Submitted by Denise Balgobin, Senior Public Information Assistant, Strategic Planning and Outreach Unit. ECLAC Subregional Headquarters for the Caribbean – Op-ED from ECLAC Executive Secretary Alicia Bárcena

The recent call to action by the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, Janet Yellen, to the G-20 for a new issue of IMF Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), which the G-20 recently approved, and the re-allocation of excess SDRs to low-income countries (LICs) is a much welcome and needed initiative. Concerted international action and solidarity are the only means to confront and overcome the COVID-19 crisis.

A truly multilateral and global response to the Pandemic must extend the benefits of this initiative to all developing countries, irrespective of their level of income, including to middle-income countries (MICs). MICs represent 75% of the world’s population, and roughly 30% of global aggregate demand. More importantly, MICs account for 96% of developing country public debt (excluding China and India). Their success in confronting COVID-19 is central for global recovery and financial stability.

Developing countries have, without doubt, borne the brunt of the social and economic impact of the current crisis. The increases in poverty and extreme poverty rates, the number job losses and declines in per capital income have been unprecedented. These impacts are not only concentrated in LICs, but also affect MICs.

Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has been the most impacted region in the world in terms of real GDP contraction (-7.7% for 2020). This has been accompanied by the closure of more than 2.7 million firms, and the rise in number of jobless persons to 44.1 million, and in the number of people living in poverty from 185.5 to 209 million people, reaching 33.7% of the total population. Extreme poverty has increased by 8 million, to 78 million people. By the end of 2020 the level of per capita GDP equalled that of 2010 (ECLAC, 2020); another “lost decade” by any measure.

The effects of the pandemic and the policies implemented in response have increased the liquidity needs of developing countries, including those of LAC. At the same time, fiscal emergency measures to contain the decline in output have led to rising debt levels which -if not carefully monitored- may jeopardize the recovery and countries’ capacity to build forward better.

LAC is the most indebted region in the developing world. The debt of the general government in 2020 reached 79.3% of GDP and the external debt service stood at 57% relative to exports of goods and services (IMF, 2020). In contrast to developed economies, LAC -as the rest of developing economies- face enormous obstacle to create the policy space to substantially increase their debt levels without jeopardizing their credit ratings, exchange rate stability, or even their international reserve positions.

The bulk of the global counter-cyclical monetary and fiscal measures to combat the Pandemic -amounting US$12 and US$ 7 trillion dollars in 2020 (24% of world GDP)- were implemented by developed countries.

A new and significant issue and reallocation of SDRs is the most effective and expedient manner to guarantee enough liquidity for developing economies, and provide the required policy space to confront the effects of the pandemic. Linking the creation of new international resources with financial transfers to developing countries to attend their development requirements is a long-standing demand. Now it is more relevant than ever; indispensable for placing the Sustainable Development Goals, within developing countries’ reach.

Access to SDRs is an indefeasible right of all IMF members. SDRs do not generate additional debt nor do they require conditionalities. Also, they are not subject to the fastidious negotiations of quota increases or borrowing arrangements. A new SDR issue would strengthen the IMF’s “fire power” (currently at roughly US$ 800 billion dollars, a third of the estimated financing needs of developing countries) and provide greater incentive for all countries to participate in this initiative: IMF’s financial support for COVID-19 represents barely 12% of its lending capacity.

A new issue of 500 billion SDR (requiring the approval of 85% of the voting power of IMF board of governors) would generate que equivalent of US$56 billion dollars in additional reserves for Latin American and Caribbean countries. This would benefit some of the most indebted economies in the region.

Since any new issue of SDRs would be allocated mainly to developed countries (roughly 60% of the total) a mechanism must be put in place for the voluntary reallocation of excess SDRs from developed to developing countries. A mechanism to pool SDRs within the existing multilateral facilities and their reallocation to strengthen the financial capacity of Regional Financial Arrangements (RFAs) and other regional financial institutions should receive serious consideration as a means to increase liquidity and put SDRs at the service of economic and social development.

72 responses to “Op-ED by Alicia Bárcena – Another Lost Decade”


  1. https://www.nationnews.com/2021/02/13/family-may-sue-scalding/

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/03/16/four-confess-torturing-boy/

    Alas, I have been away too long. I now see things through an Americans lens instead of my natural Barbadian lens. And this clarity of vision has often taken me where I would not normally go. Be it six adults or be it three adults, that number is overkill when dealing with a 14-year old.

    I will now enter the arena of speculation. The fact that they burned his hands suggests to me that something was stolen and I hope this was the case, even though I vehemently disagree with that course of action. My active imagination has led me down avenues that I do not want pursue, as I pray there was nothing sexual about this harmful contact. Is this bullying or failed sado-masochism?

    It is time we take off our blinders and deal with cold hard facts. This viciousness and savagery against the weak seem to be a theme that runs through all sectors of society; from the man in the streets to those in the courts (who should be the frontline of our defenses against cruelty. Distribute a little power in Barbados and customers/clients are rewarded with a savagery that harkens back to a distant past.

    Savaged at camp and then savaged by the prosecutor. “Prosecutor Constable Sayleen Hinds, had no objection to bail in the District “D” Magistrates’ Court, stating the boy was no longer enrolled in the programme so there was no reason for interaction” was being ridiculous. What is next? “Your honor, you can grant bail as the murder victim will have no more interaction with his murderer”. Ridiculous. Please do not rush in to explain about bail.

    It is quite possible that, here, we are dealing with several sick individuals and not one of them had the strength of character to say “This is a child, this is wrong”. The expression that three heads are better than one has been soundly refuted in my homeland and should be replaced with three heads are just as savage as one.

    Why six boys initially and then only four? Let me tell you a story. Growing-up, I had a friend who served time. One day he explained to me why he was a convict and others were not. “All of us did the crime, but the other boys had parent who begged for them. I had no one. On the day in court when I looked around it was just me by myself”. Let us hope this is not the case.


  2. What bothers me as i have said thousands of times on BU…WHERE ARE THE HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYERS ON THE ISLAND….this should not STILL be HAPPENING IN 2021..

    .they love to boast and brag about how many lawyers they have….but not one have the testicular fortitude or the spine to drag these two useless, worthless black governments up to human rights tribunals for what they allow to occur….and apparently DON’T PLAN TO END IT..


  3. …………………………Let me tell you a story. Growing-up, I had a friend who served time. One day he explained to me why he was a convict and others were not. “All of us did the crime, but the other boys had parent who begged for them. I had no one. On the day in court when I looked around it was just me by myself”. ….(Quote)

    This is the moral vacuum in Barbadian culture, the island that so many of us are so proud of. What does it say about our court s. Nothing has changed. I am sure some of the magistrates we now have were not even born then.


  4. This is the spirit of reparations…so that current and future generations of the descendants of the ENSLAVED could benefit throughout lifetimes and not crooks tiefing $50 billion dollars from descendants and build SHITE in St. Lucy so that the descendants of SLAVERS, the SLAVE PATROL and the SELLOUTS of parliament ONLY can benefit….

    Most are trying to atone for human rights abuses from the past….but Barbados intends to carry on the same traditions against Africans…

    “By
    Marisa Iati
    March 16, 2021 at 6:12 p.m. GMT-4
    One of the Catholic Church’s most well-known religious orders has pledged $100 million for the descendants of hundreds of enslaved people they once profited from — a significant move toward atoning for its slavery as the United States continues to reckon with its past.

    Support our journalism. Subscribe today.
    Those descendants and the Jesuit order of priests on Monday announced the creation of the Descendants Truth & Reconciliation Foundation to fund descendants’ educations and support programs that promote racial reconciliation and justice. The nonprofit group will ultimately seek to raise $1 billion through other private donations.

    Joseph Stewart, a descendant and the foundation’s acting president, said the descendants approached the Jesuits with a vision for atonement that would benefit their future offspring more than the current generation. The Georgetown Memory Project, a nonprofit organization, has identified roughly 10,000 descendants, about 5,000 of whom are living….


  5. Pardon GIS teen!
    Deputy chairman makes call to Abrahams
    by MARIA BRADSHAW
    mariabradshaw@nationnews.com
    DEPUTY CHAIRMAN of the Government Industrial School (GIS) Marsha Hinds-Layne is calling for the immediate release and the pardoning of the 14-year-old girl at the centre of an internal investigation at the facility.
    Hinds-Layne, the Deputy Chairman of the GIS board, charged that the child had been “wrongfully imprisoned” and as a result, Minister of Home Affairs Wilfred Abrahams had the authority to pardon her and send her home.
    The juvenile has been the focus of public discussion this week after this newspaper highlighted how she had been placed in solitary confinement naked on a concrete floor at the girls reform school following a meltdown over the quality of the food which she had been served.
    The day after the story broke, Abrahams announced that an investigation would be carried out to determine if there were any breaches of the child’s rights and who had taken a picture.
    Hinds-Layne is against the continued incarceration of the child who was remanded the St Lucy juvenile facility for wandering.
    “I am saying that this child has been wrongfully imprisoned. Given the case and circumstances of the case, she was inappropriately placed there and because of that I am calling for her immediate release. And now that the Minister is conducting an investigation you cannot keep a person in an institution, when you accept that the institution has to be investigated, to see if her rights were breached or not. That makes no sense,” she said.
    The president of the National Organisation of Women further stated that the child’s attorney intervened yesterday morning, when officials at the GIS took her to the Psychiatric Hospital for an appointment, without notifying her parents or the lawyer.
    Action condemned
    “They were trying to take her to the Psychiatric Hospital without her mother being there. When we found out this morning her lawyer was able to call and halt the visit until the mother got there so she was able to oversee what was happening.”
    The outspoken women’s advocate further condemned this action.
    Hinds-Layne was also on the radio call-in programme Brass Tacks yesterday where she made it clear that no photograph or video of the child lying in the cell was in circulation.
    She said she had the photograph and the only people she had given it to was the child’s attorney and her mother.
    “When two incidents happened in November last year I made a recommendation that the girls section be closed. It is clear that this is not a situation where you can take out two or three people and be remedied. It has gotten to the point where the core of the institution has experienced some rough spots… The brand is too far damaged. We have to just close and start again.”
    Child rights advocate and former Magistrate, Faith Marshall-Harris, who sits on the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child also weighed in on the matter on Brass Tacks.
    In terms of the Convention On the Rights of the Child, she said some of the things Barbados had agreed to was never subject a child to solitary confinement; that the depravation of liberty would be a last resort; that the child should always be held in decent accommodation and that meals would be wholesome and fit for consumption.
    She also stressed that children who came into conflict with the law were entitled to legal representation at every stage as she pointed out that parents and children were not being made aware of this.
    The DAILY NATION reached out to Abrahams for an update on the situation and his response to the call for the child to be pardoned but up to press time there was no response.

    Source: Nation


  6. This is the same one don’t want Black children homeschooled…A VIOLATION OF THEIR HUMAN RIGHTS…..so what kind of human rights child advocate is that…

    “Child rights advocate and former Magistrate, Faith Marshall-Harris, who sits on the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child also weighed in on the matter on Brass Tacks.
    In terms of the Convention On the Rights of the Child, she said some of the things Barbados had agreed to was never subject a child to solitary confinement; that the depravation of liberty would be a last resort; that the child should always be held in decent accommodation and that meals would be wholesome and fit for consumption.
    She also stressed that children who came into conflict with the law were entitled to legal representation at every stage as she pointed out that parents and children were not being made aware of this.”


  7. Where is our first female prime minister?


  8. “The president of the National Organisation of Women further stated that the child’s attorney intervened yesterday morning, when officials at the GIS took her to the Psychiatric Hospital for an appointment, without notifying her parents or the lawyer.”

    Like it or not, psychiatric hospitals are part of the state and are used in an abusive manner. Do you remember the Tiger Farrell story? How they attempted to take her off the game board by sending her to a mental institution?

    The first thing they do is to ‘stamp’ you as mad and then your fellow citizens ignore ‘the madman’. Psychiatric hospitals are the state’s rubber stamp for dehumanizing a person. Often used to remove a troublesome piece from the board.

    Look at your sons and daughters.
    Imagine them getting caught up by the system (right or wrong).
    Imagine that for some reason the system does not know they are your relatives.
    Imagine hard cold floors
    Imagine sexual organs and butt exposed for peephole viewing
    Imagine them being sent and confined at a psychiatric hospital without your knowledge or approval.

    The only way you can stop this happening to your child by accident is to prevent it from happening to anyone.

    Is the Minister so wicked and incompetent that he would destroy this young person to save himself? It must be asked.


  9. Thank God for the strong and sensible women of Barbados.
    Marsha Hinds-Layne
    Faith Marshall-Harris
    Monique Hoyte
    👍👍


  10. Are we given our medical professionals a free pass? Are we allowing their unethical behavior to go without condemnation?

    Let me cite the case of Yugee Farrell where the GoV (St Vincent) silenced, shamed and ‘discredited’ her by having her placed in a mental institution; now we see the GoB (or its representatives) planning to use a mental institution to blunt the horror of what was done to a citizen (a minor).

    How can these governments be confident that they will find a doctor to give them the diagnoses that they desire. Are we given our medical professional a pass


  11. @ Williams

    Nothing has changed about Barbados society over the last 80 or so years. The problem now is that they do it to young girls, who should be in school, and it has become public.
    Who is in charge of the GIS? Who is the minister responsible? When is he going to tender his resignation? Who has spoken to the girl’s parents?
    Not a word from our president and it is not the first time. Remember Black Lives Matter. This is the moral vacuum at the heart of Barbadian society which when I call it a failed state I am bitterly criticised. It runs from the top to the bottom of society; from the church to the gambling dens. Listen to the silence of the church.
    Remember the man who attack Ninja Man. Has he ever been arrested? No. The assumption is that Ninja Man is not important and does not deserve justice.
    Remember the cruel death of Ezra Moseley. Has the driver of the vehicle ever been questioned under oath?
    I can go on.


  12. Barbados must have something in common with the medieval RACIST royal family and its unfit for purpose purpose channeling same behaviour going back centuries.


  13. Oh well, since the old 50 billion dollar scam from 2005 with the 146 page document did not work to build the St. Lucy Project, time to join with Africa….and pretend to be Africans……same frauds who thought they could get UK and EU to rob Africa so they could maintain slave societies of Africans in the Caribbean…..they have no shame, what they should’ve done first, only just occured to them…..so now they will learn who really has the resources….and a brand new currency..

    “Plans for Kenya to host a CARICOM and Africa Summit in 2020 had to be put on hold because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but CARICOM Heads of Government have also agreed to seek collaboration with the African Union (AU) to co-sponsor a proposed summit with European Heads of Government on the issue of reparations.”


  14. William…they have NO SHAME…..CHECK IT OUT…..only now they realize how much they will need Africa..

    “Faith Marshall-Harris”..

    .that one is misleading you Theo, don’t fall for it, she don’t protect Black children, don’t want to see them homeschooled and is part of the clique who JAIL Black parents, particularly Rasta families who try to homeschool their children, but have no problem seeing whites/closed bretherens, indians etc homeschooling theirs….there was a blog about that topic ..right here on BU, most people avoided that blog like the plague…

    don’t be misled, most of them are anti-black and support human rights abuses against Black people including children.


  15. “Is the Minister so wicked and incompetent that he would destroy this young person to save himself? It must be asked.”

    yes and yes, answered.


  16. And the whistleblower who tried to save this child, also have to watch their back..

    so you see now that the games they have played with the integrity legislation and anticorruption bills for the past neary 3 years is really to destroy whistleblowers……they can’t even hide it anymore.


  17. “Faith Marshall-Harris”

    now comes the COVER UP THEIR ASSES….ya will hear that they DON’T KNOW that human rights of Black children are routinely violated on the island….although they are the child advocate, one wonders exactly what do they tell the UN when asked…first thing i would want to know is HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT THE VILATION OF children rights on the island as advocate…and listen to the answer..

    so…

    “don’t let them change you
    or try to rearrange you”

    and certainly, don’t LET THEM MISLEAD YOU….they are very good at that..


  18. This is a good read
    https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/03/19/childrens-advocate-backs-new-facilities-over-reform-school/
    @wura- FMHarris appears to be somewhat different from what you say.


  19. Theo…ya getting reeled in….this woman was a CHILDREN’S ADVOCATE FOR YEARS……she now has to cover her ass…..she CAN’T SAY SHE DID NOT KNOW ABOUT WHAT IS BEING SAID….re the abuse of children rights in a GOVERNMENT RUN INSTITUTION…

    .did the other lady not say HOW MANY LETTERS SHE WROTE TO THOSE WHO HAVE THE CLOUT TO STOP the GIS human rights abuse….do you really believe she did not get one of those letters….and as someone claiming representation under UN rules and as a FORMER MAGISTRATE…you really believe she knew nothing…

    ..the SHIT HAS HIT THE FAN…everyone will now use their naked fingers to plug all that shit so it don’t blow back on them….notice it took her days to come out, this was brewing all last week…. i even forgot she existed…


  20. I have been saying for sometime, it’s the human rights abuse AGAINST BLACK PEOPLE on the island that will bring these nogood sellouts down….the UN has them on a human trafficking watch, neocolonialism and crypto-racism….FOR A VERY LONG TIME……….black face governments in a majority black country…


  21. https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/03/18/hold-gis-accountable-ross/

    never buy into their bullshit Theo…YES…the news is VERY DISTURBING but OLD and well known, it’s no secret…..don’t let a former magistrate and self-proclaimed child advocate tell you she didn’t know.


  22. Let this sink in Theo…wuh if people on the CONTINENT OF AFRICA…know and talk about the human rights abuses against African descent people in Barbados……WHO DOESN’T?

    “I know girls who have come out and went into prostitution. I spoke to another girl who recently came out and she said to me that she felt like a slave and she referred to the ‘wicked, spiteful’ people encountered and these are words that come from these children,” Ross said.

    Ross recalled that when the Government changed in 2018, Johnny Tudor took over the chairmanship of the board and soon after made sweeping comments about the operations at the GIS and called for the removal of the principal.

    “After that outburst by the new chairman, he went totally quiet. Not another word came out from GIS board about that situation. And if a person was so passionate about what he saw and could make those statements in his capacity as the chairman and then went into keeping quiet, then we could all guess what happened.”

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