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The following is an update from a BU correspondent with a few edits applied by the blogmaster. It is important we maintain focus on the management of the economy. It is encouraging to observe in recent days the Nation newspaper has been guided to also focus on the economy and related news as Barbadians immerse themselves in matters related to celebrating Christmas. The challenges facing the country will be waiting patiently for a return to more sober ways.
The Estimates for 2022/2023 confirm the common practice in recent decades of successive governments constrained to fund ugly deficits to support our consumption behaviour, graft, financial incompetence/mismanagement exposed in annual Auditor General Reports and Central Bank Reports. The estimates for 2022/2023 read a shortfall of $173. million dollars.
David, Blogmaster

On the 16 December 2022 in parliament Minister in the Ministry of Finance, Ryan Straughn delivered the mid-year review of Barbados’ fiscal performance from March to September, as is required by the Financial Management Act passed in 2019. The review consists of important information on spending, interest payments on debt and current debt levels. Here is a video of what the Minister had to say at about 6 minutes in https://youtu.be/icgJs7wFN0I and the document laid in parliament with the title MINISTERIAL STATEMENT HONOURABLE RYAN STRAUGHN M.P. MINISTER IN THE MINISTRY OF FINANCE.

The good news is that Barbados’s debt to GDP ratio is on a downward trend, this is after it increased during the pandemic, The Debt to GDP ratio now stands at 126 % which is below the 178% in 2018.

See Related blog

Policy Performance and Outlook (Part 2)

This is consistent with what some had predicted with the economy producing higher growth this year which is materialising due to significantly higher tourism arrivals with growth projected to be at around 10% this year.

Of concern to many in the mid-year review is that the government will run a fiscal surplus of 2% which is larger that the original 1% target. This higher fiscal surplus is due to larger than expected corporate tax intake and transaction tax (e.g. VAT ) intake due to higher inflation and the fact that government spending this year so far is actually 9% lower than originally projected.

The current global environment remains challenging for developing countries due to rising global interest rates and a strong US dollar which put a strain on debt servicing costs and causes Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) outflows since bond investors can now get higher interest returns in developed countries with less risk. This environment can be seen in challenges faced by Sri Lanka, Ghana and Pakistan.

An overall assessment of the Mottley administration’s handling of the economy is – so far so good.The biggest area of concern however is the fall in the Government’s capital works programme. In the previous fiscal year it was felt that the administration did well to get it to about 4 percent of GDP. which was the highest since the mid 2000s, but it has fallen again in this fiscal year to only $55 million thus far. Whatever bottlenecks the administration needs to remove to get it going again it needs to do so, given that public capital investment is tied to competitiveness in many ways.

Related economic activity

In related developments, a UK media report about Scottlands’s trade mission to Barbados and the work that is being done between companies from both countries, and developments with respect to the relationship between Barbados and Rwanda and also Kenya and the number of Barbadian entrepreneurs that are now going on these missions. This is where the rubber meets the road on economic diversification, Barbadians should be glad to see that we are now finally moving beyond talk and into action. Now that trade policy seems to be improving, the next step is to deal with Education Reform at home.


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101 responses to “A Sober Mid Year Review of the Barbados Economy Required”


  1. @Bush Tea

    This lowly blogmaster will always hesitate to philosophize about anything with you given your wisdom – especially about things unknown LOl. This one time let us suggest we humans love the comfort which comes from long standing arrangements. Unfortunately things never remain the same. We live and we die.


  2. @ David
    No philosophizing needed Boss.
    Just ban Kikiโ€™s donkey period! .. and let him go and monopolise the BLP blog with his shaving cream.

    This is a very simple case of ‘disruption by frigging upโ€™ that can be easily solved with a ban in his donkey, and a restriction of one damn pseudonym per IP.

    You clearly donโ€™t realize how much BU was pissing off the brass bowl authorities – PRIOR to Kikiโ€™s DDos type of assault.
    The old David would have stamped out that shiite long ago…

    Tired of the lotta Kiki shiite now…

  3. 60% Investing Formula Avatar
    60% Investing Formula

    Stocks are a Risk exposure and you should claw back your money asap
    I use a 60% investment formula (I personally developed)
    where when your stocks go up 60% you sell 60% holdings
    which means you get 96% (160% x 60%) of your investment money back and sit on 40% stocks that cost 4% of original investment, (ignoring buy and sell fees)


  4. Thanks for your feedback, agree with you he has been overdoing it. Let us see what the new year brings.

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Not encouraging shite. Rather the darling Tesla is in the same declining basket. And EV are predicted to be in over supply come summer-fall with many players.


  6. @60%
    If only I could get one to the 60% level ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚


  7. “If only I could get one to the 60% level ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚”

    perhaps you should have an awakening realisation the stock game is a scam
    fund managers invest millions of other peoples money for 10% or less profits (10% of 1 million is a good turnaround)
    when you realise that they also sell short stocks they don’t own you should get out the kitchen
    the banking game is all about fees and treasury’s overnight deposits during settlement


  8. @scammer
    exactly why I never get to 60? Take the gains and reload.

  9. 100 dollar bill y'all Avatar
    100 dollar bill y’all

    “exactly why I never get to 60? Take the gains and reload.”

    so how much will you invest in one punt
    small $100s punts are eaten up with fees and commissions


  10. @NO
    Maxar is a publicly traded company on the New York Stock Exchange. Advent plans to pay out investors at $53 a share, which Advent notes is โ€œ129% over Maxarโ€™s closing stock price of $23.10 on December 15, 2022, the last full trading day …

    The price is now $51.00 .. There is some litigation as well.. some think $53.00 was not enough.


  11. Thou shalt not covet but try to find a lookalike.lol


  12. @TheO
    I have owned Maxar on-off for the past 20yrs. I made good money on several of its run ups over the years. When I bailed in Feb, it was at a loss, like $5/share. Like most, it fell by +/-30% by Oct. It was on my short list to buy in the $27 range (Cdn$ it also trades on the TSX). It has always had great technology (my limited opinion) but never monetized it fully. When I asked friends in the inv buzz for their thoughts in Oct, and all said NO to Maxar, that’s all I needed to know? Hence why it was pure luck that I got back in.


  13. I don’t have advisers I pay. Trades are $7.99 a pop. Negligible costs these days.
    2022 has been tough. Been playing reporting pops. Won 7/10. The last one, I was lucky my stop just cost me $5/share. It was LuLu and it’s numbers were ok, but it dropped like $50(>15% in one day?) Would have been great playing the drop? But I didn’t. Shit happens.


  14. The Question asked was how much do invest in a trade
    but that is your business so under no obligation to Answer


  15. Today’s Nation Editorial

    2023 โ€“ a rocky road ahead
    As we enter the New Year, most Barbadians can look back with pride at some of our achievements during 2022. There has been no major economic dislocation although Barbadians have had to endure some hardships and high prices during the year.
    We are technically still in the Christmas season which is supposed to be synonymous with joy. The familiar carols proclaim this message, with Joy To The World resounding in many churches, while the more secular counterpart encourages others to have A Holly Jolly Christmas.
    It is often said that the real emotions of the season are a bit more complex. For many people, late December produces a kind of โ€œtoxic brew of nostalgia and melancholyโ€. Itโ€™s perhaps difficult not to remember loved ones missing from the holidays. It is also important to spare a thought for those going through those ranges of emotions.
    All people, even children, move on, grow apart or pass on โ€“ all these hit home with a special poignancy at this time of year.
    Notwithstanding, Government
    this year has tried its best to mitigate the impact of the high prices on fuel and some targeted items in the supermarkets for a while.
    As a country, we are still relying heavily on a good winter tourist season to pull us through a difficult patch as Tuesdayโ€™s Daily Nation clearly indicated. It stated that Government will have to fork out $1.5 billion to pay creditors this financial year alone. This was detailed in the midyear Budget review for the period April to September 2022 which was produced by the Ministry of Finance, Economic Affairs and Investment and laid in the House of Assembly on December 16.
    The review noted that Government was facing a $379 million budget deficit in the last half of the current financial year and debt payment totalling $500 million.
    Minister Straughn said that โ€œsignificant financing is needed to meet this gap and is expected to be met by domestic and external fundingโ€.
    It is clear that Government is unable to extricate itself from the twin evils of debt and deficit. This situation comes on the heels of an interesting exchange between two distinguished economists in last weekโ€™s Midweek Nation.
    We should point out that, invariably, agreement with a given statement
    or opinion strongly depends on its attribution. Economists were more likely to agree with a statement if it was attributed to a mainstream source than a heterodox one.
    In their public response to an International Monetary Fund (IMF) debt sustainability analysis which assessed the overall risk of Government debt stress as moderate and public debt as sustainable, this dichotomy was played out.
    Professor of Finance at the University of the West Indies, Justin Robinson said that while Government was on a path to reach its target of 60 per cent debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio by 2035, there are risks involved but that indeed the debt was โ€œtoo highโ€ and public finances have to be managed to get us to a lower level of debt.
    Professor Emeritus Michael Howard was slightly less diplomatic, saying the IMF owed Barbados an explanation on how the debt could be labelled as sustainable in the face of the global threats of war and inflation.
    The consensus between the economists is the same though expressed differently: the debt is too high. One thing is certain: the road ahead in 2023 is going to be rocky. Fiscal discipline is critical.


  16. For some things, my head is extremely hard. I have attempted to understand ‘options’ but I can never get it.

    I believe the book is right next to my book on how to play the guitar.

    I buy and hold …


  17. man’s life is like a river that does not know the vastness of ocean it journeys to join

    I assume (guess) Barbados does not have any real hills or rivers or an Underground in a literal or metaphorical sense

    “to utter in a low voice, repeat internally, mutter”
    ‘what is true worship’ and what is the nature of God’

    Japji Recited in English

  18. Financial Jargon Avatar

    I have attempted to understand โ€˜optionsโ€™ but I can never get it.

    An option is a derivative (not in primary market) that allows you to purchase stock in the future at a given price.


  19. The long and short of it is that you are old fashion. @TheO

    You prefer to carry a long position. Good luck with that approach in these times.


  20. “You prefer to carry a long position. Good luck with that approach in these times.”

    Are you inferring Theorcracy is anal
    (*) lasting for an immeasurably or indefinitely long period of time.


  21. Zero-sum game is a mathematical representation in game theory and economic theory of a situation which involves two sides, where the result is an advantage for one side and an equivalent loss for the other. In other words, player one’s gain is equivalent to player two’s loss, therefore the net improvement in benefit of the game is zero.

    If the total gains of the participants are added up, and the total losses are subtracted, they will sum to zero.


  22. @ David

    The arrivals are encouraging let’s hope the spend is there as well. Hopefully we can return to 2019 -2020 numbers finally this year.


  23. @John A

    The blogmaster is more concerned about spend.


  24. No surprise here.

    Donโ€™t expect cost of living reprieve – economist: https://barbadostoday.bb/2022/12/30/dont-expect-cost-of-living-reprieve-economist/


  25. Min 50k. Unless I’m adding to a position.


  26. At the racetrack less the 15% cut the track takes. $1M bet 850k returned. (less than zero) But these governments are flooding the markets with money.


  27. Experts say there is the possibility that cost of living may may increase in new year

    โ€˜SLIM CHANCESโ€™ OF PRICE EASE CHANCESโ€™ EASE
    By Colville Mounsey
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com B arbadians hoping that 2023 will bring some ease in the cost of living crunch impacting the country are likely to be disappointed.
    In fact, if the predictions of economists Jeremy Stephen and Professor Michael Howard hold true, Barbadians might find themselves paying even more for goods and services next year.
    Meanwhile, president of the Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI), Anthony Branker, said the business community was expecting to deal with more of the same global supply chain issues in the new year.
    No abatement in sight
    Stephen told the Sunday Sun that with no abatement in sight to the global supply chain challenges, unless the country recognised the type of growth that could offset these cost, chances of an ease in prices are slim.
    โ€œI donโ€™t think that Barbadians appreciate one fact well enough and that is you live on a small island and the cost of living will always go up because you live where constrained supply is a fact of life. This is going to be the case unless somebody magically changes the laws of economics overnight, where we can expect some great return of growth that more than subsidises our cost of living or begins to abate the cost of living going forward. So I can put Barbadians on notice now that prices are going to go up, it is just a matter of how much,โ€ said Stephen, who is a former banking and finance lecturer at the University of the West Indies.
    โ€œGiven how the tourism season has performed thus far and the fact that it has not returned to prepandemic travelling behaviours, we can expect that next year is going to be a bit of a struggle if current trends continue. Maybe itโ€™s because the region is still a very expensive destination compared to other newly opened and promoted markets. The debt levels are still too high, so growth is likely to be tepid,โ€ he added.
    Concurring with Stephenโ€™s outlook was Professor Emeritus at the University of the West Indies, Michael Howard, who said that current global challenges stemming from the war in Ukraine and the poor performance of the British economy were likely to be a wet blanket on economic activity at home while continuing to heighten inflation.
    โ€œThings are not going to be as good as one would have hoped for. The world economy is not expected to perform very well. One cannot expect exceptional growth in the world economy and because Barbados is a small island, anything that affects the world economy will affect us. So I definitely think that the inflation will continue, it is only a matter of how high it will go. I also foresee continued anxiety with the behaviour of the British economy and the war in Ukraine. These anxieties are likely to have a dampening effect on economic activity next year,โ€ Howard said.
    On the other hand, Branker indicated that the business sector was well aware of the continued impact of the exogenous shocks, but noted that as was the case in 2022, the business sector again stood ready to work with Government and other stakeholders to come up with workable solutions in 2023.
    โ€œThe BCCI, in response to Governmentโ€™s efforts to help ease the impact of the rising cost of living on Barbadians, led the negotiation with Government to establish the social compact which limited the mark-up on a basket of items.
    โ€œWe laud the members of the Chamber, particularly retailers and distributors,
    who have continued to adhere to the terms of the Compact, while faced with the impact of supply chain challenges on their businesses.โ€
    Unstable
    โ€œIt is anticipated that 2023 will continue in the mould of 2022 as long as the world continues to be in such an unstable state. We, however, plan on increasing our relevance to the business community as we seek to build on the gains of 2022. We will seek to be top of mind as we enhance other areas of collaboration for all our members and continue to develop harmonious approaches to business solutions. We foresee working with Government directly and at the Social Partnership level in carving out the way forward for business and all Barbadians,โ€ Branker said.
    His view was wholeheartedly supported by former chairman of the BCCI and prominent businessman Eddie Abed, who told the Sunday Sun that the sector was โ€œhoping for the best but preparing for the worstโ€.
    โ€œWe are not expecting any improvement in prices next year. The signs are that cost of living in terms of non-essential goods may have stabilised or, in some instances, have started to come down. It is such a precarious situation, and the global market is so unstable that you canโ€™t bank on it. We have to first see a few months of stability and certainty before we can say that we anticipate a downturn in prices. As long as the war in Europe continues the price of oil will remain high and that affects everything. So, in a nutshell, we are preparing for things to remain the same or [get] even slightly worse,โ€ said Abed.

    Source: Nation


  28. STINT OVER
    Greenidge back in US confident of economic growth
    By Colville Mounsey colvillemounsey@nationnews.com

    As Government executes a second Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) programme, it will be without the guidance of one of the key architects of the International Monetary Fund-approved plans.
    Dr Kevin Greenidge, who was seconded from the IMF to serve as Senior Economic Advisor to the Mia Amor Mottley administration for four-and-ahalf years, has returned to his substantive post in Washington in the United States, where he spoke to the Sunday Sun in a telephone interview.
    However, the IMF Senior Economist assured Barbadians that BERT 2022 was well on course for similar success as its predecessor BERT 2018, even without his presence. He also predicted that 2023 was likely to be Barbadosโ€™ strongest year since the economic recovery effort began.
    โ€œThis is not a one-man show, we were part of an economic team, a team of very competent persons, led by the Prime Minister. The team is more than capable to continue the work that we began and to move the country to where it needs to be. In addition, over the last four-and-a-half years we have continued to build capacity in the public sector, we have also continued to engage the private sector. The way I see it is that it is not just the Government and a few people pushing BERT, it is the entire Barbados population,โ€ said Greenidge, who officially ended his secondment yesterday.
    Par for the course
    He said that having a second IMF programme was essentially par for the course for countries that have availed themselves of the facility because the types of structural reforms necessary cannot be done in four years. He pointed out that the setbacks under the COVID-19 pandemic made a successor programme almost inevitable.
    โ€œWe have had the experience collectively over the last four-and-a-half years and we have seen that we can get success, we have achieved it under
    BERT 2018 and there is no better encouragement than being able to taste success. So, I am really confident that BERT 2022 will be successful,โ€ he added.
    However, Greenidge cautioned the country that now was not the time to rest on its laurels, noting that like the rest of the world, Barbados would be beset by a number of external challenges next year.
    He said that given the groundwork already laid, Barbados was in a strong position to meet those challenges and still achieve significant growth.
    โ€œIn my view, 2023 is going to be one of our best years on record. I agree that there are a lot of vulnerabilities and challenges internationally with the continued high levels of prices. There is the potential de-globalisation where we are seeing tensions between the west and east, where we see countries starting to adopt the position of doing business with countries that are friendly to them. These types of issues are going to continue to put pressure on global supply chains.โ€
    โ€œSo, there are a lot of headwinds in the international arena, but I think Barbados is in a very strong position to weather those headwinds and to get amazing growth in next year. We have some work still to do such as the reform of the SOEs (state-owned enterprises) to make them more fit for purpose,โ€ Greenidge said.
    Incremental surplus
    Under BERT 2022, Barbados will be aiming for an incremental primary surplus which starts at two per cent surplus next year. He explained that the fiscal targets were not likely to compound the international challenges, as the primary balances would have been calibrated to have enough space for Government to step up capital investment to about $500 million per year. He said that this was the highest level of capital investments on record. โ€œIt is capital investment that drives growth. So, first of all, the path to the primary balances leaves more than sufficient space for the Government to invest in the economy and to get the growth working with the private sector. Secondly, the space for capital spending allows the country to adjust accordingly in case there is shock, so it is a comfortable path in my view,โ€ the economist said.
    Looking back on his time in Barbados, Greenidge
    said his was an opportunity which many in his position at the IMF seldom get, namely, to apply their skills to help their home countries.
    โ€œWhen you get an opportunity like this to come to your own country it is different. Usually, the IMF does not allow you to work in your home country and that is the reason I took leave. It was a rewarding experience because it directly affects me, every policy advice impacts my family, my friends and the people around me. So I have a vested interest in giving the best policy advice and I am proud to have done exactly that,โ€ Greenidge said.

    Source: Nation


  29. Petra Roach. Bajan success in Grenada tourism.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2023/01/02/tourism-numbers-grenada/


  30. Are we losing our ‘place’ in the English speaking Caribbean?
    Are we still a part of the “Big Four” or have we now lower on the list?
    I have been following the news and it would appear that we are in reverse gear whilst other islands are actively moving forward. I have already commented that in stories where I expected to see the word “Barbados” I am now seeing one of the ‘smaller’ islands mentioned.

    Watching the press initiatives and new deals being announced, I am seeing the fancy footwork of the Ali shuffle as our island is moving backward. We need to stop navel gazing and look at how our neighbors are making progress. We talk of punching above our weight whilst our neighbors are moving up to higher weight classes.

    “Ladies and gentlemen in this corner is the a flyweight who hits like a bantamweight, and his opponent is a middleweight who hits like a middleweight”.
    Perhaps we need to tackle the real problems facing is instead of announcing esoteric initiatives that will benefit a few.

    Solution

    Perhaps we need to tackle the real problems facing is instead of announcing esoteric initiatives that will benefit a few.
    Trade in digital, cryptocurrency …… for
    Bread and butter! Meat and potatoes!


  31. Based on what is happening with digital currencies globally I for one would place little confidence in them taking us anywhere at this time.


  32. Prime Minister Mottley using the R word.

    Message of hope

    PM: We need to build resilience as individuals and as nation
    PRIME MINISTER MIA AMOR MOTTLEY remains optimistic that 2023 โ€œwill be a better yearโ€ for Barbados.
    Yesterday, she delivered a New Year message in which she spoke about the economy, crime and the environment, noting that 2023 will be a time to โ€œbuild resilienceโ€ while at the same time warning that โ€œthe headwinds are still out there internationallyโ€.
    โ€œLast year, we were able to grow in a way that we anticipated, recovering from the very, very difficult decline of 2020 when we saw our economy decline by almost 14 per cent.
    โ€œIndeed, last year we have been able to grow and I am asking us to ensure that if we can stay the course, that we will continue to do so again.
    โ€œThe truth is that the headwinds are still out there internationally, but we equally know that if we work carefully and are careful stewards of all that we do, we can in fact make it,โ€ she said.
    Working together
    Mottley said that over the course of the last few months, Government had been engaging with stakeholders as well as the Social Partnership, โ€œrecognising that no matter how much a Government may want us to grow, no matter how much its Prime Minister may want us to grow, that ultimately it depends on all of us working together and making that definable difference to help the needle moveโ€.
    The Prime Minister added: โ€œWe are at a difficult point in our countryโ€™s development, largely because the world is at a difficult point in its development.
    โ€œWhat is required of us in 2023 is to build resilience; to build resilience at a personal level, at a community level; to build resilience as a nation, to continue the structural reforms that weโ€™ve been doing, recognising that over the course of the last four years, yes, we have had to say to you to stay the course and to hold on and to hold on tight.โ€
    While Mottley asked people โ€œto share the burden wherever there is a bountyโ€, she said those who were experiencing hardship would be supported by Government.
    In terms of violence and gun crimes, she stated: โ€œWeโ€™ve put resources behind being able to do more trials at a quicker rate, being able to give the police and law enforcement that which they need to keep the country safe.โ€
    However, she added that families and communities needed to also play their part โ€œbecause guns donโ€™t talk and guns donโ€™t walkโ€.
    Mottley, who has been speaking globally about environmental issues, urged Barbadians to accept responsibility for their environment.
    โ€œThe next 362 days in 2023 can be a period where Barbadians distinguish ourselves by ensuring that we work together to fight off the headwinds internationally.
    That would suggest a very, very difficult year again. We know that we have much to do domestically in terms of our housing programme, in terms of our renewable energy programmes.
    โ€œWe know that we will continue to boost our tourism and international business sector, but I donโ€™t want us to focus just on these macro things in terms of the sectoral approaches. I want us to focus on what each of us individually can do to make this country better, to make our communities better, to make our family lives better,โ€ she said.

    Source: Nation


  33. Living in Barbados


  34. https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/01/05/no-regional-matches-allocated-to-the-island-by-cwi/

    This is a continuation of a comment that I made. No matter how uyou interpret it, Barbados is moving out of the top 4. This is manifesting itself in several different ways.

    From BT
    โ€œI think it is a clear indication from Cricket West Indies that Barbados is being ostracized. You cannot have Barbados as a leading nation in the region not โ€ฆ. host meaningful matchesโ€ฆ. I would like to know from Cricket West Indies who sets out the fixtures and who decides where these games are being played,โ€ Wallace said.

    Spin if you want. Reality is a bitch.


  35. https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/01/05/house-settlement/
    “It appears as though Member of Parliament for St Michael East Trevor Prescod wonโ€™t have to fight to keep houses being built in his constituency for residents there after all.”

    Me, I got a likkle 2×3 that the wind could blow thru and wind from a fan could blow way. I want uh spot to rent and tekking my house to this constituency. This Barbadus thing en wukking uh me. I’m now from St Michael East. I fuh Prescod.


  36. You know, that I do not like Ralphie (Gonsalves), especially after he used the powers of the state against that young girl “Yugge Farrel”. But as I read the news, I am beginning to like the man.

    https://stluciatimes.com/150119/2023/01/st-vincent-buying-pre-fab-houses-from-guyana/

    No fancy speeches; no outrageous promises for 10,000 houses; just delivering meat and potatoes …

    Say what you like, the man brekking into the Big 4.


  37. TheOGazerts on January 5, 2023 at 1:21 PM said: โ€œThis is a continuation of a comment that I made. No matter how you interpret it, Barbados is moving out of the top 4. This is manifesting itself in several different ways.โ€

    โ€œSpin if you want. Reality is a bitch.โ€
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Seems as though โ€˜The O Guyโ€™ is sadly losing his ability to think reasonably and rationally. Perhaps it may be as a result of him having โ€˜too much time on his handsโ€™ nowadays.
    And, I may have to reluctantly place him in the same category of certain persons who post excessively to BU.

    His above comment isn’t FAIR.

    Unfortunately, he hasnโ€™t placed the situation in its proper perspective and may have PURPOSELY OVERLOOKED an important point made in the BT article he alluded to.
    That โ€œThe BCA, under Riley, has had previous run-ins with CWI under its present leadership.โ€

    It is a known fact current CWI president Ricky Skerritt and vice-president Dr. Kishore Shallow are not too fond of former president, Dave Cameron.

    BCA president Conde Riley publicly supported Cameron in his re-election bid as president of CWI.

    โ€˜The BCA did not support the candidature of president Ricky Skerritt and vice-president Dr Kishore Shallow in the elections that saw former president Dave Cameron unseated.โ€™
    โ€˜And Riley was highly critical of Skerritt and Shallow when the coaching staff and selectors were dismissed just weeks before the World Cup in England.โ€™

    On Saturday, October 26, 2019, CWI announced the schedule for the tours to the Caribbean of New Zealand and South Africa. No matches were scheduled for Kensington Oval.
    Some people believe

    Recall on Friday, June 26, 2020, Cameron confirmed was seeking to succeed Shashank Manohar of India as chairman of the International Cricket Council (ICC), which wouldโ€™ve required him to have the support of two full ICC members.
    Cameron was proposed by the United States of America Cricket Association (USACA) to be chairman of ICC and needed a second and final nomination, which he hoped wouldโ€™ve come from CWI.
    The US Cricket Hall of Fame wrote to the world body recommending Cameron as the man for the jobโ€ฆโ€ฆ and CWI asking the Board to nominate him.

    Skerritt and Shallow refused to support him.

    In fact, on Monday, June 29, 2020, during the Nationwide Sports Show in Jamaica, Shallow made it clear Cameron would not be getting his support.

    Riley held the opinion CWI should support Cameron. While speaking on Tuesday, June 30 edition of โ€˜Mason & Guests,โ€™ Riley said Shallow โ€˜spoke out of turn.โ€™
    Supporting Cameron โ€˜is not a personal decision. It is a Cricket West Indies decision where all the directors would sit and decide if Dave Cameron is the right man for the job.โ€™
    The โ€˜governing body of cricket in the region needed to support their own.โ€™

    There are several more examples.

    Also remember, on Thursday, November 9, 2017, Antiguaโ€™s PM Gaston announced in Parliament that the Government of Antigua and Barbuda and the then West Indies Cricket Board (WICB), would jointly purchase the Stanford Cricket Ground and Sticky Wicket restaurant for US$7.5M.
    Browne said the WICB would contribute US$4.5M, giving them 60% shareholdingsโ€ฆโ€ฆ and the Antiguan government the remaining US$3M.
    The PM also said he believed the joint agreement โ€˜would help grow the islandโ€™s economy and keep the WICBโ€™s headquarters in Antigua.โ€™

    The property was subsequently renamed ‘Coolidge Cricket Ground’โ€ฆโ€ฆ and it is interesting to note that all or the majority of WI cricket teamโ€™s practice matches are played at that venue, as well as several international tournaments.


  38. Fewer breaks
    Govt reducing concessions to recoup lost revenue
    by COLVILLE MOUNSEY
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com
    BARBADIANS ARE BEING put on notice that starting this year Government will be reducing the amount of import tariff and tax concessions granted.
    Noting that the specifics on the cutbacks would be made public at a later date, Minister in the Ministry of Finance Ryan Straughn said Government was taking stock of the areas where revenue was being lost. He explained that this would be necessary to manage the fiscal budget, as Government shoots for a surplus under the Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) Programme 2022.
    The minister made the comments while responding to recent warnings by economists Jeremy Stephen and Professor Michael Howard, both of whom predicted that additional taxes were likely to be on the cards for 2023.
    However, Straughn made it clear that the consultations with the ministries that would determine the Budget and any possible revenue-raising measures, were still in progress. He also said that while the ruling administration was comfortable with its current tax posture, it was also focused on raising revenue through growth as well as reducing expenditure through reforms.
    โ€œOne of the things we are also examining in 2023 is the quantum of exemptions that are given as a mechanism to be able to close the revenue gap. In the next 12 to 18 months we would have reduced and better streamlined concessions. โ€œThis is to ensure that we get the right balance by looking at the amount of revenue that we are foregoing and making sure that there is greater compliance within that space in order to help with the fiscal situation,โ€ said Straughn, who disclosed that the Customs and Excise Department had already started the groundwork.
    โ€œWe are working with Customs, and with the upgrade to Asycuda World, we are having access to that data now in almost real time. It gives us an opportunity to have a better look at what is processing through the system, and we are conscious that we have to address that as part of the mix of being able to raise any revenue.
    โ€œSo compliance in this area is going to take a more aggressive posture. It was our intention to start that specific set of work in 2020 but of course the focus was on COVID,โ€ he added.
    However, Stephen, a former banking and finance lecturer at the University of the West Indies, said the country was not likely to realise the type of growth necessary. He cautioned that it was likely to come down to a choice between accumulating more debt or raising taxes.
    โ€œGrowth has returned but not in the sense that on its own it is enough to lessen our debt burden. So, in my view, the Government will be left with a choice of whether to increase the taxes on society in the name of future economic growth. The other option is to continue to put the economy under more debt and see if productivity catches up down the line.โ€
    โ€œBoth strategies are dangerous from the perspective of the average consumer but unless we have a big wind such as a new big company or some new big market unfolds in the near term, there wonโ€™t be the massive return of growth and Government is constrained debt-wise and fiscally. The massive return of growth is still a few years out,โ€ said Stephen.
    Howard concurred with this view, saying that Government needed to re-evaluate the taxes to determine which ones were most effective.
    โ€œWe have to look at the main taxes that provide our revenue. We have to also look at the taxes that are not doing so well and determine what adjustments can be made. We are not earning as we should from the Value Added Tax because people are not paying it in and we need to make the collection of VAT more effective.
    โ€œI think that some austerity will have to come about because I donโ€™t think Governmentโ€™s ambitious programme is likely to succeed without paying attention to the deficit,โ€ he said.

    Source: Nation


  39. A very thorough response, but …

    I would be the first to admit that I have no or a little knowledge of WI cricket. On the politics of WI cricket, I can easily pass as a dummy. The current game does not show the Caribbean/WI in a positive light.

    However, my power rankings are based on several stories not a single one.
    Again, I repeat where I expect to see the word Barbados, I am seeing the name of another country.

    We may be big on promising 10,000 houses in five years but Gonsalves scores more points with the actual delivery of 150 houses. Meanwhile we are unable set up 150 houses in two years. Initiatives are announced but the other islands are more realistic and are in the execution phase.

    On July 1, in BarbadosToday, there was a story about ferry service between Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean “Ferry investors ready for business” but more recent stories suggest ferry travel between other islands is more likely. We have fallen off the map.

    In my power ranking Guyana is #1 of the Big 3. Trinidad and Jamaica has the next two spots, but that is due mainly to their ‘size”, the fourth spot is being hotly contested by other governments and reluctantly I am giving the nod to St Vincent.

    I will search for the other stories that influenced my opinion


  40. โ€œOn July 1, in BarbadosToday, there was a story about ferry service between Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean โ€œFerry investors ready for businessโ€ but more recent stories suggest ferry travel between other islands is more likely.โ€

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    I understand and agree with the points being made, especially about the โ€˜Comradeโ€™ and SVG, which I believe is a fair comparison, relative to making promises and fulfilling them.

    As it relates to a ferry service between Barbados and the other Caribbean islands, there has been talk about such a service for over 20 years.

    The president of โ€˜easyCruise One,โ€™ Stelios Haji-Ioannou, visited Barbados in May 2005, with the hopes of basing his 170-passenger here from November 2005 to April 2006.
    Plans included โ€˜a weeklong Caribbean loop to islands such as Saint Lucia, Martinique, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Grenada.โ€™

    The Thursday, August 4, 2016 edition of the Daily Nation reported that a company registered in Barbados named, โ€˜Caribbean Ferry Service,โ€™ was in the process of finalising paperwork to operate two vessels, โ€˜The Dream Jet Expressโ€™ and โ€˜The Opal Jet Express,โ€™ for travel and cargo through the region, by the end of 2016.
    The service was supposed to be initially accessible to passengers from BGI, SVG and SLU. And, eventually, other islands wouldโ€™ve been added to the itinerary.

    However, if we objectively evaluate any feasibility study of such a venture, I donโ€™t believe there would be enough evidence to support the claim โ€œweโ€™ve fallen off the map.โ€

    For example, what would be the operational, financial, economic, market and scheduling feasibility of operating a ferry service between Barbados and Antigua, St. Kitts, Nevis, Anguilla, Montserrat or St. Barthรฉlemy, especially when one considers fares would be high because of the distanceโ€ฆโ€ฆ and ferries are preferable for short distances?
    St. Vincent and the grenadines; Antigua, Barbuda and Montserrat; Guadeloupe and Dominica; Martinique and St. Lucia; St. Maarten, Saba and St. Eustatius; St. Kitts and Nevis; Trinidad & Tobagoโ€ฆโ€ฆ are examples of islands with โ€˜short tripโ€™ ferry services.

    Consideration must also be given to sea conditions.

    Interestingly, successive political administration of Grenada and Trinidad have so far been unsuccessful in their efforts to launch a ferry service between both islands.


  41. HIGH HOPES
    Straughn optimistic despite global slowdown forecast
    By Gercine Carter gercinecarter@nationnews.com
    Minister in the Ministry of Finance Ryan Straughn remains optimistic about Barbadosโ€™ growth prospects this year, despite a dire world economic forecast.
    He told the Saturday Sun the economic picture is โ€œvery positive provided that Barbadians as individuals, and companies and firms operating in Barbados, take the right strategic decisions for the opportunities that we have opened up, such as access to finance and markets. If we do that, then we will be able to navigate 2023, 2024 and 2025 with much more confidenceโ€.
    He conceded the latest world economic forecast coming after the last three years was โ€œnot good news, considering that we have seen in 2022 an increase in global interest rates in response to the Ukraine war as well as inflation.
    โ€œThe fact that the indicators are suggesting there will be a slowdown because the cost of living has increased significantly across Europe, any news of a global slowdown is not necessarily the news that people want to hear.โ€
    However, the minister expressed confidence that the mechanisms put in place by Government, such as the recently-established association with Africaโ€™s Afreximbank, will help to provide an additional buffer to what is happening globally.
    โ€œBut it means that we have to change the way we have been doing business and seek to expand our market access by being able to access the funding and be able to boost our production capacity,โ€ he added.
    Last month, Straughn predicted a strong economic performance this year supported by an improved tourism performance and the commencement of some large construction projects.
    Still optimistic about the tourism prospects, he said: โ€œBased on the bookings so far, the travel seems to be holding and we hope that will continue. But what we will be mindful of is that obviously if persons are concerned about the cost of living, then that will impact on how much they spend when they are on holiday . . . . The numbers look good, we continue to see healthy spending still and I hope that will continue for the remainder of the year.โ€
    With regard to construction, he acknowledged rising interest rates will mean the cost of capital to finance private sector development will โ€œpose a challengeโ€ to the developers and may force them to โ€œrevise numbers in terms of the scope of the project to be financedโ€.
    โ€œThat certainly is an element that we are monitoring very carefully,โ€ Straughn said. However, he cited the progress on construction of Sam Lordโ€™s Castle, and suggested that could influence other projects to come on stream.

    Source: Nation


  42. He told the Saturday Sun the economic picture is โ€œvery positive provided that Barbadians as individuals, and companies and firms operating in Barbados, take the right strategic decisions for the opportunities that we have opened up, such as access to finance and markets. If we do that, then we will be able to navigate 2023, 2024 and 2025 with much more confidenceโ€.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Same shaving cream that Mia said!

    We elect 30 brass bowl โ€˜leadersโ€™ and their message is that it is all up to “individuals and companiesโ€, and if things fall apart, it is these individuals and companies who would have failed….

    MEANWHILE, the 30 BBs paying themselves top dollar to talk shiite, giving consultancies and contracts to their friends and family, and seeking out โ€˜finders feesโ€™ from foreigners – in exchange for the gifting of local assets.

    …and passing new, useless, shiite laws every damn week…

    Note that, not one BB have they been able to get to work successfully….
    -The roads are all like cartloads
    -The Hospital is an embarrassment and insult to the poor
    -NIS scheme mash up
    -Importing $28Million in Steal Houses – and assembling 5 in a year?
    -No action on sewage management
    -They now giving the sugar industry to the same white people that raped it
    -CBC being given away to foreigners
    -Begging the Chinese for someplace for our children to play….

    How low can we get to…?

    The ONLY good news is that Bajans seem to enjoy being โ€˜playedโ€™ like this – even without vaseline.
    So indeed, a people ALWAYS get exactly what they DESERVE.

    @ David
    Do you think that we will EVER hear one of these government jokers come out and articulate a clear, detailed, plan – to move the damn place forward ..or at least to solve some of the problems?
    …and a โ€˜plan’ is not just promising everyone everything that they ask for, and then skinning your teeth as the mendicunts hold out their hands…

    Steupsss
    What a damned and cursed place….
    once blessed!

    Bushie long told wunna about the significance of that ugly monument to Satan that Froon planted on the damn Garrison….


  43. @Bush Tea

    From what we have seen so far it will continue stretch our faith to continue to hope for things that should have been seen by now and of promises yet to unfold.


  44. โ€œ….stretch our faith to continue to hope for things that should have been seen by now and of promises yet to unfold.โ€
    ~~~~~~~~~~~
    Speak fun yuhself Boss…

    Ongoing empty promises may be a comfort to brass,
    but not to stinking Bushie…

    Where Bushieโ€™s faith is grounded, such shiite promises by blind brass bowls are nothing but fodder for derision and mirth…

    ps
    Looks like yuh got Kiki in a neck lock…
    Bushie hope that yuh choke de BB.
    LOL
    ha ha ha


  45. @ David re your Instagram release
    What did Bushie tell you…?

    The Central Bank of Barbados (CBB) and the Financial Services Commission (FSC) today confirmed that the Barbados Public Workers’ Cooperative Credit Union Limited Group of Companies is solvent and condemned social media posts that suggested that CAPITA Financial Services Inc. had collapsed.

    They warned that these alarmist statements could destabilise the financial system and encouraged individuals to be more responsible in their communications on such matters, whether to traditional media or social media outlets.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    What a collection of jackasses!!

    THEY start a shiite panic over some petty issue – and against one of the BEST and most successful financial, social and functional institutions in the shiite place – and only NOW grasp the CONSEQUENCES of their ill-conceived folly.

    Up to Bushie, Each and every one of those jackasses would be fired. Both from the bank and the waste of time FSC.

    Ordinary Bajans, MANY AS VOLUNTEERS, running a complex set of organisations, SUCCESSFULLY and PROFITABLY, and due to circumstances – (many of which were IMPOSED by these same shiite โ€˜regulatorsโ€™) happen to be A FEW MONTHS LATE with some shiite report- and these scamps come running with a big hammer – and talking a lotta shiite.

    Meanwhile, The damn TREASURY has been. unaudited now for YEARS.
    Annually, the Auditor General writes scathing reports about practically ALL government agencies – and not a word from these judases.
    Steupsss
    Nothing worse than a slave-minded brass bowl handed a set of keys and a stick….
    But in Barbados, they will all probably be promoted to โ€˜seniorโ€™ some shiite….

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