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The Adrian Loveridge Column usually occupies this space on Monday mornings. The blogmaster takes this opportunity to thank Adrian for being a strident social commentator over the years and willingness to enter the BU fray, especially as it relates to promoting and defending the tourism sector he is very familiar. The BU household extends best wishes as he takes a voluntary timeout to ‘recharge’ – David, blogmaster 

The market certainly doesn’t know! The massive public financing in many places is nothing more than a band-aid, it is when that dressing is removed, we will see who has healed and can function, and who needs an amputation or worse. For Barbados, the acid test will be employment.

NorthernObserver

The raging COVID 19 pandemic has hammered home a reality- individuals, organizations, governments are being forced to change business model. Specifically as it relates to E-commerce and doing business in a digital space. The new way of doing business demands a reskilling and redeployment of the workforce that must be equally supported with reallocation of budgets. In a January report prepared by Hyun Song Shin titled E-commerce in the pandemic and beyond 3-takeaways are identified:

  1. E-commerce has ramped up during the pandemic around the world. The growth has differed across sectors and over different stages of the pandemic.
  2. The growth of e-commerce has been higher in countries where there were more stringent containment measures and where e-commerce was initially less developed.
  3. Some changes in consumers’ shopping habits and payment behaviour may be longer-lasting. This may have implications for structural change and the growth of the digital economy.

There has been robust discussion in this forum recently about how we foresee business being done in Barbados. The blogmaster sides with the argument supported in the report mentioned that even before the pandemic wrecked global economies and livelihoods, there was a push to shift business and other activity from bricks-and-mortar to the digital space. Covid 19 has accelerated the shift. Welcome to a view of what a post COVID 19 landscape will look like whether we like it or not.

Another forecast coming out of the pandemic is that people will have to coexist with COVID 19 AND other viruses likely to follow. It means in the future traditional supply chains and business related travel will be disrupted. Individuals, businesses and governments are already adjusting to a post COVID 19 reality with greater use of the digital space defined as the new normal.

As expected some countries start with an advantage in the new normal space- the so-called developed world. Barbados unfortunately has been lazy to rely on manual, redundant models not fit for purpose exposed in the current environment. Our private sector is not far behind if we accept reports of disruption to large companies being attacked by ransomware, supermarkets and essential businesses unable to efficiently manage spikes in demand for services and distribution during lockdowns and so on.

What is required is a nimble approach by public and private sectors supported by NGOs to strategise next steps how as a country we narrow the gap between existing and the new business model to sustains livelihoods in a post COVID 19 world. In fact the blogmaster will be disappointed if after a year of managing the pandemic this is not a work in progress.

The blogmaster is sympathetic to the current leadership of the country demanded to manage in unprecedented times. Let the blogmaster be clear, leadership is defined as government and private sector. For too long Barbados has relied on government to lead in all areas of managing the country.

The big question: what is the strategy to reposition Barbados to be able to compete in a post COVID world?

#socialpartnership


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178 responses to “Post Covid 19 World Demands New Approaches from Government and Private Sector”


  1. Barbados may be nice location for tourists to visit for a week or so and for rich folks to buy holiday homes, but it is not the only or best place to visit in the world. Tourism should be a side hustle not the biggest industry


  2. @David

    You presented a good paper, asked the IMPORTANT QUESTION and answer that question ” For too long Barbados has relied on government to lead in all areas of managing the country.”.

    There’s the problem in a nut shell incompetent management in charge and supposidly leading. Until Barbados government moves from the slavery socialistic mentality of management nothing will change other than the situation becoming increasing worse. Take a careful look at the the last 25 years playing carefully attention to the last 15. Do an in-depth truthful forensic non partisan evaluation and ask yourself WHAT HAPPENED and how can we get out of this downward spiral and on a path to sustainable recovery.


  3. @Wily

    The blogmaster has no problem with your perspective given where we are today. We must use Covid to implement relevant (fit for purpose) policies and we must do it fast and with consensus (buyin) from key stakeholders.


  4. What a show it will be.


  5. @David

    The FIRST ISSUE TO TACKLE is not the adjustment to e-commerce but the overall overhaul of the government operations from the ground up. All aspects of Barbados, as presently implemented government operations, require significant in-depth evaluations and adjustments to become sustainable and relavent. The socialistic mantra must be revalidated and it must be determined if this is a sustainable objective in the short and long term. SOCIALISM is an excellent GOAL & PHILOPSOPY, however it’s NOT CHEAP financially and impossible to implement in non resource environments. In Barbados case it would as a minimum require DICTATORIAL management, a path which has been showing signs of emergence in this present administration.


  6. @Wily

    Picked this one because of its immediate requirement to grow efficiency, it does not negate your point it must be done within a holistic approach.


  7. (Quote):
    There has been robust discussion in this forum recently about how we foresee business being done in Barbados. The blogmaster sides with the argument supported in the report mentioned that even before the pandemic wrecked global economies and livelihoods, there was a push to shift business and other activity from bricks-and-mortar to the digital space. Covid 19 has accelerated the shift. Welcome to a view of what a post COVID 19 landscape will look like whether we like it or not. (Unquote).
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Your support for the ‘projected’ dominant digital model of conducting commerce and other forms of business in the future effectively puts paid to any expectation of a ‘Post Office-type’ retail banking setup in Barbados where queuing for over-the-counter services and paper-based transactions (like issuing and processing cheques) would be order of the day.

    The pipedream of P.O. bank is just the product of a rather politically excited and overly fertile imagination.

    It would be the insane equivalent of Barbados setting up its own ‘regional’ airline to rival LIAT.

    The decision to set up a P O bank catering to the “needs” of the digitally -deprived poor will be based primarily on the ‘economics’ of such a welfare-type project; but more importantly, the zeitgeist of the technologies controlling the world of finance and banking and which will certainly remove the Post Office model from the table of project implementation.

    The rapid spread of viruses potentially dangerous to public health in a modern global village world is ably facilitated by ‘fast’ international air travel and ‘cheap’ cruise ship vacationing.

    It’s extremely difficult to see how the Bajan brand of tourism could ever recover to a stage where it could be a big employment sink and forex earner to keep Bajans expecting the same standard of ‘high’ living as they have grown accustomed to based on the many foreign money loans needed to prop up the annual balance of payments. It’s now time to pay the piper.


  8. One fool’s thoughts.
    I do not have any answers and can only parrot what I have seen from others.

    However, one thing that I am certain of is that given three sides, the only closed figure we can build is a triangle. We should welcome and explore ideas, but we should keep in mind that we have severe limitations on how we can transform our economy.

    For the ignorant like myself – What exactly does shifting to a digital space means. Explain it in time, dollars and cents and employment rates.

    I am no lover of tourism, but we don’t have an immediate/ short term replacement and I fear that this makes it almost impossible to replace in the long-term.

    The work/stay visa may be more issue resistant than tourism, but it is becoming clear that it is prone to some of the same ‘diseases’ as tourism.

    We have worked ourselves into a tough corner.


  9. Read ePaper
    Home / Covid-19 / Saffrey: People experiencing homelessness are being fed

    Saffrey: People experiencing homelessness are being

    When asked if the Government had reached out to any of the organizations in order to help with the safety during COVID-19, Saffrey said he was not aware of any special attention being given by the Government at this time.

    “Our group StreetLink, which has about 19 members, all who feed at different times locations, I think all of us can be credited because we are the ones telling them to keep their distance, we are the ones telling them to sanitize [and] we are the ones telling them wear a mask. We are the ones who have relationships with them, so in doing that, that can [be] a testimony, that what we have been doing as a group, has been keeping the homeless safe.


  10. @ Wily Coyote February 15, 2021 8:22 AM

    I agree with you wholeheartedly.

    The state should focus on its core functions, i.e. security, health and infrastructure. It is obvious that the state has failed as an entrepreneur in Barbados. Just look at Coverley Plantation. It is not the task of the state to keep creating new public service jobs for the masses degenerated by social welfare. It is also clear that large-scale university education has not made the masses smarter and more capable of living, only more demanding.

    “In Barbados case it would as a minimum require DICTATORIAL management, a path which has been showing signs of emergence in this present administration.”

    For this to change, the people indeed need a president who will rule with a firm hand. We should therefore suspend elections, restrict freedom of speech and trade unions so that our government can transform Barbados into a liberal market economy, following the example of the Chicago School. It is no mere coincidence that Chile, the model country of Pinochet and the Chicago Boys, is doing best in South America in the vaccination campaign. We need a female version of Augusto Pinochet.

    Only then will slavery end in Barbados. At present, our masses remain enslaved. Excessive taxes are the new whip, the lack of economic prospects the new neck-iron, the hotel industry the new plantation.

    Those who want to continue the welfare state in Barbados at the current level despite its obvious failure are oppressing the masses and depriving them of the prospect of ever successfully entering the world of business. We need a real BLM culture: (Black) Business Lives Matters.

    Welfare state means racism.
    Welfare cuts mean freedom.


  11. The question is not really about WHAT is the strategy. Many examples and pathways are already known and have been proposed as nauseum

    The real question is WHO is the bold leader that will listen, assess, articulate and lead the country through implementation of whatever strategy is needed. We are well past political soundbites and the usual rallying cries and yardfowl buzzwords. It’s about real measurable results and implementation deficit disease IDD is a bigger Caribbean pandemic than Covid

    The other real question is Barbados really ready to hold leadership accountable to deliver real results? Are we really disciplined and ready? Or will we be easily distracted by bus crawls on other foolishness when the facts are blatant

    Action starts with belief and mindset


  12. @Bajanabroad

    Thanks fo the intervention although what you added is implied. It makes no sense devising a strategy if not intended to execute. However your point is taken given the execution deficit we have suffered over the years.


  13. BajeabroadFebruary 15, 2021 2:19 PMThe other real question is Barbados really ready to hold leadership accountable to deliver real results?
    Barbadians did just that in 2018. However, if you mean on a daily basis and putting more pressure on a more focused area, that is a good question.

    But that is just what politics of inclusion neutered, intended or not. Inclusion and cooperation with opposition are two different scenarios.

    All depends on what is perceived as the intention in the strategy.


  14. How old was the healthcare worker who died from CoVid?


  15. More data from Israel’s vaccination programme is suggesting the Pfizer jab prevents 94% of symptomatic infections.
    This indicates the vaccine is performing just as well in a larger population as it did in the clinical trials.
    It is proving highly effective at preventing illness and severe disease among all age groups, according to public health doctor Prof Hagai Levine.
    “High vaccination coverage of the most susceptible groups” was key, he said.
    Israel’s largest health fund Clalit looked at positive tests in 600,000 vaccinated people and the same number of unvaccinated people, matched by age and health status.
    It found 94% fewer infections among the vaccinated group.
    This was based on test results in people’s medical records, usually taken if they had symptoms or were a close contact of someone who had tested positive.
    And the vaccine prevented almost all cases of serious illness.
    This pattern was the same in all age groups – including the over-70s, who may have been under-represented in clinical trials.
    The data has not yet been formally published…..(Quote)


  16. Let us do the math:
    1)3500 tourist coming to Barbados during winter season from hot spots ( UK & USA).
    If 1% of those entering are covid 19 (+)= 350 persons/ day & 2450 / week.
    If each positive person infects approx 2 people –>(4900).

    If all tourist entering Barbados were tested plus local suspected cases : 3500+ 500= 4000 cases/day.
    A sample takes approx 72 to process & validate.

    The local lab even running on a 24 hour basis using a single machine doesn’t have the capacity to process so many samples / day.
    In addition ,they would eventually run out of reagent to do test.
    Equipment may malfunction/ breakdown/ staff may burn out.
    The policy of the government is clear , foreign exchange is worth more than your life.


  17. The government allowed thousands of tourists from hot spots ( UK) to enter Barbados & spread the new variant of the virus to Barbadians.

    The government is responsible for the current crisis.


  18. DC

    A lot of Dengue going around too.

    Do you think the mosquitoes came from the UK too?


  19. Imagine the theme of this blog is about how we reimagine a Barbados post Covid economy and some of you can only use your brain cells to point blame.


  20. Visa de vaccination

    Barbados can introduce a vaccine visa that certifies its holder has been vaccinated against Covid-19 and is able to travel between countries. This is in addition to the regular entry requirements such as passports and visas, as the vaccination drive gathers steam throughout the world.


  21. What is the nurse holding in her hand?

    Frontline staff back vaccination programme – Frontline staff back vaccination programme: https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/02/13/frontline-staff-back-vaccination-programme/


  22. @ Bajeboard
    “The real question is WHO is the bold leader that will listen, assess….”
    There is no leader. In the BLPDLP. We are a barren country submerged in stupid party politics and political prostitution.
    Any Barbadian would wish any government well but we have to be realistic. All the approaches or ideas for a post COVID economy are backward.
    It is obvious that once we get past the virus, it will be business as usual.
    We need vision. Not where we will be in six months but in twenty five years. We have to literally have plans for the next two generations , that can only be achieved by a radical reform of the education system.
    All we have now is waffle , hoping for “ tourism to bounce back” Its not going to happen under four or five years.
    As Pacha says we can’t have any real agricultural development without radical land reform.
    I said on this blog over and over that we can’t produce a 2020 model on a 1920 production line. Bragging about borrowed foreign reserves is not economic policy. It’s only the ability to get draconian loans. No different from having four or five credit cards. Lose your job and you are ruined. Serious bankruptcy. Credit lines dry up and you are living on the streets.
    Conclusion: we have no post COVID plan. If we do ; it’s a well kept secret.


  23. A Certificate of Vaccination. It must be presented prior to the second dose.

  24. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Another new font….lol
    Yes to e-commerce. It was very noticeable over the Xmas period, in an effort to support local sellers (vs sending a package from overseas), that doing 100% of transaction online was near impossible.
    Also a good time for the private sector to take responsibility for the packaging (read garbage) challenges, and make an effort to significantly reduce the throw away components, unless they are easily recyclable.


  25. A country holding 2.6billion dollars in borrowed money and no having no financial planning by way of repayment is nothing to be proud about
    Mottley pletted out that large sum to listeners yesterday sounding as if barbadians should be happy by such great news
    The fact being that 2.6 billion most of which would be drained off and depleted in a short time having to fight COVID every year
    Not withstanding the many variants COVID leaves in its wake
    What barbadians needs mostly to hear are when will they get jobs to pay bills and feed their families


  26. The following link research paper is useful for those who prefer to anchor these kinds of discussions in a theoretical framework. There are all kinds of variables governments must manage to ensure optimum economic performance. This is made more difficult if there is low growth and having to defend an open economy.

    https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/304045728.pdf


  27. “We are a barren country submerged in stupid party politics and political prostitution.”

    a shame isn’t it.

    “It is obvious that once we get past the virus, it will be business as usual.”

    let them keep up the dependency tourism, while minorities continue building generational wealth and feeding off Black backs..this is the perfect opportunity to shake off the moochers and scroungers in the social parasites community and build Black independence and Black wealth..

    . Amazing that racist minorities didn’t want independence for Barbados, fought Barrow on it, some left the island for Australia prefering to clean pig pens…..the ones who remained grabbed independence for themselves and have been robbing the Black dependent population ever since because of weak, backward black leadership.

    “All we have now is waffle , hoping for “ tourism to bounce back” Its not going to happen under four or five years.”

    perfect opportunity to SHAKE OFF greedy tiefing minorities.


  28. However people livelihoods depends on jobs
    The current situation in barbados is not going away any time soon
    Every time their is a lock down households financials are depleted
    Yesterday Mottley talked about financial lost to the economy
    However the financial lost to households is just as devastating as the lost can add to financial stress and depression
    Depression is a lost which cannot be compensated


  29. Only politicians in the world who brag and boast about accumulating debt in the people’s name and them and yardfowls feel it’s a grand achievement…..unbelievable…2.6 billion in debt….wuh i remember when they were so rich…they wrote of 1 billion dollars the minority crooks STOLE/EMBEZZLED in VAT from taxpayers and no one went to prison, that was in 2018…..part of the deficit that keeps following them around and won’t go away..and never will…now they’re so poor…they’re on a borrowing spree and sees that as genial success.

    this is 2021.


  30. Coming out of the Prime Minister’s address yesterday she alluded to a push to have debt of developing countries reprofiled. Also Minister Ryan Straughn is charged with meeting with financial institutions to discuss a COVID-19 package for Barbadians to ensure households are given a measure of protection. It will be interesting to see how this develops. Financial institutions are already smarting from the debt restructure. Interesting times facing the world especially SIDs.


  31. DavidFebruary 15, 2021 11:34 PM

    Imagine the theme of this blog is about how we reimagine a Barbados post Covid economy and some of you can only use your brain cells to point blame.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    We can’t reimagine a Barbados post COVID because we can’t imagine or accept that we are all mortal.

    COVID has brought us face to face with our mortality and we won’t face up to it.

    We want to live for ever but this life as we know it is short.

    We just can’t get our minds of our possible deaths and looking forward is not going to happen.

    Sure there will be pretty words, but that is all.

    As our resident expert in life expectancy would point out we are living longer.

    The result is that our population is aging.

    Death naturally comes with age.

    Since 1998, 23 years ago, our death rate is rising.

    It is only a matter of time before our life expectancy plateaus and possibly falls.

    Get up and move.

    Our lives are short, make them count.


  32. The problem with economic ideas is if someone does not agree, or understand, they can often become dismissive.
    We have an economy with a debt to GP ratio of about 100 per cent; yet the minister of finance is boasting of having Bds$2.6bn in reserves.
    It is like a young man or woman with debt up to their necks and yet they are boasting of how much they have on their credit cards.
    How can I explain this in simple terms: a current account deficit of any amount is simply spending more thn we earn. They way to reduce that deficit is to cut back on spending.
    To talk about reserves to cover 30 days or three months of imports is like saying we have a couple hundreds dollars to spend go out and pick up what you want. Such a decision would be irresponsible.
    The challenge is to make that money work for the nation, a better way of using that Bds$2.6bn. I suggest again that we should decouple from the Greenback, fix with a basket of currencies and commodities; we can then lock our debt obligation in to derivatives (no arbitrage pricing?) in forward contract,, allowing us to diarise the delivery date and strike price.
    Such an approach will give us the freedom to use the bulk of the reserves, for example Bds$1bn of the $2.6bn for more long-term productive projects, such as a balance sheet bank, capital developments, infrastructural improvements, etc.
    Not only will the nation benefit from such developments, future generations will also benefit while at the same time we will meet our debt obligations. No defaulting.
    I am aware that our lawyer/politicians do not understand finance, but their job is to buy in the relevant talent. At present all we are doing is going round and round in circles and keeping our fingers crossed that things will work out.
    They won’t unless we do something to make change happen.

    (If you are interested in the subject, have a read of Hunt and Kennedy’s Financial Derivatives in Theory and Practice; or Goodman, et al, The Mathematics of Finance)..


  33. “Yesterday Mottley talked about financial lost to the economy. However the financial lost to households is just as devastating as the lost can add to financial stress and depression.”

    My friend, a household is an economic unit of the economy.


  34. @Artax

    We have to avoid the usual by conflating issues. We are trying to keep our noses above water because of the pandemic. Just before covid 19 arrived the country rolled out polices to stabilize the economy with some bitter policies. All of the mentioned occurred against a background of an island dependent on mainly one sector responsible for greater than 60% GDP (direct and indirect). Clearly some hard decisions have to be taken to protect those immediately affected to defend against catastrophe and there is the job of looking to the future i.e. not only rebooting the economy but implementing a major upgrade to the operating system. The narratives must take cognizance of the horrific challenge ahead of us. Yes we accept successive governments have been lazy with policy direction and implementation etc. We are here now for crissakes. What is so difficult to understand people?


  35. William…it must be highlighted for black leaders that PAUVERIZING Black/African populations generationally, something they’ve grown entirely too fond of…..to ENRICH OTHERS is NOT AN ACHIEVEMENT…it’s a DISHONOR, a SHAME and DISGRACE…they must be reminded while in their little world of 18th century slave titles. ,that this is 2021.


  36. @ John February 16, 2021 7:01 AM
    As our resident expert in life expectancy would point out we are living longer.
    The result is that our population is aging.
    Death naturally comes with age.
    Since 1998, 23 years ago, our death rate is rising.
    It is only a matter of time before our life expectancy plateaus and possibly falls.
    Get up and move.
    Our lives are short, make them count.”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Glad to see you have regained some measure of your former ‘lively’ intellect after an almost terminal bout of stark insanity resulting from your idolization of a madman called Trump who has left you lot of sycophants high and dry while looking for his second coming to lead you into a Jim Jones brand of white supremacist paradise.

    You should let the ‘modern’ old black Bajans know how lucky they are to be among some of the longest living beings today compared to their Hobbesian type existence under the good ole halcyon days of a short life span between the slave-breeding plantation cradle and an unmarked grave of chattel slavery despite the beneficence of the Christian-minded Quaker-funded health care system of the times.

    Sir John, are you still holding the view that black people were better off under chattel slavery with total dependency on the plantation grown and controlled provisions and imported Canadian salted meats and fish than they are under the modern scourge of obesity and easy access to processed foods controlled by the same angels of early deaths?


  37. @ WURA
    I seldom use the term : we just don’t get it. Unfortunately, I must use it now. The greatest threat to Barbados is political sycophancy. We have Abeds and .a complete joker , one Edward Clarke representing the private sector, literally telling a Black prime minister that to allow people to die is a better option than closing down the country. They can’t bear that , but we survived slavery and still fighting racism in our own country.
    On the other hand, we have these party sycophants, who cannot see beyond the BLPDLP. Once this continues , Barbados and particularly Black Barbadians would not be capable or indeed allowed to breathe.
    We are fooling ourselves that the billions on the banks belong to us. We are fooling ourselves that we are going to walk away from the IMF unscathed. Jamaica with much more resources has been in the fangs of the IMF for over 40 years.
    The IMF told us when the program started, we should seen some major turnaround by 2032 . That was before the COVID 19. It is now obvious that we would go way pass that timeline. Pure common sense will reveal that unless we start to radically pump money into small mainly black small businesses; seize unproductive plantation lands and embark on a new thrust in manufacturing, we would be no where until about 2050/60.
    We came on BU talking pure crap about people coming into Barbados with the virus to get sunshine; the villas were going to be bursting and the cruise liners would be fighting for dock space in the port. Pure pie in the sky nonsense.
    We had an ill informed Minister of Tourism , making fashion statements but no sense. How on earth could any breathing person predict in the midst of a global pandemic that tourism would be back by mid 2021? Now the same minister is predicting 2024 / 25 which was what all the other destinations in the region were saying.
    I can’t figure out how any BLP can call for censorship of social media when they used it just as widely and with as much fake news when they were in opposition.
    But that’s the hypocrisy and political sycophancy , that are permanently in resident at Roebuck and George Streets .
    Like I am forced to say : we just don’t get it.
    Please continue your excellent work and ignore the ostriches wherever they are.


  38. DavidFebruary 16, 2021 6:43 AM Coming out of the Prime Minister’s address yesterday she alluded to a push to have debt of developing countries reprofiled. Also Minister Ryan Straughn is charged with meeting with financial institutions to discuss a COVID-19 package for Barbadians to ensure households are given a measure of protection. It will be interesting to see how this develops. Financial institutions are already smarting from the debt restructure. Interesting times facing the world especially SIDs.

    On the first part, reprofiling is one thing. But is that reasonable? With a significant duration of post Covid recovery, how can mere reprofiling help small island states that were so dependent on travel and tourism, which is the industry most destroyed?

    Surely some write down is required. In the absence of that, reprofiling will be necessary, however, it will leave the countries in a state of being unable to really make a change in their fortunes.

    On the latter, the financial institutions may be unhappy, but the reality if that they will lose either way. Any loan portfolio is already effectively impaired by the Covid event and recovery of the impairments unlikely to take place in the near or even medium term.

    What the recovery requires is a paradigm shift in approach to working with business and individuals. I suspect that this may not be forthcoming, as in the Caribbean, they are singularly unimaginative. Great corporate facade, but little substance of thought.


  39. William SkinnerFebruary 16, 2021 9:10 AM

    I do not think that the private sector head put lives over profits. More likely he knows the reality, that businesses are struggling and is concerned about their survival, as their survival also means livelihoods.

    I agree with your take on manufacturing and agriculture. Get the place back to work.

    Same old cannot work and subdividing masses of agricultural land to sell to rich foreigners, does not cut it.

    Look at Coverley and Ross. Now that is a model. Using space and resources to draw an educational establishment and its ancillary benefits. Even if it was not the original intention, it does show that there is opportunity, as that is much more than just selling villas for visitors and the benefits are continuous.

    The other factor, is that these fancy developments either fall flat, such as Paradise, or have to be bailed out, like Apes Hill.

    I do have more thoughts on Paradise and what should have transpired subsequently, as I am sure many do. But I would rather not put those thoughts on paper.

    But your are right. The last word in the National Motto, it means more than just a piece of machine. It infers a thought process and attitude.


  40. Did you know that the oldest slave on record was 114 in 1817 and that there were several slaves who centenerians and super centenerians in the 1817 census?

    Slaves were taken care of from cradle to grave in the socialist utopia sometimes referred to as a plantation.

    There is a record of a burial at Westbury of a woman after 1878 who was 120 years old.

    The oldest person I have come across was in the early 1800’s.

    Elizabeth Philips was buried at the age of 126.

    Bajans have always lived long, in fact, I would say longer in the past than now.

    NCD’s are claiming an extra 3 persons per 1000 when compared with the lowest death rate on record in 1998.

    Our death rate is projected to continue to climb until it levels out (hopefully) in 2150!!

    COVID looks like it might exacerbate the death rate of persons with NCD’s.

    We have a large segment of our population that is at risk.

    It means our life expectancy will probably plateau and then fall.

    Food for thought for our resident life expectancy expert to chew on.

    Get up offa wunna backsides and move.

  41. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David Bu
    You are asking the impossible. How can your bloggers imagine the economic and social future of Barbados with out developing a model of how they think it should look like 25 years from now. Man can only think in models. Models are not reality. Man has to make adjustments along the way. Planning is a process.
    How is it possible to build a model by ignoring how we arrived at the current state. Surely if mistakes of a policy nature were made blame has to be attached to those responsible for those missteps. It is how economy and society evolve.We must constantly correct ,over correct and adjust. That is life. That is reality. BUT do not expect all concepts of reality to coincide.

    Barbados is not a political and economic island . Other countries are making decisions which will impact Barbados. Since we do not know these ,the planner can only make educated guesses. So relax. Encourage discussion; but avoid venting impatience.


  42. @ David February 16, 2021 7:41 AM
    “Clearly some hard decisions have to be taken to protect those immediately affected to defend against catastrophe and there is the job of looking to the future i.e. not only rebooting the economy but implementing a major upgrade to the operating system. The narratives must take cognizance of the horrific challenge ahead of us. Yes we accept successive governments have been lazy with policy direction and implementation etc. We are here now for crissakes. What is so difficult to understand people?”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The present political administration has been presented with the perfect opportunity under the convenient cover of the Covid-19 crisis to bring about the necessary root and branch economic structural reform starting with the importation of goods and some services that undergirds the now unaffordable and clearly untenable conspicuous consumption habits of too many Bajans.

    We are sure that you have stored some where in the BU archives the list of items Bajans can certainly do without; not only because of the coming economic crisis but also for the future health of the people both of which Covid-19, like the innocent child, has exposed as the naked Emperor living far too long above his means but mainly on the borrowing of other people’s hard earned money.

    There is no post Covid-19 return to the ancient régime of Bajan sweet living without the major sacrifices of cutting and contriving underscored by a significant increase in productivity and land reform.

    We are sure that a fellow ‘time’ traveller “Pachamama” is not taken aback by the recent turn of Covid-prescribed events all intertwined in the economic fabric of change necessary for the replacement of a dying model of the Bajan society.


  43. “I seldom use the term : we just don’t get it. Unfortunately, I must use it now. The greatest threat to Barbados is political sycophancy. We have Abeds and .a complete joker , one Edward Clarke representing the private sector, literally telling a Black prime minister that to allow people to die is a better option than closing down the country. They can’t bear that , but we survived slavery and still fighting racism in our own country.
    On the other hand, we have these party sycophants, who cannot see beyond the BLPDLP. Once this continues , Barbados and particularly Black Barbadians would not be capable or indeed allowed to breathe.”

    Those parasites have to be ripped out of Black lives….as for the political slaves aka yardfowls…they will deserve whatever they get, the Black world is moving on and upward, fowl slaves can stay right where they are, it looks good on them, someone gotta be the dorrmats…and since they volunteered….politicians have become overly useless..

    the conscious Black/African has had a rethink and moved right away.

    “Barbados and particularly Black Barbadians would not be capable or indeed allowed to breathe.”

    that’s the plan..

    “The IMF told us when the program started, we should seen some major turnaround by 2032.”

    that would be Black people’s foolish business to hang around for the big bang crash..

    “I can’t figure out how any BLP can call for censorship of social media when they used it just as widely and with as much fake news when they were in opposition.”

    oh the days when the black sellouts all colluded with racist, trash minorities to remove social media from Barbados as though they owned it, they paid out big money for infornation on how to KEEP INFORMATION AWAY FROM BLACK PEOPLE….then realizing what stupid asses they are shortly after, the parliament traitors started to use it to win and/or lose an election…now they’re a stuck with it as the only vehicle they can use to fill up their support base’s head with shit…

    Black people need to make some informed decisions REAL FAST….or sit their asses down for a decade waiting for 2035-40


  44. @Vincent

    Your pro-gradualist approach is respected. The big bangers also have their place. Hopefully there is the overlap where we discover agreement to advancing the cause.


  45. Dear People,

    As stated by Mr. JohnFebruary 16, 2021 9:25 who said get up offa wunna backsides and move.”

    The office lifestyle and being present at work has also damaged the health of Barbadians. Real work, between 9:00am and 200pm can get more done than being present at work, between 800am and 500pm. All you are doing is working longer, to pay more, because everyone then does it, to pay the banks more.

    All office hours should be changed to 900am to 200pm, like the good old days. Effective work is far more important. Then, the afternoons are for cricket, football and athletics.

    Rekindle the cricket matches, the love, the community spirit, that existed before, instead of this false and destructive Bold and Beautiful, indoctrinated nonsense.

    THAT is healthy, THAT is a future worth living for.

    Upward and Onward.

    What are you actually doing?? THINK!!!

    Signed – Sir Benwood Dick (pass me a glass of Port, my good fellow).


  46. Sitting down at home eating and worrying is just making you a sitting duck for COVID to pick off!!

    Get up and move.

    No need to congregate, wear a mask and keep your distance.

    Just move.

    Take your dog for a walk, fork your ground, plant some vegetables, cut some grass, destroy some cow itch …. anything, just move.

    During Ms. Mockley’s pause, set yourself a goal of losing some weight!!

    Eat sensibly and keep positive.

    If you catch it, hopefully you will throw it off like flu, but if you are a sitting duck you gone … hows dat!!


  47. @ Crusoe

    The task the president now claims she has given Ryan Straughn was the very task she gave the CoVid economic task force. Whatever became of that.
    Your idea that developing nations have a moral right to expect debt forgiveness is like a shopkeeper ‘trusting’ a customer with goods and at the end of the week or month that person begs the shopkeeper to forgive the debt. Even if they do you cannot come back.
    The important point is that even if they were to consider such debt forgiveness they will also make demands – from LGBTQ rights to how we arrange our own society.
    There is no easy way out of bad economic policy.


  48. Ah, hit that button too fast. But, the truth is out.

    Sir Benwood Dick, my alter ego. The eccentric and mirthful character from my mind.

    But, do pay attention to what he says, I think that there is some truth in there.

    C.


  49. @Crtusoe/Benwood Dick

    You are not the only one. One character uses about seven different anonymous names.


  50. @ Hal
    It’s called the dependency syndrome. Old time saying: living off others.
    Close the frigging university!

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