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by Kemar J.D Stuart – Economist and Director Business Development , Finance and Investment Stuart & Perkins Caribbean

Government will be forced to decide the fate of Barbados very soon as the decision to enter into another International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme will be publicly known in some days ahead. In my analysis the Prime Minister may seek to table the proposed changes in legislation before September 30th 2022. In the press conference hosted by the PM she indicated that the NIS is not in crisis really but we must act now to save it. The rush to amend pension is the government following the dictates and timelines imposed by the BERT plan endorsed by the IMF.

Prime Minister Mia Mottley on May 13th 2022 told reporters at Ilaro Court that the current programme would end on September 30 , 2022 and discussions would begin once the mission report โ€œpasses the boardโ€ at the end of June.Mr. van Selm said Barbados had reached a staff level agreement with the EFF, following its latest review and once approved by the IMF Board in June, the country would have access to US $23 million in funding.

From the recent NIS political showcase with Actuary Derek Osbourne which caused serious civil & societal discomfort across the country . The GOB is going ahead to alter pension to meet the draconian proposals agreed to by signing the IMF program back in 2018. Pension reform is one of the major agreements the government agreed to enact and to date the government has not lived up to it’s end of the bargain with the iMF as the current IMF program winds up in 23 days and pension reform is still due.

The odd timing chosen by the Prime Minister to raise the NIS and pension reform conversation was not to sensitize the public about the NIS which she categorically stated is not in crisis but we must act now to save it was but a cliche is to hide the force and pressure being applied against Barbados to live up the agreement made with the IMF within the specific dictates and timelines imposed. This is why Bajans may have to work to 72 through no fault of their own.

My prediction is that the government may move swiftly to amend the pension before September 30th to avoid running over into the end of the IMF program. If no decision is made by then this will be an indication of the government’s intent to indeed enter into another IMF program come September 30th and pension reform will be a high priority requirement for the government to enact in the next program. The next program will be more difficult than the first including more cuts to jobs, deeper cuts to pensions especially non-contributory , cuts to SOEs, increased taxes and levies on government services, cuts in budgets to all ministries and to also privatize more government assets such as the GAIA airport which being leased out to an unknown we speak for 40 years and the water authority which is undergoing serious changes to it’s operations as we speak .

Prime Minister Mottley said that โ€œFrom July, we will start discussing. Will we have a successor programme? If so, what type of successor programme? Will we go it on our own or is it time or is it right to go on your own when interest rates are rising globally? Or do you stay in the comfort of concessional interest rates by having a programme or working closely with the other regional development banks and international financial institutions . July and August passed and no discourse took place

The Prime Minister of Barbados mentioned the possibility of a roadshow in September to start to tell our story to the capital markets pointing out โ€œwhether we go back into an IMF Programme or not, we believe that our story, which is a credible story, has to be told, in order to be able toโ€ฆget our way back to investment grade. Barbados was barred from capital markets because of the voluntary international debt default by the Mottley government in 2018 and in 23 days September comes to an end therefore the public should monitor social media over the next 23 days starting september 7th for comments from the Prime Minister surrounding Barbados’ fate in regards to signing another IMF program and proposed NIS reform.


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346 responses to “Countdown to the End of Barbados’ IMF Program”


  1. David

    The Chinese have a national development plan such that who ever is in charge must follow 5, 10, 15, 20 up to 100 years.

    Does Barbados have such a national consensus or is that too communism?


  2. What Pacha said on the lack of sustainable industry is agreed.

    Pointless expecting improvement without this.

    However, all nations are now caught in the cold economic war between the five armies (used in the broadest sense).

    Unfortunately there is no end in sight to this, as the rulers are driven by deep ideological differences and the biggest driver of all, power.

    Some hard years ahead.


  3. @Pacha

    You compare China to Barbados? Is China as vulnerable to exogenous shocks? Does China have an export led economy? What about Chinaโ€™s domestic market to compare to Barbados?


  4. Pacha,

    A national development plan is just the common named long term strategic plan, as you know.

    I agree, any entity, including a government, that does not have a sound plan cannot progress.

    Lack of a strategic plan demonstrates a lack of appreciation for the available opportunities and weaknesses. Worse, that such has not even been considered.


  5. Crusoe

    Yes. But we are divided against ourselves by following a political calendar where every 5 years who plans must changed for political reasons.

    This is what David does not want to confront.

    David

    But weโ€™ve followed other people in the past and currently who were or are vastly bigger than us.

    Scale David, scale!


  6. David,

    I agree with Pacha, of course there should be an exit plan, or at least, an improvement plan. It is obvious.

    And there are measures to address this, which the many expert consultants should have already proposed.

    “Should have”.

    If this is not addressed now, the issues will spiral. I am not sure that everyone appreciates the serious threats that are around the corner. What we have seen thus far are but the top layer.

    Example, civil servant salaries. To be blunt, it will not happen.

    How many ways can one say “de boat tekkin in wata”?

    This is why the “national conversation” is superficial. The issues are existential and need to be addressed as such.

    As I said, there is medicine, but it is bitter. However, if everyone truly understands, it can be swallowed.

    As I said already, it also requires a paradigm shift in culture.

  7. African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Bottomline….they don’t have the intelligence and always hire overpaid consultants with the same disability, and always have their crooked tag-a-long minorities to lay waste to the people’s money. I wont give them the time of day let alone an idea or solution….so they can continue the same self serving shite….greedy and corrupt.


  8. But Waru
    The Chinese experience could be helpful but all they want from China is the money to keep this shiiite going, not to transform it.


  9. For example, are civil servants willing to accept a four day work week instead of a raise in pay?

    But with improved workflow efficiencies and embracing of technology, to become faster and more effective in output?

    That is but one small aspect, but with important cultural changes.


  10. Crusoe
    We agree. Civil service salary increases, as much as we support workers always, do not make economic sense, are merely political.


  11. I welcome the grand plan to remain in the IMF programme. This is our beloved government’s way of ensuring that our naive, native masses continue to be the slaves of international finance capitalism.

    The emancipation of 1834 was a charade. The fact is that our masses have never been more deeply enslaved than they are now. It is more likely that a plantation master will go to heaven than that we will get rid of the debt by traditional means.

    We are left with only one quite extraordinary solution, which puts every government in a dilemma: continue as before or sell people as cheap labour to Qatar in exchange for debt relief. Since our island is heavily overpopulated, this plan should be easy to implement without losing any really valuable manpower. After all, we have enough sleeping civil servants, beggars, welfare recipients and woke activists.

  12. African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “But Waru
    The Chinese experience could be helpful but all they want from China is the money to keep this shiiite going, not to transform it.”

    That is very clear. The dumb as ass negros cant see that far ahead. China just recently one of the poorest countries in the world spent 15 years in Afrika and now about to take over…these backward little negros can’t see the big picture, they need tiefing corrupt minorities to do everything for them and tief everything in the interim because they are hellbent on pushing these tiefing racist demons to the front…..and now everyone knows that they cannot be trusted….they can go fcuk off, i have absololutely no use for any of them…their slaves fowls and pimps are welcome to them…assholes and some really stupid ones too.


  13. @Pacha

    There is no issue with the need for a vision and a plan.


  14. @Crusoe

    Agree with you in theory, however, in the same way we expect government to have an execute a plan, are we sure stakeholders will be aligned given the conspicuous consumption model we have adopted? Remember key sector players in Barbados are controlled by foreign players. How do their strategic objectives align with Barbadosโ€™ national goals? How will this further impact the investment climate.


  15. @Pacha

    If the Chinese are investing and lending to Barbados to grow their influence, they should be vested in critiquing our model? Why would Barbados, a dot in the map risk alienation from the western establishment?


  16. @Crusoe

    The public servants will get their raise and the struggle will continue for declining number of taxpayers.


  17. @ David September 11, 2022 2:37 PM

    We are paying for a bunch of sleepers, underachievers and saboteurs.


  18. David
    One thing we should have learnt from Barrow – friends of all, enemies of none.

    And be bold enough to tell both the Chinese and Americans this in plain words

    Are we independent or not?


  19. David

    The Chinese will not interfere in the internal affairs of Barbados. If government has a project of governance transformation and asked them, then and only then will they entertain it.


  20. @Pacha

    Whether we are independent is relative. Wouldnโ€™t you say the geopolitical landscape had significantly changed since the Barrow era?

  21. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David, on a totally different subject of “an end game plan” I was struck by a blaring headline that world leaders are scambling for invitations to ‘The funeral like no other’; ‘the diplomatic event of the century’ !

    The fact that this grand meetings of so many leaders is so closely dated to another grand event like no other that which we call ‘9-11’ is a highlight: a highlight for all intel services because it’s a highlight for all terrorist organizations!

    And oh btw I have no idea of the validity re the rather perplexing news of Duma elected representatives signing a misguided ‘no confidence’ petition against their leader Putin but I’ll say that this is a difficult unsettling moment… not an ideal climate for attendance at such a spectacle.

    But I am just a cynical old guy who reads too much spy and political fiction/fact stuff, yet I would be suprised if every intel agent from evey service worldwide has not been recalled from any out-of-office leave and guided with one critical mission: prevent any disruptions/assassination attempts during the QEII funeral.

    The Brits and allies will prevail … one demands … as a Lord Mountbatten type sail off into the sunset is just too hellacious to consider!


  22. @ Pachamama September 11, 2022 3:07 PM

    China will not intervene because the political systems of both countries are very similar, so there is no need for intervention at all: strong people’s democracies and with a mighty Supreme Leader at the top. In a way, we are a kind of Chinese People’s Republic of the Caribbean, even if the Chinese work ethic will remain forever unfamiliar to us.


  23. David
    You are a moving target.. Is Eric Williams just as irrelevant?

    Or William Demas.

    What about the British “luminaries” who you are want to quote, are they as irrelevant?


  24. @Pacha

    Their messages are more relevant for that epoch?


  25. David,

    Yes, the foreign player element is important, but these take .ore than they give.

    Not the international business companies, that is a truly symbiotic relationship, but others, who take the cream off the top.

    This is why national and pan Caribbean technology and other service providers are important.

    Truly, telecoms may be the pill to he swallowee, due to rhe vast invedtment needed. We rely on the international supplier.

    The rest, not so much.


  26. David

    Yes. But they cannot be dismissed. Lloyd Best and all were grappling with some of these same issues long before us.


  27. @Pacha

    Not dismissing at all, we have to be intelligent enough to filter what is relevant to current state versus the stuff with a shelf life.

  28. African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    PUBLIC SERVICE:

    Does Emera understand what its own directive and notice from 9AM -4PM means and that we are in the middle of a full blown heat wave with young children and the elderly severely impacted….it’s after 5PM.


  29. You fucking son of a bitch! The queen did not give me an island! My ancestors had a continent full of all the riches you lot kill for!

    This island is a barren rock!

    This barren rock was left to us with no resources to sustain it after the Brits extracted unpaid labour from our ancestors for centuries with which they built up their own countries!

    The rasshole people of Britain have not repaid their debt to my ancestors for their forced labour.

    If our palms are upstretched it is because we are too few in number to take up arms and reclaim what they stole by rasshole force!

    You are a stinking piece of nasty work!

    But yes, it galls me because I would rather tell them all to go to hell and keep their “clean” money. (otherwise known as blood money)

    I would rather we cleanse our minds of all the shite man’s brainwashing and reimagine our region, as we all took the “same trip, on the same ship” and many of us share common ancestors.

    With a little imagination and right thinking, we could overcome.

    But the very David who harps on about conspicuous consumption does not understand from whence it came.

    It is rooted in our cultural buy-in to the shite man’s brainwashing system.

    He wants to have “financial’ conversations to show our literacy. What he fails to acknowledge is there is no way out of this financial debt trap without a change in mindset and culture. There must be national buy-in for this dancing with debtors to be light-footed, twinkle-toed agility and not leaden-footed two left footed farce.

    Crusoe has said it, others have said it, and with the blogmaster’s indulgence I will continue to say it.

    The only way we can extricate ourselves from this morass is with a change in mindset. I would be willing to suffer a drop in my living standard, if I thought it would lead to a sustainable future for Barbadians over the long haul.

    In other words, I can take the bitter medicine, provided that it will cure the illness.

    But who wants to take bitter medicine that cures nothing?

    If that be the case it would be better to eat, drink and be merry until tomorrow we die!


  30. Could somebody please tell me from whence the British got their “clean money”??????

    No matter how they launder it, those blood stains ain’t going nowhere!

    It is robbing and pillaging that made modern Britain. We Africans built it with our blood, sweat and natural resources!

    No stinking shite men like John and Lawson can change what the whole world KNOWS.

    WE REJECT YOUR SHITE MAN’S NARRATIVES.

    P.S. Africans did communicate in their own languages. We were not mute beasts who needed to learn English to survive. In fact, the first university was in Africa.

    Asshole!


  31. “Why would Barbados, a dot in the map risk alienation from the western establishment?”

    There are many black polka dots against a white background, but it seems you are chained by money worries and problems and not the song of flesh and blood freedom of your ancestors spirits

    Jill Jones and Prince – Flesh and Blood (Unreleased)


  32. Prince – Positivity (Demos 1,2 and 3)


  33. Parade – Under the Cherry Moon

    Anotherloverholenyohead ยท Prince

    Prince & The Revolution – Girls & Boys


  34. “Could somebody please tell me from whence the British got their โ€œclean moneyโ€”

    Ownership of slave property was done by the book (of hook and crook using every dirty trick) where purchases were made with trinkets like glass beads, manilla, cowrie shells or manufactured goods with added value like tobacco alcohol guns and their is full accounting paper trail audit of assets which were branded for proof of ownership claim. Only strongest survived the race of slavery and weakest died prematurely with sickness. The pile of bones is high but they were sub-humans as their skin was not white and so were ordained to be ruled by a master race, or so their story goes.


  35. Look you stupid woman if it wasnโ€™t for the British you would be running around in your underwear and making clicks instead of sentences if you donโ€™t want the island you were given protest to give it back. Poor me poor me have you never heard of the boy who cried wolf. Your beggarism disgusts me


  36. The new scourge of the downtrodden and marginalized: they are suffering from โ€œfinancial illiteracy.โ€
    What will the shameless apologists think of next or say in defense of a failing economic policy?
    I hope some fairy godfather or mother turns up and gives us 5 billion USD so that such nonsense will not be written anymore or anywhere else by anybody.
    People broke ; canโ€™t guarantee their children food during the summer vacation and we are being told that they are suffering from financial illiteracy.
    Peace.


  37. End of the Road
    Where Do We Go from Here


  38. wake up and smell


  39. Don’t worry worry yourself
    Stupid white boys doing what stupid white boys do, just fucking with you

    here is some jukebox music
    Pain in My Heart

  40. African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “I hope some fairy godfather or mother turns up and gives us 5 billion USD so that such nonsense will not be written anymore or anywhere else by anybody.”

    first said fairy godfather or mother will have to ask them….wuh dey did wid de 5 or 6 BILLLION DOLLARS OR MORE MISSING FROM THE ECONOMY….and if they can’t answer that…..NOT A DIME..


  41. @ Donna September 11, 2022 7:02 PM

    It’s nice that another person has realised that we can no longer get out of the debt hole by conventional means.

    The next debt cut is only a matter of time. We will never again raise hundreds of millions in the capital market in New York for public financing with our current debt level and the poor outlook. Who would be so insane as to invest their money in wage increases for unproductive civil servants and in order to fake a certain degree of civilisation through electoral gifts?


  42. If a raise is given to the public sector it will be at the expense of the few that will be sent home.

    So in simply terms out of 100 or so, 10 will go home so 90 can get a 5% raise. When you hit groud zero you can’t get blood from stone. The IMF has clearly sent the message when they spoke to the need to now “consolidate government and its expenses.” They could not of made it any simpler than that for us.


  43. P.S. Africans did communicate in their own languages. We were not mute beasts who needed to learn English to survive. In fact, the first university was in Africa.

    Asshole!

    Who let this loose foul mouth animal out of her cage.

    Thinks cursing anyone is her ticket on the blog topic after topic


  44. Lawson,

    The Canadian companies must be trying to climb over the Murcans to get piece of the Guyana action, nuh?

    Murcans get there first.

    Brits musse blue vex they missed that boat. I mean, after installing Buurnham they missed all this oil!.

    Oops.

    Hahaha.


  45. Lawson,

    Looks like a couple of Canucks made it in. John Cullen. Have to do some reading on his background.

    https://oilnow.gy/profiles/companies/jhi-associates-inc/


  46. Wood objects to IMF strategy
    GOVERNMENTโ€™S LATEST BORROWING trip to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) reflects a strategy that will lead to โ€œfurther social and economic disasterโ€ says economist Anthony Wood.
    He was reacting to Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottleyโ€™s revelation last Friday that her administration will be entering a second programme with the IMF when the current Extended Fund Facility programme expires on September 30 which will enable Barbados to access a further US$340 million in loans.
    โ€œDuring the televised news conference the Prime Minister also stated that โ€˜we have been of the view that the cheapest money in town is still at the IMF. In addition to that, it also unlocks other development funds that may be available to us as a nationโ€™. โ€œThis statement cannot be refuted but it reinforces another point made by Professor [Michael] Howard and myself that the continued failure of the Mottley administration to boost economic activity in the productive sectors and the economy generally, will have the administration relying heavily on borrowed money to keep the economy afloat and service our external debts. The โ€˜tax and borrow, and spend indiscriminatelyโ€™ policy which characterises the economic strategy of the administration is unsustainable and is a strategy for further social and economic disaster in the country,โ€ Wood said a statement.
    Harsh measures
    The former member of the ruling Barbados Labour Party said that important information was not told to Barbadians including the unhealthy state of the economy and a preview of harsh measures within the new IMF programme.
    โ€œHowever, what is certain is that the bigticket items which were not addressed during the four-year Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) programme must be undertaken. These include the overhaul of the state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and reform of the public sector pension scheme.
    โ€œThe more stringent dictates of the IMF in the new programme should mandate cuts in unnecessary spending within central government and increased fees for the provision of some government services. The reform measures to restore medium to long-term viability of the National Insurance Scheme must also be implemented with some alacrity,โ€ he stated.
    The former minister during the BLPโ€™s 1994 to 2008 time in office said the reality was that the new IMF programme was unavoidable and resulted in large measure from the failure of the economic and financial management of the economy by the BLP administration.
    โ€œWhile exogenous shocks like the coronavirus pandemic, price increases in strategic commodities and in more recent times the war in Ukraine, have had an adverse impact on the Barbadian economy, persistent inappropriate
    economic and financial policies have exacerbated the problem. The time for procrastination, expensive public relations and wastage by the Mottley administration is over and Barbadians must brace themselves for a heavy dose of austerity,โ€ he warned.
    Mottley, he said, had implicitly admitted that Barbados ranked among those countries struggling with debt when, in providing justification for the new IMF programme, when she said that Barbadians were living in a time where in excess of 40 countries were on the brink of โ€œdebt difficulties and debt crisesโ€. (AC)


    Source: Nation


  47. Debt transparency a must
    AS BARBADOS PREPARES to enter a new arrangement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) it must ensure there are no transparency gaps.
    The Government must tell the public about the countryโ€™s entire national debt, who we owe and when these debts are due. The citizens of this country need to know the risks they, their children and even their grandchildren will face as a result of these debts, whether to foreign institutions or governments.
    In 2018 we borrowed US$290 million from the IMF and have sought US$340 million on this occasion. There must be clarity on whether we have repaid the first loan and whether the projections are that the new loan will be refunded in three years.
    This issue must not be shrouded in fancy economic terms to turn off most people. Indeed, the Government must say if it is considering โ€œevergreeningโ€ existing loans by renewing them when they become due.
    Barbadians understand the precarious situation the Mia Amor Mottley administration faces given the unexpected and heavy debt caused
    by the COVID-19 pandemic. They also know of the high levels of inefficiencies at many of the state-owned businesses and the drain on taxpayers.
    This is the time to give full disclosure as to the true and exact amounts borrowed and spent during the pandemic and the full liabilities of the statutory corporations. There must be no hidden debts for either the civil service or the parastatal operations.
    Barbadians need this level of openness for their peace of mind, to understand the countryโ€™s financial health, its economic stability and the resultant risks they face at the individual level.
    Such an approach is essential for the Government as it urges a cagey public to buy the BOSS (Barbados Optional Savings Scheme) Plus bonds, given the likely reluctance from commercial banks, insurance companies and credit unions about investing in large sums of Government paper in a volatile environment.
    This newspaper understands and agrees with the decision to approach the IMF for foreign exchange support but wants the Government to lay out a plan to address certain fundamental issues the country faces.
    There is a need for a comprehensive sustainable plan to grow the economy to earn foreign exchange over the next decade, create jobs, fight inflation, and address poverty alleviation.
    As we seek to attract and retain international companies in Barbados we must readily meet their foreign exchange requirements, including repatriation of dividends.
    Barbados is on an economic tightrope given how international monetary policies will impact us when interest rates are raised in our main source markets, whether it is in the purchase of goods and services, including tourist arrivals. At the same time, local consumers and businesses are stretched while rising bad debts are a reality.
    In such circumstances, the Government needs to outline the countryโ€™s debt stock and the related terms of those agreements.
    The national debt is at an elevated level and it worries many citizens.
    This
    is the time to give full disclosure as to the true and exact amounts borrowed and spent during the pandemic and the full liabilities of the statutory corporations.

    Source: Nation Editorial (12/9/2022)

  48. ๐ŸŒ Magnificent a.k.a Magno โ€“ Yu Heard Formula: Cโ‚‚โ‚Hโ‚ƒโ‚€Oโ‚‚ IUPAC ID: (โˆ’)-(6aR,10aR)-6,6,9-trimethyl- 3-pentyl-6a,7,8,10a-tetrahydro- 6H-benzo[c]chromen-1-ol [[[ONE LOVE ONE WORLD โ™ก โ™ฅ๐Ÿ’•โค๐Ÿ˜˜ ๐ŸŒ]]] Avatar
    ๐ŸŒ Magnificent a.k.a Magno โ€“ Yu Heard Formula: Cโ‚‚โ‚Hโ‚ƒโ‚€Oโ‚‚ IUPAC ID: (โˆ’)-(6aR,10aR)-6,6,9-trimethyl- 3-pentyl-6a,7,8,10a-tetrahydro- 6H-benzo[c]chromen-1-ol [[[ONE LOVE ONE WORLD โ™ก โ™ฅ๐Ÿ’•โค๐Ÿ˜˜ ๐ŸŒ]]]

    Ronnie Obama and Newspapers are missing the point

    here’s the joint…

    “BRB is doing well..”
    .. in it’s debt management program
    it’s head is still underwater but is still managing to breathe and survive
    and needs to remain being careful and frugal in spending

    extra funds are needed for
    infrastructure investment
    maintaining debt repayments
    a safety net for any unforeseen problems

    The Glamorous Life

  49. African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright โ“’ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha…ah heard world leaders are BANNED from flying private jets to UK for Elizabeth’s funeral…..ah guess economy class and first class on commercial planes will have to do..

    take them down a couple pegs, no showing off they wheeled in on their best friends jets, no bringing in friends family and buddies, only leaders and their SPOUSES are allowed…

    that must have put a dent in a lot of elaborate plans….

    wait until things really get going, am sure we will hear much more..


  50. @ Donna

    Suck it up girl, the bottom of the barrel is getting closer, only then when the POPULACE starts to starve, like the African homeland, will changes “start” to appear, these changes however will likely not be to your liking.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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