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Recently the blogmaster received an email expressing concern about Barbados’s foreign debt stock as the economists refer to it. A look at Central Bank’s Review of Barbados’ Economic Performance (January to December 2021) listed the following.

Gross Central Government Debt stood at (BDS $millions):

201620172018201920202021(p)
13,294.113,704.112,573.812,791.212,761.213,310.7

Gross Central Government Debt = Domestic Debt + External Debt+ Domestic and External Arrears

Of the gross debt owed by government, external debt stood at (BDS $millions):

201620172018201920202021(p)
2,912.32,864.03,198.93,090.03,974.54,484.4

According to the central bank report the uptick in in external debt was due to an increased reliance on policy based loans, the benefit of which kept the average interest rate on debt stable. The blogmaster assumes the benefit of a policy based loan besides its purpose of targeting specific sectors for reform and strengthening is the low interest rate. 

In the period 2018 to 2021 the government borrowed as seen on the central bank graph, total debt to GDP was recorded at 136.3% with foreign debt being 33.9% of total debt. It should be obvious a large component of USD1.5 billion in foreign reserves is the result of heavy inflows from policy based loans contracted in the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021. 


Ministry of Finance and Central Bank of Barbados

From the following graph it should be clear Barbados’ debt load should not be viewed through a political lense. Successive governments have accessed heavy borrowing – both local and foreign to finance government’s operations over the years. The slowdown in the global economy caused by the ongoing pandemic has had a devastating effect on the economy of Barbados by eroding gains from the debt restructure administered in 2018. With the fickle tourism sector the major foreign exchange earner, Barbados has to be hopeful it continues to rebound to be able to honour its external debt obligations. Hopefully our planners at the strident insistence of the citizenry will make this a strategic priority.


Ministry of Finance and Central Bank of Barbados

This raises the point of concern indicated in the email received from a concerned BU family memeber, who are our foreign creditors and are Barbadians comfortable that having mortgaged the future of our great grand children, there is sufficient capacity of the country to service its debt. In 2018 local and foreign bondholders suffered a ‘haircut’ because debt to GDP was too high and the country suffered several downgraded by credit rating agencies. 

The blogmaster does not have a listing of our local and foreign creditors. However the concern China has aggressively been increasing its stock in the island has been refuted by financial consultant to the government Avanish Persaud, evidencing that China’s exposure in Barbados represents ‘only’ $300 million or less than 3% of the 13.3 billion gross government debt.

While it is comforting that foreign debt as a % of GDP is low, in real terms in represents a liability the country will struggle to honour given our heavy dependence on one sector to earn foreign exchange. To make matters worse, in the short – and possibly medium term – the ongoing conflict in the Ukraine will create additional economic pressure with the price of commodities forecast to spike. 

The government owes it to the country to implement a plan to disrupt consumer behaviour. The typical Barbadian aspires to buy a car, travel and to engage in a level of consumption spending on durables that is inimical to the national interest. The blogmaster is not suggesting that individuals should not aspire to acquire material things to appease a sense of aggrandizement. However, if it means Barbadians are being encouraged to cut off the nose to spite the face then we are spitting in the air.

Are Barbadians aware of the perilous state of affairs we are operating in?


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101 responses to “Too Much Debt Man!”

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    Sufferer’s Choice


  2. Critical point, how long will the conflict last. It has the potential to decimate our economy to mirror 2008.

    The high fuel price in Barbados

    By Dr Juliet Melville

    Since the beginning of the year, there has been a sharp increase in international energy prices, mirrored in a similar movement in fuel prices here in Barbados. This has been a source of much concern and angst among the population, and has led to strenuous calls for some relief.
    The Government, in response, announced a cap on the value added tax (VAT) take from a litre of gasoline and diesel of 40 cents and 37 cents, respectively, for six months starting March 16, 2022, in a bid to cushion the effect of escalating fuel prices. Since then, there has been a further jump in fuel prices and yet again this has attracted the ire of the public and has led to more calls for relief.
    Since the end of last year, gasoline prices have increased by almost 27 per cent per litre, diesel by 37 per cent and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) by 14 to 16 per cent, depending on the cylinder size in Barbados.
    Unfavourable comparisons
    Spiralling fuel prices have also led to unfavourable comparisons in Barbados relative to its neighbours. As at April 4, 2022, GlobalPetroleum.com reported that around the world, the price of gasoline averaged $2.74 per litre and diesel $2.64 per litre. The average gasoline price in Barbados was 51 per cent higher than the world average and the average diesel price exceeded the world average by 31 per cent.
    Information from this same source reveals that fuel is indeed much more costly in Barbados than in other regional countries. Excluding the region’s established oil producers – Venezuela, and Trinidad and Tobago – the average price of gasoline in Barbados exceeded its neighbours by between 34 and 123 per cent, and diesel prices by 12 to 227 per cent.
    The prices of our energy supplies are undoubtedly tied to developments in the international market which we have limited or no control over, but the final prices in different countries are a function of the domestic market structure and more importantly, the taxation policy of various governments. To gain a better understanding of the impact of Government policy on the final price of fuel in Barbados, the retail price of gasoline, diesel and kerosene was disaggregated to identify the components contributing to this.
    The Customs Tariff Amendment Order of 2019 sets out the duties, excise tax and fuel tax (Government charges) that apply to fuel imports into Barbados.
    Industry sources indicated
    that the petroleum dealers apply an average markup of 25 cents per litre per product. Using the information on the Government charges and the petroleum dealers’ markup, the base price (the estimated import price) and the share of the overall tax take in the final price of a litre of gasoline, diesel and kerosene were estimated ( Table 3). Of note, VAT is the only charge that varies directly with price. All other charges and taxes, including the markup, are levied on a per litre basis.
    These charges are independent of price and constitute a fixed amount per litre of fuel irrespective of price. Even before VAT is applied, the Government gets an estimated $1.50 on every litre of gasoline, $0.91 on a litre of diesel and $0.12 on a litre of kerosene. VAT is applied after all other taxes, charges and markup are added to the imported base price. This means that the only component that changes directly with price is the VAT.
    Absorbed increase
    In January, with gasoline retailing at $3.99, the imported (base) price was estimated at $1.64 while Government charges accounted for 53 per cent ($2.10 per litre) of the retail price. With the introduction of the cap on VAT, the tax take on gasoline fell to 49 per cent ($1.97 per litre) as the Government absorbed the 13 cents increase in the imported price (through a reduction in its VAT take) in order to maintain the retail price at $3.99 per litre.
    The cap on VAT moderated the most recent increase in gasoline price, and consumers are paying $4.13 per litre instead of $4.30 per litre. The tax take as a share of the retail price fell by one percentage point to 48 per cent, but the Government is still collecting $1.97 on every litre of gasoline sold. Even before VAT is applied, custom duties, excise taxes and the fuel levy account for over 37 per cent of the final price.
    In the case of diesel, over 40 per cent of the final price consists of taxes. With the cap, this now stands at 37 per cent ($1.28) at a retail price of $3.45/litre. The cap on VAT is saving the consumer about $0.17 per litre on the latest price rise.
    Non-VAT charges make up more than 26 per cent of the final price of a litre of diesel in Barbados.
    Kerosene is the least burdened with Government levies with the tax take averaging around 21 per cent and non-VAT charges accounting for less than ten per cent of the final price.
    Fuel prices in Barbados are indeed higher than the world average and its regional neighbours. Given countries face similar international prices, notwithstanding any action countries may take to source at better prices, Government taxation policy does play a significant role in explaining the final price of fuel.
    Sizeable share
    Taxes and other Government charges account for a sizeable share of the final price of all fuel.
    The markup of the petroleum dealer, while contributing to the retail price, is relatively smaller by comparison.
    In a scenario of rapidly escalating prices, while seeking to purchase fuel at the best possible price, a re-examination of all statutory charges on fuel may be warranted.
    The Government has to perform a delicate balancing act of garnering badly needed revenue while trying to shield the population from the effects of rising energy cost and its adverse impact on disposable income and economic activity.
    Dr Juliet Melville is an independent consultant, former chief economist at the Caribbean Development Bank and former lecturer in the Economics Department at the University of the West Indies, St Augustine, Trinidad.


    Source: Nation


  3. STRUGGLE AHEAD

    Experts see possible erosion of lower midde class
    By Colville Mounsey
    colvillemounsey@
    nationnews.com
    With a significant spike in the cost of living following closely on the heels of the COVID-19 pandemic, three prominent academics are warning that this country’s middle class is in jeopardy of further significant erosion.
    In fact, head of the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies (SALISES), Professor Don Marshall, says that some of the lower middle class may now be in real danger of being “pauperised”.
    His view is supported by economist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of the Board for Undergraduate Studies of the University of the West Indies (UWI) Cave Hill, Professor Justin Robinson, as well as Professor Emeritus of UWI Cave Hill, Michael Howard.
    Marshall said that coming out of the 1940s, when the world went through a series of successive calamities, the current period should have been the solidification of intergenerational wealth transfer for the Barbadian middle class. Instead, those prospects have been greatly diminished as the country battles a series of events at the scale of those experienced in the ’40s.
    “The rising cost of living, which is linked now to rising electricity and fuel, simply now means that coping from the end of April onwards will be a struggle. We are also talking about an onward deterioration and decimation of large swathes of the middle class.
    Businesses in crosshairs
    “The middle class in Barbados . . . came into history after the 1940s, and before that largely black middle class could sink roots enough to allow for clear signs of intergenerational wealth transfer, we are faced with as deep a recession, as deep a level of economic uncertainty, as the 1940s,” he told the Sunday Sun.
    Marshall warned that as a result of the anticipated middle class slide, many small businesses are likely to also be in the crosshairs of the economic fallout, as it is the middle class that supports these enterprises. He said many may be forced to strip away certain
    expenditures from their budgets, making casualties of services such as landscaping, beauty salons, nail technicians and barbershops.
    “The invasion of Ukraine, and the deleterious impact that it is having on the cost of living, is putting a strain on the middle class, including the upper-middle class. This group has had to carry a number of their relatives and a number of households. This includes those who provide services like landscaping and other types of maintenance. It is the middle class that is supporting nail salons, barbershops, bakeries. So, the more pressure that this group faces with the rising cost of living, the sooner they would begin to shed some of those extra cost that come with a sense of wanting to live and not just exist,” he said.
    Robinson said a lot will depend on whether the rise in the cost of living is short term or protracted.
    Run down reserves
    “If these pressures are temporary, the people who don’t have buffers, savings or capacity to absorb this, would face genuine hardship while other persons could see their buffers and reserves running down. One anticipates that if this occurs for three months or so, for the majority of persons the damage need not be long-term. If this, on the other hand, is a protracted crisis, which would be six months or more, some persons who were at the edge can get pushed over the edge.
    “So you can see people falling behind in their bills, you can see defaults on loans. Others could have their savings eroded and they would also cut out any form of discretionary expenditure. So, for example, if they had a helper coming three times per week, they would cut down to one,” he explained.
    Howard is expecting rising fuel costs to cause the middle class the most pain.
    “It is going to affect them significantly because it is the lower middle class and the middle class that own the most cars, so they are going to be hit really hard by that aspect of the cost increase. The commercial entities and the production companies will be affected primarily by the overhead cost in terms of increasing electricity, transportation and so on,” the economist said.

    Source: Nation

  4. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    That’s why Professor Don Marshall made it into my book, he has a very sound mind.

    necessity BREEDS invention…

    time to get creative, bring forth those new age Black businesses….think outside the conventional go nowhere-ism…it’s a win win…


  5. And here we go again!

  6. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    Our debt problems can be solved by targeting niche markets in all segments we operate to attract premium prices across the board. Our government agencies like BNSI can be tasked with developing, monitoring and certifying business compliance with those high standards and list them on an Authentic Bajan High and Premium Standards List.

    For instance, ministry of agriculture can help develop fully organic, chemical free crop production methods so when the BNSI lab tests, they will be certified organic and be in great demand the world over at premium prices.


  7. There was an issue with how this blog updated, hopefully it is visible second time around.


  8. Surely Government must realise that fuel costs affects the costs of most other goods & services that every Bajan need to live & survive … specifically, Food, Utility services, etc.

    We cannot continue on this upward spiral ….. ease up on the high taxes on fuel and the rise in the cost of living will slow down!!!

    Remove ALL taxes on Solar vehicles, Solar panels, etc. and allow us to become less dependent on fossil fuels.but NO … regional Governments seem to think that “more is better”, when it comes to taxes, and always try to tax their way out of problems.

    Finally, when will our Government begin to “tighten their belt”? Less overseas trips, new monuments, etc. ….. and dare I say, big salary Ministers & Consultants???


  9. People know the debt trap that barbadians would face in the future
    However the usual suspect noise makers about all things economic during the past ten years of goverance have suddenly disappeared leaving an open gap of distracted replacements to take control of govt narrative and messages
    Hence loud noises become infused as talking points such as teachers on leave make way
    Now that the burdening debt continues to make a stronghold on the people
    The silence is deafening
    But then again Silence is Golden


  10. It is true which is why a protracted scenario will spell doom for the economy because of the foreign exchange that will have to be used to pay for imports. Look at it like an equation, we continue to burn imported fuel like there is no problem and we are back to dwindling foreign reserves in a situation tourists arrivals although improving, receipts are not at pre covid level.


  11. Lack of productivity would continue to spell economic doom and gloom for Barbados economy and the Barbadian household
    Spending millions building parks that cannot build gainful revenue
    Productivity is the horse that pulls any economy
    Ask China there economy has the formula
    Instead of becoming beggars China pursue a path to place their economy on a path of production
    Maybe China can teach barbadians how to make paper clips
    Paper clips and hair pins are of good use and valuable world wide
    Point being that all the symbols in the world in a small economy does not had up to a hill of beans


  12. How about lack of leadership in all spheres of civil society combined with a passive citizenry.


  13. RE Look at it like an equation, we continue to burn imported fuel like there is no problem and we are back to dwindling foreign reserves in a situation tourists arrivals although improving, receipts are not at pre covid level.
    AN EQUATION HAS TWO CLEARLY SET OUT SIDES
    E.G A x B = AB
    WHAT ARE THE TWO CLEAR SIDES IN YOUR SO CALLED EQUATION


  14. “It should be obvious a large component of USD1.5 billion in foreign reserves is the result of heavy inflows from policy based loans contracted in the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021.”

    I told you so ever since!

    With the massive increase in foreign currency loans, our situation has worsened dramatically. We will not be able to service these loans.

    Since 2008, i.e. for about 15 years, we have had no economic growth at all. Our excise duties and tariffs are far too high, the population is lazy and superstitious (see Corona vaccination), the welfare state is rampant like cancer, rebellious union leaders like the dishonourable senator are terrorising businesses, the native mob is rampaging against minorities at rallies in Bridgetown under the eyes of the government and last but not least, our Taliban rules on Corona are scaring away tourists to other pepper islands.

    There is no hope at all that we will ever grow out of debt. The 1966 Declaration of Independence was not a liberation but a prelude to economic decline, littering of the island, crime and more.


  15. take a look at whats going on in sri lanka……..and they have stuff to sell….your in trouble .Time to raise your exports…..of people.


  16. Ask China there economy has the formula…
    It is called $3/hr wages.


  17. Oil prices will start to fall again after summer. Travel is over am production catches up with demand

    Russia was fighting war and there oppositions supported by USA for donkey ears


  18. Their


  19. There is pent up demand in the global economy because of disruption to supply chain caused by the pandemic. The strategic timing of the Russia Ukraine conflict only serves to heap on the problem SIDs will experience.

  20. William Skinner Avatar

    Professor Don Marshall, says that some of the lower middle class may now be in real danger of being “pauperised”.

    We could not want it said any clearer!’
    If the lower middle is pauperized, it means the ones under that would be economically destroyed.

  21. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Politicians have a finite time in powah, so debt doesn’t faze them, only the cost of servicing that debt. They ‘expect’ to refinance whenever it comes due. It will likely be another’s problem.
    If push comes to shove, you default.
    For inexplicable (political?) reasons “we” have allowed inflation to spike. What happens when Central Banks and Central Government become one.


  22. @Willam

    All the passengers onboard a boat taking on water in the middle of the ocean with a lifeboat with limited capacity will mean what?


  23. Have these 2021 figures got a typo/extra digit (Of the gross debt owed by government, external debt stood at (BDS $millions):

    2020
    3,974.5

    2021(p)
    44,84.4 ??


  24. 44,84.4

    commas in the wrong position
    I should have gone to specsavers


  25. RE All the passengers onboard a boat taking on water in the middle of the ocean with a lifeboat with limited capacity will mean what?

    DEPENDS ON HOW MANY FOLK WERE ON THE BOAT AND THE CAPACITY OF THE LIFE BOAT AND WHAT OTHER RESOURCES WERE AVAILABLE


  26. @ William Skinner April 17, 2022 10:01 AM

    Our so-called middle class only exists thanks to horrendous debts.

    Time to bury the middle class!


  27. Barbados must be one of the most indebted nations on earth. Does anybody know how and where these loans were spent? Did the government ensure that all loans’ monies received were spent frugally and that the maximum value was extracted on their expenditures.

    I Just read in today’s Nation, how yet another bridge was closed in St Andrews. This is the second bridge closure in as many weeks within the same parish.

    Last week we saw Mia visiting a BWA pumping station which provided the island with 30 percent of the islands water output. You guessed it the station was on the point of collapse and required major intensive surgery just to keep it operating.

    Our country has built up unlimited debt and yet our infrastructure remains inadequate and on the point of collapse.

    In this respect we should twin ourselves with Zambia, a country which is on the point of collapse and will soon be owned by foreigners.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/apr/11/blackrock-urged-to-delay-debt-repayments-from-crisis-torn-zambia

  28. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “You guessed it the station was on the point of collapse and required major intensive surgery just to keep it operating.”

    billions of dollars unaccounted for but the pipes that carry life giving water are over a 100 years old, degraded to the point of delivering filth or nothing at all to keep the people alive, and around long before at least 99.9999% of us, they did not see repairing it in the last 40 years as a priority, but every useless parasite/vampire and useless unhealthy thing.. was more important……..

    that alone speaks volumes and for itself…

    but the fowls will tell ya..”we doah drink water, we doan like it”


  29. 40 yrs???
    You don’t know what you talking about

    There was a main replacement program started under the OA government


  30. Please do not let this blog go into a rabbit hole. Both governments have been incompetent replacing old mains over the years. Barbados has a dense and intricate network of water mains known to be over 100 years old and must be systematically replaced by implementing a structured program to do so. We have had a mains replacement project going in recent years but it was overdue because of incompetence. Let us move on. We are quick to dig rabbit holes but ignore the debt challenge because of limited sectors designed to generate foreign exchange in the local economy.

  31. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “Overview of Resources. Zambia’s natural resources include uranium, silver, cobalt, copper, coal, lead, silver, zinc, emeralds and gold. Zambia is also a chief global producer of semiprecious gemstones and cobalt.”

    TLSN…the worse thing you can do is give Black people a title and power over each other….most of them run everything into the ground just to prove how powerful and DUMB they are with their swollen heads……..Zambia was warned for YEARS and still played fast and loose despite knowing those with ulterior motives……..they have no excuse..

    the people complained how they allow others to enter the country, nonblacks and do as they like, now htey will pay the price, no sympathy, leave them to the people..

    Barbados has none either, they had the time and ACCESS to loans…money generated from the treasury and pension fund…

  32. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    What is too much debt? What factors decide the size of the debt? The debt is predominantly local. Why should a debt owed to ourselves be a problem? What was this debt a substitute for? Can we eat our cake and still have it?


  33. @Vincent

    Having our cake and eating it too is separate to having too much debt. The two situations are not meshing.

  34. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ DavidBu
    They do mesh. They are opposites. Why did GoB incur the debts? If you can answer that ,you will see the mesh.


  35. @Vincent

    You would have noted in the blogmaster’s submission there is a mention the need to disrupt consumption spend behaviour. Isn’t this where leadership plays a role?

  36. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ David
    Where are the solutions from the administration?
    Where are the economic management policies?
    Are going to continue blaming the so- called lose decade ?
    Are we going to blame COVID forever?’
    Are we going to blame the war in the Ukraine forever?
    When are we going to admit that the pauperism of the poor started long before the lost decade, COVID or the war in Ukraine ?
    Are we going to blame the citizens and their consumption habits forever?
    Again I ask:
    What is this administration’s economic policy?

  37. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU
    Why do you want to disrupt the consumption of the population? The population needs to consume in order to live. The need to consume drives production and create employment. Consumption is the motivation in the formation of a society/ economy.
    Moreover, can the so called leaders change the population consumption pattern? You assign to them power that they do not have. You are putting Coyote’s proverbial jackass before the cart. We ,the people ,elected the GoB to ensure there is a flow of consumption goods and services. .


  38. @William

    The answers are obvious. This administration has been happy to operate in reactive mode. There is the inkling of a digital policy. One sees sone effort to forge diplomatic and trade relations with non traditional players. One saw an attempt to take a hit with the debt restructure to access policy based loans to help with repairs infrastructure. That said we need to see more, after four years we need to see a more aggressive blueprint how we plan to shift from tourism sector.


  39. @Vincent

    You are aware the saying ‘champagne taste and mauby pockets?’


  40. @Vincent

    You must be aware of your be terms ‘ good and bad debt’. Then there is the lack of good governance where citizens cannot be comfortable monies borrowed has been efficiently allocated and spent.

    #seeauditorgeneralreports

  41. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ David
    And that’s the problem ! There is no coherent economic policy. And until the MOF can present , explain and implement such a plan, we are going nowhere. This is a major disappointment.
    What really are the advisers telling the MOF ? The country is on an economic precipice.
    Mottley appears clueless.

  42. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    William…it gets worse as predicted, but that news will soon catch up…it’s been floating around for weeks…


  43. FrankApril 17, 2022 9:34 AM

    Ask China there economy has the formula…
    It is called $3/hr wages.

    Xxccc
    And what is Barbados US3.50 per hour
    The equivalent of China and yet govt can’t produce a rubber band

  44. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU
    The citizens elected the GoB. I believe their record of efficient management of the Public Finances was a motivating factor. The masses’ preferred drink is not champagne. So that phrase is more applicable to the “meritocracy”.
    Please bear in mind that exogenous factors have not changed significantly over the past four years. Do not expect too much ,unless you want to be disappointed. The world is still as uncertain as in 2020 CE


  45. @William

    The irony is that in the land of the blind the one eye man or woman is king or queen. The seriousness of our predicament can be measured in the fact this government was given another overwhelming mandate. We will not see the fundamental changes we want until leaders emerge at every level in civil society. We are too passive, always relying on a maximum leader. We have allowed the 2008 financial crisis and the ongoing pandemic to go to waste. Tinkering will no longer work.


  46. @William

    The problem is bigger than to focus on the macro. In the 70s and 80s first time employees saved and tried to secure piece of the rock or some investment. Today it is about buying a vehicle. In the same period our governments tried to balance the national budget, these days it is about financing the deficit. Our expectations have become unrealistic to match the current state of affairs.

  47. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “And what is Barbados US3.50 per hour
    The equivalent of China and yet govt can’t produce a rubber band”

    lol….lawd,,,

  48. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU at 3 :37 PM.

    You have now meshed them:
    Balanced Budget,
    Budget for a surplus
    Budget for a deficit.
    Deficits are extinguished by:
    More taxes
    OR
    a cut in expenditure
    OR
    Borrowing.
    Eating your cake and having it relates to having a deficit and not raising taxes. The alternative is to borrow.


  49. I think the old time folk can do better than the Bs + Ds. Lol


  50. @angela coxApril 17, 2022 3:24 PM

    That is why we should halve wages and double the working week. Since the disastrous declaration of independence in 1966, the economic situation has deteriorated dramatically. Once we were the crown jewel of the British Empire, now we are a poverty stricken republic which even cannot afford a proper head of state.

    Indeed, we have one of the best governments in the world. However, this is of little use because the masses are too arrogant and too lazy.

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