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Let’s see which tranches were defaulted and exactly the amount. And what value the “books” placed on the asset(s). All neatly hidden, because we can never see what those entities who received the “loans” did with that money, other than defaulting on repayment. Everybody got bailed out except the local taxpayer.

NorthernObserver (call for transparency by BU commenter in the Paradise/Clearwater Bay matter)

Both major political parties continue to baffle the citizenry with ‘bullshit’ and we accept it. Is Minister Ryan Straughn telling he does not have a recent valuation of the Paradise property to share? Why have we allowed another crisis to go to waste? 

At the best of times the Barbados economy was deemed to be fragile because it is a tourism_service oriented economy which makes it ultra vulnerable to what economists warn exogenous attacks from the global economy.

Post-2018 the incumbent Barbados Labour Party (BLP) after winning the general election, recruited a bevy of financial consultants supported by a 26 member Cabinet. Immediately proceeded to opt for a selected default (SD) on foreign and domestic debt. Fate has intervened and the so-called fiscal space created has been eradicated by a raging pandemic made worse by a 2 week period of ash fall from an active volcano next door on St.Vincent.

Acts of nature have tested the adaptability of man from the beginning of time. This is what we must do, adapt.

Is it the imagination of a lowly blogmaster we have allowed our priorities to shift to ‘less pressing’ matters at this time? All local newsfeeds are choked with traffic about transition to a referendum by 30 November 2021 and the consideration by government- supported by private sector- to regulate a mandatory vaccination policy. Further, we had a march reported to be upwards to three thousand people registering public concern. The news from government and Central Bank of Barbados that there is a hole in government’s revenues of 600 million dollars has not registered the same level of protestations from John Public. Is it fully understood the success of expertly managing the economy of Barbados directly impacts quality of life of individuals, households; food on the table, jobs etc? 

The blogmaster smiled this week while listening to a Canada-based Barbadian economist beseeching the government to decrease excise/ad valorem taxes to buffer increasing cost of imports. The fight to satisfy our taste for imported goods and services to feed the consumption behaviour continues.

Covid 19 virus feeding the pandemic has had an uncompromising impact on economies of developing countries like Barbados. Unlike so-called developed countries, scarce resources have had to be redirected to defend against Covid 19. For Barbados the issue is made more acute because of the pre-Covid 19 state of the economy. 

The structure of the local economy means there is limited prospect of achieving real growth in the short to medium term. The weight of years of debt accumulation means more significant fiscal adjustments – that will be painful – have to be made. Coming after about 15 years of economic fatigue this will spur social fallout. The time has come and gone for our leaders, political and social to govern, to lead. A recommended first step in that process is to immediately desist from baffling the citizenry with bullshit and set about the task of setting realistic expectations.

A word to the wise should be sufficient.


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236 responses to “A Citizenry Contented to be Baffled by BS”

  1. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @JohnA
    Why not?
    The pols will do as they like. What are you going to do about it?
    The sheeple like it so.


  2. Talking about inflation. Our inflation over the years have been relatively low and stable. With the exception of 2008 and 2011the inflation rate have been below 5% over the years, tracking to some extent inflation rate in the USA. Annualised Inflation rate in the USA is over 5% for the last two months. Bim inflation rate will have to trend in the same direction sooner or later.


  3. In simple terms our capacity to earn forex is not matching our ballooning consumption appetite.

    We have to earn more foreign exchange or curb consumption behaviour. If we cut back the downside is that government’s tax revenues and related will be negatively impacted. Ryan Straughn can try to baffle us with bullshit.


  4. @ Northern

    You call that blind political loyalty when no questions are asked hence no explanation offered. In some place they call that a dictatorship but nothing so don’t happen bout hey! Dat only happen in places like Russia, China and our beloved Singapore.

    I see the USA like them having them second Vietnam with the Taliban back in control. Helicopters taking away the US embassy people from rooftops and thing. 1960’s all over again for the USA. Hope dem learn they lesson this time. Anyhow I not going bad mouth uncle Sam cause I might need his help too someday who knows.


  5. @David

    Don’t mind Ryan Straughn with he fancy footwork, let me brek it down for you shopkeeper style!

    We got a country that costing we way more than we can generate to run post covid.

    We 2 years from elections so the divine leaders can’t risk to make no real changes now.

    We never attempted to diversify the economy 18 months ago when this covid thing hit, so we going ride the old ass donkey called tourism to it either drop down or turn into a race horse.

    We borrowing from whoever we can just like sinkyuh did to get we to elections without rocking the boat. The only reason we ain’t printing pissing money is because the IMF take way the printer room keys.

    In closing we ain’t no different to some big guts bajans that in the heights with a audi and a benz that could only pay the minimum pun them 4 max out credit cards every month.

    Good that is shopkeeper response 101 to the fancy talk and footwork. Tell any of them come here and call me a liar!


  6. “We have to earn more foreign exchange or curb consumption behaviour. If we cut back the downside is that government’s tax revenues and related will be negatively impacted”

    don’t cry worrying thinking about how to do things the way they used to be
    when you have to readjust and do things the way they are now
    fx and consumption going down is not the end of the world
    and is not your worst nightmare like waking up and losing your penis


  7. With many states relaxing the rules on the use of medical marijuana, we can say the ‘war on drugs’ in the US is a bust. During this war, we saw unequal prison sentences for cocaine and crack use. Now, we see how the opiates crisis is treated differently than the crack crisis. The nasty and derogatory language and images of the war on cracks has softened. Instead of crack-heads, crack whores crack-addicts and drug-crazed individuals we are now hearing of victims and oozing sympathy for those caught up in the opium crisis.

    I suspect that legalization of marijuana use in the Caribbean would help put a serious dent in our drug related crimes. What we must not do is to allow those who lost the war on drugs in their own country, gung-ho and war-crazed American officials to continue their war on drugs with citizens in the Caribbean.

    It is interesting that having lost the war in Afghanistan we see an increasing ‘military’ like focus in the Caribbean.

    NB: I am not in favor of legalizing without expunging related criminal records and setting those imprisoned for drug use free.


  8. My focus is on the use of marijuana in the Caribbean.


  9. @David. On August 23, 2021 the IMF is going to allocate free SDRs to every member country. Bim portion of this allocation will be well over us$100 million dollar. That means our international reserve will increase by this amount. The good about this allocation is that we don’t have to pay it back. I think the government should ring fence this money and use it to capitalise a national wealth fund.


  10. The COP was a personal friend. This excerpt shows that he was failing on the job from 2015.

    ” It was late last year that Commissioner of Police Tyrone Griffith said that despite Government’s efforts to tighten security at the ports of entry, with new scanners and other state-of-theart software, most of the guns which ended up in the hands of criminals were still getting through the border security dragnet.
    Griffith said at the time that over the last two years there had been improvements in terms of security, especially at the Bridgetown Port, but charged that the intelligence garnered by the force revealed that guns were still slipping through the cracks at a worrying rate. It was the second time the top cop made this claim as back in 2015 he issued the same warning, adding that it was possibly done with the cooperation of officials
    at the border entry facilities.”

    It appears, that for the past six years, the RBPF (Republic of Barbados Police Force) is unable to infiltrate those who import the guns.


  11. @ fortyacresandamuleAugust 15, 2021 6:06 PM,
    What are you smoking? Ring fenced into a national wealth fund!


  12. @TLSN. Explain your disagreement. What you reckon we do with this free SDRs ?


  13. The IMF should even go further and allocate the SDRs of rich countries to other low-income countries. If that was to become a reality, we wouldn’t qualify, because according to World Bank calculation we are a high-income ($15500 per capita) economy. T


  14. @fortyacresandamule
    There is nothing wrong with your reasoning.
    When North Sea oil /gas was discovered Norway and the UK were the main beneficiaries Norway created a wealth fund for their citizens, and it’s now worth an absolute fortune. The UK squandered theirs
    Our politicians do not have the foresight to manage any wealth funds nor any reparation monies. The money will be mis-spent. It’s better for our country not to receive any largesse


  15. @TLSN . I see where you coming from. Harsh as your point is, it is not an unreasonable one.


  16. @ John A August 15, 2021 3:14 PM

    For investors, the most important thing is to finally weaken our numerous unions, put people to penal labor in road construction instead of entertaining them in the Hotel Dodds, increase the working life and finally devalue the BBD.

    With the current economic policy, zero growth is guaranteed, as it has been since 2008. With or without a republic.

    Only our naive, pseudo-educated, financially illiterate masses called “the people” are being blinded by all the mumbo jumbo called republicanism.


  17. “Our politicians do not have the foresight to manage any wealth funds nor any reparation monies. The money will be mis-spent. It’s better for our country not to receive any largesse.”

    they already created a 16-17 year old blue print to tief and mis-spend it, not a dime for the people who are entitled…never created one for an education UPGRADE or anything else in 55 years, they only create to tief from the population…don’t know how they expect to get away with that heist, but they can keep trying…..that it will be for our DESCENDANTS…to negotiate within the next 4 generations, not this gang of thieves..escapes them, but they tell themselves otherwise…

    “It appears, that for the past six years, the RBPF (Republic of Barbados Police Force) is unable to infiltrate those who import the guns”

    “This excerpt shows that he was failing on the job from 2015.”

    no so much failing AS CONFINED, and RESTRICTED..

    confident criminals who know the police can’t touch them..

    the whole nasty show has to tumble down SOON, there has never been a better time …they had years and years of warnings…..time for this to end..


  18. https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/08/15/btcolumn-the-plight-of-workers/

    Barbados needs TO FOCUS on their own WORKERS RIGHTS/HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS, social and financial REDUCTION of the majority population…look at ya own short comings FIRST, then ya can attempt to preach about and fix someone else’s…


  19. Ill winds may blow

    MAYBE IT IS just a rumour, but these days, rumours have a habit of coming true.
    The job of the Governor of the Central Bank cannot be an easy one, especially if he does not have strong willpower. One Governor has been heard to say that he is a creature of the Minister of Finance, and another Governor has had to toe the line. Today we note that the powers of the Governor have been strengthened by further isolation of the bank and he has been more isolated from the aims of the Minister of Finance. The International Monetary Fund was very much involved with the need to make changes so that the Governor would be isolated.
    This is really with respect to the behaviour of the Central Bank, but not with respect to whether or not he retains his job. So the problem still remains that the Minister of Finance has ultimate say in whether or not he keeps his job.
    Today, many of the decisions of the Central Bank have been foisted upon it by the worsening circumstances of Barbados brought on by COVID-19, the volcanic ash, Hurricane Elsa and a host of unexpected (or expected) circumstances, the major ones being the left-over effects of the past administration and placing the bond losses in its portfolio. This is not to say that there are not many instances of uncollected revenue, maybe owed by the rich and famous entities that could lessen the burden of the Central Bank.
    That the present Governor has steered the ship well cannot be gainsaid. Perhaps lesser mortals would have balked at the challenges. Indeed, we have seen where in other vital areas those in charge have been sorely lacking in performance.
    The saying silence is golden may apply.
    I have a problem with institutions that encroach on the business of money and which seem to allow all sorts of operations in Barbados. I have spoken about them already. They are the institutions that offer high rates of interest payment for depositors that do not correlate with the financial guidelines of commercial business, yet they operate freely in Barbados. I am not referring to commercial banks. Commercial banks have their own problem with respect to low interest rates for savings and high commissions.
    Barbados tax
    Some time ago the issue of using the facilities of the commercial banks to pay for goods from overseas came up for discussion and requiring Amazon and other stores overseas to add the Barbados tax to the purchaser’s bill.
    Obviously, local businesses must have been complaining and voiced their concern. While it is true that institutions are promoting
    their goods to accommodate the lowest common denominator, the eventual profit margin is unconscionable. I think that more and closer oversight is required, knowing the history of failure of institutions in Barbados. I would be the last one to query the report of the Auditor General. His report may be the thin edge of the wedge.
    Every institution with a computer now offers credit card facilities where the interest factor can be as high as 35 per cent in addition to other charges for late payments.
    Time after time you see where I have criticised the printing of money and the deteriorating credit rating of Barbados. Indeed, when it seemed that the Central Bank was taking note, the Governor was fired. Although the present Governor cannot be blamed for the condition in which Barbados now finds itself, he needs to be careful that he is not embroiled in whatever failure may accrue to the fortunes of Barbados. Ill winds do not always blow from the east off the coast of Africa, and we are not always advised of their coming.
    I remember a storm was right over Barbados and we did not know. You see, bad things do not always happen from the area where you may be looking.
    You know that the monkey, because of his sagacity, was the one appointed king of the beasts at a sideshow that was not proven authentic. The jackass, whose strong point was braying, professed to be the real king ( Sparrow sang about it). In a voting ceremony in 1526 the monkey lost his work and the jackass was crowned king. I would advise the Governor of the Central Bank to gird his loins. Fasten his seat belt. Be prepared for lack of gravity in space.
    A past Prime Minister never used to mince words! He had his say.

    Harry Russell is a banker.

    Source: Nation


  20. “This is not to say that there are not many instances of uncollected revenue, maybe owed by the rich and famous entities that could lessen the burden of the Central Bank.”

    If Rihanna is going to bail out Barbados, she should take ownership of the island as an asset in her investment portfolio and should replace the Queen of England as head of state, otherwise she should look after herself and her own interests.


  21. @TheoGAzerts August 15, 2021 6:08 PM “…adding that it was possibly done with the cooperation of officials…”

    Surprose, surprise. What do we expect when we like to “do favours” for our relatives, our friends, the fellas and girls that went to school wid we, the people for our lodge, our church, our vollage?

    If we are moral idiots. This is exactly what we get.

    People in certain positions need to understand that in order to properly do the job they are being paid to do, they cannot have family, friends, lodge, church, school, or village buddies.


  22. Heard just recently that a certain late PM facilitated his school buudy who has never worked a day in Barbados to receive the “non-contributory” NIS pension, because allegedly after living [and working] outside of Barbados for nearly 50 years he has no income. So the “gentleman” a returning national has for years been collecting, and is now collection $900+ a month from a fund to which he has NEVER contributed.

    And to those overseas Bajans who cuss us daily? The “gentleman” is one ‘o wunna.


  23. @ Cuhdear Bajan,

    This overseas Bajan emphathises with any returning national who has to live in Barbados in poverty.

    I will continue to live in Canada and vacation in Barbados.


  24. @cuhdear
    He is a Bajan
    He is in Barbados.
    He is one of wunnah.
    He is one of we.

    Why would you deny this man his citizenship and act as if his navel string is not buried there?

    So the man catch a plane and flew out. One day he returned and he is no longer a genuine Bajan? You are wrong. He is one of we.

    I guess he didn’t have money for wunnah to rob him and pat wunnah self on the back at how smart wunnah are.

    I sense your delight in his ‘misery’.
    I can hear your laughter and cries of derision.

    “Look at he! He went overseas and wasted his time. He could have stayed at home or just gone towns come back. I surprise he ain’t come back mad”

    After that nonsense you wrote, you don’t think ‘wunnah’ deserve a good RH cussing.

    Do you know how many Bajans he fed whilst he was in England.

    Your last sentence was horrible.
    Question the corruption, nepotism, breaking the rules for friends, but don’t deny the man his citizenship.


  25. @ Cuhdear Bajan,

    can you identify the area in the photo ?

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/08/14/newly-paved-highway-1-reopens/

  26. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ TheOGazerts at 10:06 AM

    Cuh Dear did not and cannot deny the cited gentleman his citizenship. She objected to his receiving benefits from a fund to which he did not contribute. Are you aware that there are thousands of Barbadians who contributed through direct and indirect taxes but were denied noncontributory pensions? It is the inequity that Cuh Dear is challenging.


  27. @VC
    I get your point and I understand cuhdear contribution.

    You must agree that the sentence
    “And to those overseas Bajans who cuss us daily? The “gentleman” is one ‘o wunna.”
    is divisive and separates him from Bajans on the island.

    It is the exclusionary ‘wunnah’ I am questioning. Is he unable to rejoin theQuestion the corruption, nepotism, breaking the rules for friends, but don’t deny the man his citizenship.


  28. to rejoin the fold..
    Question, broadcast, criticize the corruption, nepotism, buddyism, inequities, breaking the rules for friends, but don’t deny the man his citizenship.


  29. Last comment…
    I am certain that there are others who did not pay into the system and are receiving benefits they did not qualify for.


  30. People in Britain no longer have to wear masks and are free. The economy is booming.

    And what about us? We have not been able to vaccinate even one-third of the population because, as a stand-alone nation, we do not have enough vaccine after the breakaway from the motherland.

    Thank you Barrow and your party for turning Barbados into a concentration camp where people are dying because of the lack of vaccine. Time to throw the DLP grandees in jail!


  31. Seems like the grass isn’t always greener on the other side.

    That’s all I took from that.

    That little piggie cried, “Wee, wee, wee!” All the way home. He knew where to find the free trough.


  32. 🙂
    I agree
    And Napoleon (Animal Farm) heard him.


  33. @ TheoGAzerts,

    You have been warned. Do not retire in Barbados unless you have good family and or friends and can support yourself financially.

    Most important…..You should have a pleasant non combative disposition. lol


  34. All of this and ya got the disrespectful minorities in Barbados and the Caribbean fueled by black traitors telling themselves they will weasel their way on to OUR continent to enrich themselves, continue the practice of racism and rob our future generations…yall better stay ya asses in the Caribbean holes where ya belong…or weasel ya way to India, oh, there is nothing there but poverty and yall ain’t even considered indian, the untouchables…but ya think ya all of that protected by black traitors..

    https://youtu.be/atePuEo-2mU


  35. @ WURA-War-on-U,
    Such events will continue until collectively we say. no.. Ironically, Idi Amin stood up to the Indians: he expelled them and was harshly judged by historians. History proves, in this case, that he was a visionary.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/8/13/grief-grips-south-african-town-after-gruesome-vigilante-killings


  36. Why some of you do not stop preaching hatred? The same issues some of you rail about every day on the blog you are happy to flip the script.


  37. If you listen to haters like WURA-War-on-U and TLSN they’d be telling you that niggas be hating on pakis becuase their white masters told them to as per their divide to rule book of hook and crook who want to break up Afroasiatic unity

    But, enlightened black people mix with brown people regularly and sit down to reason with their brethren puffing holy herb

    Rasta know
    One Love


  38. Transformation
    I am not the mind
    I am not even the body

    Do all the following in an exercise routine as a daily practice to enrich your mind body and soul free of charge
    O Kegels
    O Yoga
    O Nei Gong
    O Qigong
    O Tai Chi
    O Walking
    O Meditation
    O Listening to Music
    O Dancing
    O Singing Mantras
    O HIIT
    O Cardio


  39. WURA-War-on-U and TLSN should learn how to relieve their digestive gas and fart out of their bum holes more, instead of dropping their stink ass brain farts in the public domain on BU. They should be ashamed of themselves. Shame on them and Shame on their Families and Shame on their Picknies and Shame on their Friends and Shame on Barbados and Shame on the Barbados Underground. Shame Shame Shame Shame Shame Shame. Whole Heap of Shame. Bad Shame

    BEST Yoga Poses To FART – 15 Minute Yoga for Digestion & Gas

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  40. “Idi Amin stood up to the Indians: he expelled them and was harshly judged by historians. History proves, in this case, that he was a visionary.”

    our biggest enemies are BLACK PEOPLE who love to see generational social attacks against Black people like themselves….and hope it never ends, they have no problem with seeing their people hated, violated, robbed and future generations subjected to the same crimes, they prefer to go along to get along while nothing changes, well, NOT THIS TIME..

    with all his faults Amin was right, look at what the trash descended from the trash he expelled from Uganda still do to Black people in UK and in other countries, when they get positions of power to do the dirty work of others..

    ..Africa knows what it has to do to PROTECT BLACK/AFRICAN PEOPLE, most in the west would not lift a finger to protect each other…and i make no damn apologies, when the race hatred is practiced against Black people in Barbados, you can’t find a blog about it…am not here to suck up to trash, they have nothing that i want, it’s the other way around..


  41. @ David,
    I take it you read the link before passing comment? A number of blacks were executed in cold blood.


  42. “Her brother was brutally beaten to death and his car burned beyond recognition on July 12.

    Violent protests, riots and looting rocked South Africa in July for more than a week, leaving more than 300 dead and hundreds of businesses destroyed.

    Amid the unrest, historical racial tensions between African and Indian communities exploded in Phoenix – a predominantly ethnically Indian town on the outskirts of Durban, KwaZulu-Natal province..”

    South Africa needs to PURGE its environs of criminal minorities, Black citizens need to stop spending any money with them and they WILL HAVE TO LEAVE….they cannot survive WITHOUT AFRICANS, again, i make NO APOLOGIES..


  43. 555…is a nasty piece of shit, a special place will be prepared in Africa for such demons…they will learn that Black/Africans are indigenous to Africa, no one else.


  44. @TLSN

    The idea is to make the world a better place because of your presence. Not to flip the script. Where you and others live, blacks are persecuted everyday – it has given rise to the #blm as an example. Preach love. Stop the vitriolic emissions.


  45. “you are happy to flip the script.”

    no one is flipping any script…there is something called JUSTICE…alien to Barbados, but it exists…i don’t go out of my way to be racist to anyone, that’s not and HAS NEVER BEEN THE NATURE of Black/African people….of course i can turn ON CRIMINAL RACISTS and THIEVES in a nanosecond and go nuclear if i have to..but it’s only what they deserve…KARMA..

    TLSN…..leave them, when the younger generations go off on them for the racism, oppression, thefts of their future and deliberately generated poverty, they will be more than happy to remember the good old days when all we did was typed and posted..


  46. @ David,
    Are you saying it is better to under report or not to report the story – period. I am slightly confused.

    Should we do the same with domestic violence and child abuse?


  47. “Preach love.”

    you CANNOT PREACH LOVE to THOSE WHO HATE AFRICANS BY NATURE…..it’s never gonna work, they were SPAWNED FROM HATE…and need to be ISOLATED…the only reason they go around Africa is to TIEF and spread hate and racism, just as they do in Barbados and anywhere they land their cursed asses…it’s been ongoing for CENTURIES….maybe you have centuries more to spare, but not everyone does..

    they have to be PURGED OUT of Black/African lives…..and mingle with each other instead, no one with intelligence wants them around anymore, no one needs them, it’s the OTHER WAY AROUND.

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