Contrary to your assertion, the management of the NIS did not give any assurances to former Cliff workers.”
    I inquired why NIS had not commented publicly on the matter following the media reports. Hunte responded, among other things, as follows: “The NIS unfortunately finds itself in a climate where the stakes are heavily stacked against it due to the uncertainty and the hardships being experienced by workers.
    We really don’t want the matter to continue to be portrayed as an “us versus them scenario”.
    We are sensitive to their situation and cognizant of our role as the nation’s lifeline . . . .
    At the time rather than seek to clear our own name, we sought to focus on the continued processing of claims as we too want these workers paid as speedily as possible.”
    Hunte did not advise whether she or any other member of management attempted to speak to the Cliff workers or their spokesperson on the day of the protest, since his presence on the premises made for ease of contact having failed to reach him before. She did, however, state that it is unusual for protesters to be met by heads of department and CEOs.
    Based on the information provided by Hunte, it seems that the Cliff workers and the NIS failed to speak directly with each other and instead were communicating in the media. This was not the best course and I believe the industrial unrest could have been avoided had there been direct communication between the NIS and the former workers, whether or not communication with a head of department is usual.
    The former Cliff workers had previously asserted in the media an expectation of receiving severance payment by Christmas. Hunte has advised that the severance cheques were mailed last week to the eligible former employees of the Cliff, some of whom confirmed to her that they received their cheques. As the saying goes, “all’s well that ends well”.
    Next week, I will deal with the issue of retirement, following the recent ERT decision in Grant v Barbados Beach Club.
    Michelle M. Russell is an attorney-at-law with a passion for Employment law and labour matters. Email: mrussell.ja @gmail.com.
    “Contrary to your assertion, the management of the NIS did not give any assurances to former Cliff workers.”

    Source: Nation


  24. Oh oh…some on BU pisssssed them get cheques.🤭


  25. This is big news Sarge.


  26. @David

    Can’t wait to hear what charges have been laid


  27. Reparations

    The Conservative MP Richard Drax has now added the plantation he has inherited in Barbados to the parliamentary register of members’ interests after the Observer revealed omissions and errors in his declaration.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/03/reparations-row-mp-adds-plantation-to-his-register-of-members-interests-richard-drax

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