The Honourable Prime Minister Mia Mottley

Prime Minister Mia Mottley delivered a budget yesterday anchored to a transformation theme. The blogmaster agrees with Professor Justin Robinson’s summary of the budget with one addition. There was no serious mention of the plan to address the recapitalization of NIS.

See summary of Robinson’s budget review.

Robinson: Domestic market the target 

GOVERNMENT IS SEEKING to woo the confidence of domestic investors once again, five years after the country underwent its debt restructuring exercise.

This was the takeaway of economics professor Dr Justin Robinson in his analysis of the 2023 Financial Statement And Budgetary Proposals delivered by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley in the House of Assembly yesterday.

Robinson, who was a panellist on the NATION’s State Of Our Nation’s post-Budget analysis, said Government’s announced $74.8 million partial repayment to 5 407 holders of Series B bonds, was in an effort to restore confidence in the domestic investment market.

During her four-hour presentation, Mottley said Series B bond holders who are on the register at March 31 will each receive $17 500 while 2 627 are being repaid in full.

Noting that the Prime Minister had not introduced new taxes to bridge the near $1 billion deficit, Robinson said it was evident that the plan is to finance the deficit through domestic investment and growth.

“Clearly the Government is deciding that it is going to go for growth and a lot of the initiatives seem focused along growth. Alongside growth, there were some measures and language that seem intended to encourage and entice domestic investors to provide the financing to close the gap.

“So there was no attempt to close the gap by new revenueraising measures or expenditure cuts. Instead, the Government has decided to financethe gap in this way by enticing the local investorsto come back because that’s where the uncertainty

in the financing is,” he said.

Robinson, the pro-vice chancellor of The University of the West Indies’ Board of Undergraduate Studies, said it is left to be seen whether the incentive will work.

“There was a whole section about reviving the domestic capital market. The repayment of the Series B bonds is one measure, and it is certainly feasible for the Government to make the payout. However, the unknown is whether that would be sufficient to induce investors to come back into the market in the quantity that they need in financing for the next financial year,” he said.

However, as it relates to Government’s growth strategy, he said it was lacking quite a bit of details.

“I was expecting some details on the reforms of the stateowned enterprises (SOEs), which was a central feature of the Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT II) programme. In many ways those details were sadly lacking. We are not really significantly wiser about how that will play out. Additionally, because of the uncertainty with the domestic financing, I expected details on how Government was going to address this “The other issue was growth. How do we create some new growth catalyst to take the economy to a higher level? To her credit, the Prime Minister highlighted a number of possible areas that are new – stimulating a film industry, positioning Barbados as a logistics hub. The challenge I had is that they were quite short on details, they appear futuristic and we have to wait to hear the details,” he added.

Also expressing disappointment on the lack of details on the reform of the SOEs was general secretary of the National Union

of Public Workers Richard Green, who was also a panellist.

He said there was some indication that job losses were on the horizon.

“The Budget did not provide any specificities about the reform of those SOEs. Moving forward, it would be interesting from our end to see how that goes. Obviously, there is an indication in this Budget that there is high likelihood of some retrenchment in the SOEs. So there is more in this Budget that we need to see coming out within the new financial year,” Green said.

Nation Newspaper

186 responses to “2023 Budget Talk”


  1. Budget ‘did nothing for Bajans’

    DLP president says PM maintained status quo; debt issues not addressed

    Democratic Labour Party President Dr Ronnie Yearwood
    (centre) – (from left) Oldwin Skeete (agricultural and rural affairs), Melissa Savoury-Gittens (education), Paul Gibson (health, social care and elderly affairs) and Walter Maloney (labour).

    YESTERDAY’S BUDGET did not address the concerns of Barbadians, neither did it remove any of the taxes they have been complaining about, says president of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) Dr Ronnie Yearwood.
    In an immediate reaction after Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley’s four-hour address in the House of Assembly, Yearwood gave his brief analysis from party headquarters. The DLP is expected to hold a press conference today to further respond to the Financial Statement And Budgetary Proposals.
    Yearwood said that in preparing for the Budget response, his team calculated that 30 taxes had been imposed by the Barbados Labour Party Government since coming to office in 2018.
    “The Prime Minister and Minister of Finance claimed gloriously that there were no taxes raised in this Budget, but in effect there were no tax cuts in this Budget either. That is what Barbadians were calling for and that is what Barbadians required as we try to address the cost of living,” he told viewers to the streamed event.
    Yearwood said in her presentation, Mottley maintained the status quo and the billion-dollar debt was not addressed, neither was the reform of the National Insurance Scheme, pension or education.
    “The Prime Minister and Minister of Finance addressed no serious reforms in
    the Budget and in effect the Budget read more like a throne speech than an actual budgetary statement from a Prime Minister as what we’ve come to expect,” he added.
    The attorney and university lecturer said it was interesting that Mottley said she did not want to delve into the details or be bothered by the fiscal or economic issues.
    “But I’m not sure how you can do your job as Minister of Finance without being worried about the details and the fiscal issues facing Barbados. The reality is after this Budget, your struggles as Barbadians, housewife, dad, taxi driver . . . will continue.”
    He questioned what would become of the Barbadian dream as Mottley had passed on a baton of debt, failure and failed dreams.
    “And a nightmare to the next generation of Barbadians and to whoever will pick up the next government,” he stressed.
    The DLP leader said that in its two terms so far, the current administration had borrowed $4 billion and still Mottley came to the public about the economic issue but did not deal with that.
    “I feel disappointment because this is not the Budget that we expected. This is not Budget that would get us to 2030,” Yearwood said, going on to describe it as a “hodge podge, haphazard Budget” of varying policy bits and pieces.
    “In no way does it speak to the vision of what Barbados is to become,” he declared.
    He pointed to complaints
    of garbage not being picked up, children engaging in violence and the cost of food.
    “I want to speak directly to your heart . . . . My duty is to Barbados first . . . . I implore you to join me in this fight to take back this country. Join me in this fight to add your voices to this country. What do you have to fear? You have nothing to fear but fear itself,” he told Barbadians. (AC)

    Source: Nation


  2. Mia’s mission transformation

    by SHAWN CUMBERBATCH
    shawncumberbatch@nationnews.com
    PREDICTIONS OF INCREASED TAXES and public sector job cuts fell flat yesterday as Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley delivered a Budget intended to fire up the economy and make Barbados world class by 2030.
    The Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs made her intentions clear from the start of her four-hour presentation in the House of Assembly, declaring: “Those who feel that I will keep the bad news to the end, let me come out straight out of the blocks – the good news is that there is no bad news!”
    Mottley said the Financial Statement And Budgetary Proposals were instead focused on a “mission transformation” built on seven pillars – engineering and unlocking growth; the blue and green economy; Bajan identity and cultural confidence; empowerment and enfranchisement of labour; Barbados as a global logistics hub; building smarter society and Government; and data for decision-making.
    Governance
    She announced the establishment of National Strategic Council, Growth Council and Fiscal Council “to improve governance, accountability with respect to fiscal affairs, and to ensure sustainable and inclusive growth”.
    “You cannot tax your way out of this situation, that’s why there are no new taxes today . . . but we have to grow our way out of this. BERT 2 (Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation) is fundamentally about growth and the first thing I can announce today is some new institutional arrangements,” the Prime Minister said.
    “Let us be real, the last few years have been rough and this country has held together. As it relates to job cuts, there is no massive set of layoffs coming in the public service, but there will be adjustments in the SOE (state-owned enterprises) sector, which we have already started to discuss with the public since 2019.”
    Mottley will chair the National Strategic Council, which will include her four Senior Ministers Santia Bradshaw, Dale Marshall, The Most Honourable Senator Jerome Walcott and Kerrie Symmonds, the head of the public service and Government’s seven directors general.
    The National Growth Council will be chaired by prominent Barbadian business executive Dodridge Miller, who is retiring as chief executive officer of Sagicor, and will also have representation from labour and the private sector.
    Former head of the International Monetary Fund’s Western Hemisphere Department, Mexican economist Alejandro Werner, will chair the Fiscal Council, whose other members include University of the West Indies deputy principal and Professor of Economics Winston Moore, veteran trade unionist Cedric Murrell, and senior banker Donna Wellington.
    Mottley also said there would be a new programme called Barbados Delivers led by Invest Barbados chairman John Williams. This was intended to remove obstacles to economic growth.
    The Prime Minister stressed that while her presentation had some elements of a traditional Budget Barbadians have come to expect, it was more “about national transformation; about building a global society and a world class people by 2030”.
    “This Budget ought to be called ‘Upward Onward Bajan Excellence 2030’ . . . and that is the mission. What is Mission Transformation? It is our crusade to make Barbados truly global; to accomplish excellence that will redefine our national approach;
    typify our efforts in the international landscape, and solidify the benefits for this and future generations,” she said.
    “There are well-known examples of the extraordinary success of small states – Singapore, Japan. The name of Barbados must join that list, and we can do it.”
    Mottley delivered her proposals against the backdrop of what she said was an improving economic situation at home, including “the resurgence of tourism activity” and increased domestic demand that “has also stimulated economic activity in the wholesale, retail, and business and other services sectors”.
    With another $200 million loan due this week from the Inter-American Development Bank, she said the gross international reserves would exceed $3.2 billion “for the first time ever in this country’s history”.
    While noting that Barbados’ full economic recovery was still hinged on the external economic environment, the Minister of Finance said Government was focused on three key areas that will accelerate economic growth – the further reduction of debt, the lowering of commercial banking fees, and the restarting in a more aggressive way of the domestic capital markets.
    She also reported that Government will be in a better financial position at the end of this financial year on March 31 to such an extent that it could
    give Barbadians an ease.
    This included the recent settlement for public sector wages and allowances which will cost Government $50 million this financial year and $80 million in 2023/2024.
    Government will also be making a partial principal repayment of $74.8 million, by April 30, to 5 407 individual bondholders of Series B Bonds, who will receive up to $17 500 each.
    Barbadians who owe the Barbados Water Authority and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital are also being offered a 25 per cent reduction in the debt, “conditioned on full payment of outstanding debts between March 15 and September 15”.
    Government has also reinstated the value added tax (VAT) cap on gasoline and diesel at the pump.
    Mottley also said new Central Bank Governor Dr Kevin Greenidge was
    in discussion with commercial banks “seeking to ensure that we can find at least one savings account that will have fees removed from it in order to be able to protect the average Barbadian from the tyranny of fees eroding the little piece of money that they got in the bank”.
    Other measures included the establishment of a Unit Trust Corporation to mobilise private savings; reduction of the Air Travel and Tourism Development fee for CARICOM travel from $37.50 to $20 effective July 1; extension of the excise tax and VAT holiday on the purchase of electric vehicles by an additional two years until March 31, 2026; and a $5 000 increase in the personal income tax allowance for pensioners from income year 2023.


    Source: Nation


  3. BUDGET SUMMARY

    FOLLOWING are some of the key measures outlined by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley during her presentation of the Financial Statement And Budgetary Proposals in the House of Assembly yesterday:

    • Reduction in principal owed to the Barbados Water Authority and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital by 25 per cent, conditioned on full payment of outstanding debts between March 15 and September 15, 2023.
    • From April 1, Government will reinstate cap on VAT payable on gasoline at 47 cents per litre, and diesel at 37 cents per litre, for six months.
    • Air travel and tourism development fee for CARICOM travel cut by 47 per cent (from $37.50 to $20) from July 1 to December 14, 2023. This will cost $2.2 million.
    • Provision of $5 million to the Barbados Tourism Marketing Inc to help resuscitate air travel especially in the summer months this year and the next.
    • Customs to initiate re-registration of the warehouse and duty-free shopping sector on a rolling three-year cycle, and conduct field audits of the warehouse and dutyfree shopping sector.
    • From April 1, all entities receiving concessions must participate in business surveys conducted by the Barbados Statistical Service, Ministry of Labour and the Central Bank to better
    measure all economic activity.
    • A $3 million low-interest Revolving Fund at the Fund Access to be set up for acquisition of, or conversion to, electric, plug-in, hybrid, CNG or
    • From April 1, a $25 000 loan limit for postal workers to acquire electric motorcycles.
    • Extension of the excise tax and VAT holiday on purchase of electric vehicles by two more years until March 31, 2026.
    • Effective April 1, inclusion of nurses in the schedule for Public Officers Loan and Travelling Allowances.
    • Government to initiate a partial principal repayment of $74.8 million no later than April 30 to the eligible 5 407 individual bondholders of Series B Bonds, on the register as at March 31, 2023, who will get a principal repayment of up to $17 500 each.
    • Introduction of new instruments such as reverse auctions and a bonds-on-demand facility at commercial banks authorised to sell securities to the public.
    • For income year 2023, personal income tax allowance for pensioners being increased from $40 000 to
    $45 000.
    • Government to set up a working committee to implement reverse mortgages by January 1 next year.
    • A National Strategic Council, Fiscal Council and the Growth Council coming to improve governance, accountability with respect to fiscal affairs, and to ensure sustainable and inclusive growth.
    • Management Trainee Initiative for the Public service.
    • Provision of $9.6 million to the National Sports Council in financial years 2022-2033 for creation of 17 mini-stadia across Barbados.
    • Creation of posts of life coaches, parental coaches and a programme to support psychological counselling across ten communities that are most challenged in the first instance, with a budget of $2.5 million.
    • A $2 million fund at the Barbados Investment and Development Corporation/Export Barbados to support the fashion industry.
    • Provision of $600 000 annually for the introduction of National Strings Programme in the 68 public primary schools.
    • Establishment of Unit Trust Corporation to mobilise private savings.
    • Incentive regime for film production.
    • A $2 million Revolving Fund at the Barbados Agricultural Society to provide small loans to aid livestock farmers.

    Source: Nation


  4. PM calls for BL&P, FTC resolution

    THE CAT-AND-MOUSE GAME between the Barbados Light & Power Company (BL& P) and the Fair Trading Commission (FTC) will only hurt Barbadians if it continues, says Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley.
    She warned the parties yesterday that “if we continue to be the subject of delay, the only losers will be the country and people of Barbados”.
    Last month the FTC delayed its decision on the rate increase application by BL& P and demanded the utility company adjust a significant number of its assumptions, including a downward revision in the rate of return, on which the 11.9 per cent increase requested in the company’s 2021 application is calculated.
    Mottley was delivering the Financial Statement And Budgetary Proposal in the House of Assembly and touched on the topic of energy in the fourhour presentation.
    She said that renewable energy was still a major plank and it was no secret that there were constraints on the global level even affecting Government’s announced plans for electric cars and batteries.
    “We cannot permit equally the transformation of this country to be hampered by a tiresome cat-andmouse game by the BL& P and FTC. Bajans cannot be the losers in this cat-and-mouse game and this is what will happen if this catand- mouse game does not stop. “After 100 years the BL& P as a monopoly provider should know that it has to trust this country and its people a little more, and does not need to delay the procurement of things in a difficult supply chain environment such that when we resolve the issue, you can’t find the things to buy for under two three four years.
    “Similarly, the FTC must understand that delay is the obstacle to progress in this world, especially where commodities are difficult to access,” she added.
    Objectives
    She said the FTC/ BLP matter was sub judice.
    “I say no more on that but suffice it to say that the process needs deconstruction further again. If we continue to be the subject of delay, the only losers will be the country and people of Barbados. We do not produce the materials necessary to participate for most of this . . . but having said that, we believe we can still set the ambitious target and we intend meet our policy objectives.
    “We have to create space to encourage investment by foreign providers because all can’t come from local, but we said enough to let you know that we are creating space for Bajan householders, Bajan companies and Bajan SOEs (stateowned enterprises).”
    The Prime Minister said that if Barbados wanted the cheapest electricity rate, it could have made an offer to a single provider because of its small size, “but what we want is balanced development because Bajans cannot be tenants in their own land, they have equally to be owners.
    “And therefore we accept that the electricity rate might be a little higher in order to create the bounty that can come to individuals to be able to help us with a housing revolution, to help us with sugar industry reform, to help us with state-owned enterprise reform, to help people have a extra piece of money in their pocket when the month come by being able to sell back to the grid,” she stated.
    Mottley said the national energy plan was being upgraded to a national energy investment plan and there will be meetings with investors and utility companies to iron out the bottlenecks.
    “If it means changes to the legislative model, we will be brave enough to do it . . . but let us sit down and discuss how this system is working for us or not working.”
    She also announced the extension of the waiver of the excise tax and value added tax holiday for electric, plug-in, solar-powered and compressed natural gas vehicles until March 2026 because of the logistical difficulties.
    Furthermore, from April 1, the loan limit will be increased to $25 000 for postal workers to acquire electric motorbikes, while nurses have now been added to the schedule for the public officers’ loans and travel allowances also from April 1, and will be eligible for the $50 000 loan for purchase of vehicles.
    With regard to sustainable farming, Mottley said the Barbados Agricultural Society will receive $2 million for grants to its members in that regard. (AC)

    Source: Nation

  5. Mind the (Wealth Inequality) Gap Avatar
    Mind the (Wealth Inequality) Gap

    Barbados is said to be one of the wealthiest and most developed countries in the Eastern Caribbean, but is it still part of the Third World or a Developing Country as it also displays economic, social, political, and environmental issues such as high poverty rates and harder living conditions

  6. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    William…so wuh happen with the budget evabody so silent…normally ya would get the challenged jumping out boasting and attacking evabody, but the silence is loud and deafening.

    Even heard two people complain they tried to listen to it but the yelling was unbearable, they had to shut off the noisemaker and wait for the printed version.

  7. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ WURA
    All I can say At this time, is that Cockroach has no right at Fowl Cock dance. So all I can say at this time is continue the good work,victory is certain,of that I have no doubt whatsoever.

  8. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyriggt (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyriggt (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    Ase! Ase!


  9. Best use of beachfront ?

    “We are going to see the relocation of the civic centre in St James, which is now on the beach, to in there by Frederick Smith Secondary School”

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/03/15/investment-coming-to-town/


  10. There can be NO GREATER SHAME for young people than to find themselves growing up in a country led by a pack of international PARRO beggars, whose claim to fame is that they have been able to increase our indebtedness well beyond that which was incurred by the previous set of jack asses of very similar ilk.
    No wonder the youth are hesitant about reproducing… who the hell wants to be the parents of future maids, porters, guards, beggars and Parros?

    So rather that INSPIRE the youth with creative, futuristic, nationalistic visions for future generations, all we hear is a lotta emotional talk about bringing more materialistic albinos to take control of the local assets that have been moving further and further from the reach of the locals – except for those who are watchmen and porters.

    What a CURSED place in which to be born in 2023….


  11. Waru
    Have you considered that the ritualist budget is no different than the evening news on CBC or for that matter most of the countries they micmick?

    You could not have watched these rituals for decades and missed nothing at all. Having not so listened or read anything about it, not even anything on this thread, excepts yours, this writer chooses to ignore the tired, meaningless claims and counter claims.

    Make assumptions that this one toooo is a sameness of a sameness!

    The nonsense of Mia Mottley showing up to receive a floral arrangement. Then performing the ritual of have some special message in a proverbial Black box. And proceeding to talk shiite for four hours as if she had something say. Before a parliament which could have been exactly so constututed were it convined at BLP headquarters is a pappyshow, a mockery as rotuals go.

    Its fairy tale to have a DLP titular leader, who has no standing, go through the pretense that he is in some position to counter the dictator-in-chief, these enactions go beyond the ritualistic and borders on the absurd.

  12. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    “You could not have watched these rituals for decades and missed nothing at all. Having not so listened or read anything about it, not even anything on this thread, excepts yours, this writer chooses to ignore the tired, meaningless claims and counter claims.”

    Exactly, would never waste energy time and space to listen to slick talking diatribe, when ALL the evidence and reality are staring us in the face, for those who make an effort to see….playing for the peanut gallery packed with a pappyshow- loving crowd…..seems like the weak in mind can withstand another 100 years of the same old, just as they deserve and are entitled…

    The laughable part with bad news all around every inch of the earth, is the opening statement i read……”the good news is, there is no bad news.”

    Ah guess that can only be found in their make believe world of gigantic lies and sleight of hand..nowhere else….while people on the island suffer every day for a cup of tea and a bread…cant feed themselves or their children.

    A dictator wannabe should at least be able to feed the masses…all the glitter and the glamor they CONVINCED themselves was real…is coming TO AN END.


  13. Increase in allowance to pensioners means more money will sit in the banks doing nothing. Smart to pay back the bonds but I doubt they will reinvest.
    I assume Dodridge and Wellington on the growth and fiscal councils is to encourage the big financial institutions to trust government bonds again.
    No responsible investor is buying government bonds until they prove they can start an actual money earning project.


  14. The homo-phobes too like homo-geneity. What a ting! Killing the blog dead, dead. Keep it up.


  15. Bushie was wondering which rock to look under…. LOL

    Looks like we have now done Enuff digging …

    Murduh!!


  16. @Redguard

    You have highlighted the challenge. Unless the government can turn around investor confidence to finance the deficit we will not advance.


  17. Bushie
    The tagline is “watch muh”. There is therefore no need to waste time here talking. Get up good.

  18. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023.All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023.All Rights Reserved.

    Wuh i dint know a blog was dependent on pro-homo lovers to stay in cyberspace, where and WHO did this distracting topic come from….and who got the time to waste caring about other people’s sex lives, except for the usual suspects.

    or is it now resoundingly clear that the 3-degrees of separation was ABRUPTLY and UNEXPECTEDLY SEVERED, so no imps, pimps, fowls or slaves can jump/fly out and present themselves as a buffer for the cowardly…whom it’s said are afraid of any ONE- on- ONE ..

    just my kind of to do….one-on-one for the whole duration.

    Anyone care to help out with details…Bushman…i thought this was about a budget or lack of..

  19. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved

    Bushman…here is where you can find no end of details, i know it’s a topic that has now become the usual suspect’s bete noire….they now WISH it will all go away…..NOT
    A CHANCE ..but these spent YEARS boasting right in front my face about what they have done, while i remained in the dark all that time…..they thought they had it in the bag lock, stock and barrel.

    .. with no clue that what they cooked up over the decades was a recipe for their downfall….ah want them to confess to their BU family WHAT and WHY….

    Their evil actions…their story to tell.


  20. Canada

    ” The Honourable Chrystia Freeland, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, announced today that the government will table its 2023 budget on March 28, 2023, in the House of Commons, at approximately 4:00 p.m. ET


  21. Just listened to Liz Thompson a member of PMMIA’s dream team spinning on Brasstacks.


  22. Chrystia Freeland is also a Ukrainian genetic fascist!

  23. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing

    Bushman…doan look like they want to share any details with you bosie…….maybe Miller will be luckier….

    …those are the details everyone on the island needs to hear…it’s not only about my family and i, but about EVERYONE ELSE of African descent…in one way or another…

    …no 2 stories are likely to be alike…in any or every instance….but they all lead the same place, thefts, and disenfranchisement from the HIGHLY immoral and WHOLLY unethical….who got nuff, nuff explaining to do….no…it will NEVER GO AWAY in my case…and if they ever try to use any of the knowledge they kept from me to cash in, i will fcuking CRUSH THEM..

    If everyone remembers the very first time i was called Salemite, i was told ” you won’t know anything about that” with a lol….it’s archived, wuh if i dint know, it would mean others under different cicumstances re their history, dint either..

  24. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    Pacha…seems it’s spreading like wildfire. The collapse is definitely in full force.

    I posted on the Confused thread about the banking changes with the bigger players closing branches.


  25. Waru

    Anybody so wilfully blind deserves the death which must come.

    Wilful blindness or arrogantly doubling down on wokeism, pragmatic nationalism, financial slavery, and wholly descriptive of Mia Mottley and this dictatorship amounting to death.

    Yes, we see contagion, now reaching Europe, has legs.

    Waru! It now takes only a feather to break this camel’s back for a financialized empire.

    So when Bajan politicians and their foolish followers right here on BU keep doubling down on their ignorance, they shall be very soon found wanting.

    And even when these assholes are so found, don’t expect contrition. Don’t expect apologetics. Only rinsing and repeating. These are why we would much prefer the mushroom-headed phallus in them.


  26. @ Enuff
    You don’t know how much Bushie missed you….
    Good to hear that you are still getting watched…
    You walk good too…

  27. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved

    “And even when these assholes are so found, don’t expect contrition. Don’t expect apologetics. Only rinsing and repeating. ‘

    we know the mindsets very well, weeee watched them for years, they will sit their asses down and try to justify these layers of pure evil coming from a gang of thieves, and still crave to be Slaves..

    …what i got pon dem the reason they will not escape my wrath….is that barring a few instances, i remember everything from the year DOT….and even from times outside my current existence, familiar places etc that happens to many…so they did not stand a chance of winning any of this..no matter how hard they tried to stop me from finding out, working overtime to attack and discredit me. Like that could win the dummy nigas something. While boasting and bragging about my not knowing any of it….white world dummies forgot one very critical thing….I HAVE WHAT THEY DON’T.

    The criminal CRABS. .certainly will not get away with what they did…am not the type to forgive generational crimes directed at my family and future generations from traitors who look just like us…and wont rest….until….

    .but the weak-willed sheeple, fowls slaves and others, would do well to learn from my experience, unlike what they would do, i did not hide that there is an issue abd peoole should do their own research.

    …it’s just too private to make public, and will never happen in my case.

    The nerve of these SNAKES trying to cash in on these types of circumstances without the PERMISSION or KNOWLEDGE of African DESCENTS. Everyone should watch their backs, not only in Barbados but across the wider Caribbean…cause we know misleaders all carry the same low class subterranean mindsets.


  28. Steuspe


  29. It’s not looking good for Credit Suisse. They should have hung on to their black CEO.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/mar/15/credit-suisse-what-is-happening-at-swiss-bank-and-should-we-be-worried

  30. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    TLSN…it’s a situation many of us saw coming YEARS OFF..there could have should have been better preparation, but when ya have to read from and follow someone else’s script because ya too foolish and full of yaself to know otherwise…this is the result…

    We were ridiculed, but guess what..it’s happening right in front our faces…just as seen over a decade ago, you can ask some on here, they will tell you the same thing.


  31. The ridicule lies with those who refuse to denounce the quasi madness emanating from Mia the great, and the PR machine that she has put in place to overpower the voices of reason and common sense. Rome, under the madness of the emperor Nero, went into terminal decline due to the inability of their senators to challenge Nero.

    When a Prime Minister announces to her parliament that she has only good news to announce then we can take this as madness. Note the international and domestic female praetorian guard that she has surrounding her. Note her Minister of Propaganda who propagates stories which are buffed and varnished and made to look like all is well in Barbados. Her name is Thompson. How in God’s name has she ended up under the wing and the protection of Mia.

    Barbados is sick. I care not for our politicians. I care only for my black brothers and sisters who are disenfranchised and who have had their dignity removed. Rest assured, there will be nothing left for them to salvage within the next generation and a half.

  32. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    “Rest assured, there will be nothing left for them to salvage within the next generation and a half.”

    That’s why some of us spent our valuable time for the last decade, successfully trying to wake up many, we saw this happening, needed more info about the reparations scam, which is now available….but outside of warnings here and there, when situations like the above arise, they will get very little going forward, unless they read, since my focus and interests in that direction have largely shifted.

    I am not a Harriet Tubman and not about to pretend am one, none of that energy and life waster interests me….so they better get their shit together, they got all the info at their fingertips that’s been around now for quarter century and more added daily, so the onus is on them to free themselves from the ego bloated wannabes, no one else can do it.


  33. If the history of capitalism teaches us anything it is that it has always been unstable. Such instability guarantees a crisis every 4 to 7 years. These make it impossible for the development of poor or small countries.

    Yes, Keynes and others made commendable efforts to temper such maladies with popular remedies, though few of their arguments were accepted. And even those accepted, like social security, have been hollowed out. So what we have today is a most perverse formation, worst than at any other historical moment in the history.of capitalism.

    That Mia Mottley and a Barbados government, comprising people who were supposed to be brighter than previous generations, could mindlessly and monumentally continue to fail the country by asserting the preeminence of a dead-ended, bankrupt, economic order, must be the betrayal of all times.

    There shall be a price to be paid.


  34. Does anybody know the name of the president of Barbados? Should she not be stepping out of the shadow and challenging Mia. The president of Israel has spoken out. He could not maintain his silence any longer with Israel’s corrupt and fascist Prime Minister.

    Barbados’ president, appears to be nothing more than a ceremonial dummy!

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/15/israeli-president-civil-war-is-within-touching-distance

  35. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    The price to pay is just around the corner.

    TLSN…if they dont leave the colonial indoctrination behind, nothing will ever change. That blight is following them around and they are yet to shake it off. As i said over and over for years and years…if those who can see what’s happening right before their eyes, continue on this road to destruction minding, dizzy politicians that personally i would NEVER vote for, they will remain trapped indefinitely.

    Pacha…popular opinion is FDIC don’t have the funds to continue bailouts for depositors…some are seeing it as ” a combination of hyperinflation colliding with the Great Depression.”

    I take it the next few months will be the tell, when the transition takes hold.


  36. Waru

    No. The Fed can create as much money as it likes from thin air. That’s real easy.

    That is not the problem.

    The problem is that in continuing creating such fiat money the ills that you mentioned will be unavoidable.

    This certainty is not merely a function internal to the Fed, the Americans. For there are externalities which, to writer’s view, are vastly more consequential within all calculations.


  37. Tannis is always intelligent in her responses.

    BPSA: No good, but No taxes but . . .

    ‘Details needed for for other measures’

    THE BARBADOS PRIVATE SECTOR ASSOCIATION (BPSA) is in full support of Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley’s no-new-taxes Budget.
    In a statement yesterday, BPSA chairman Trisha Tannis said it was commendable that the Government did not to bring taxes considering the challenges being experienced at both the domestic and corporate levels in the present inflationary environment, particularly against the context of the recent extension of the Social Compact.
    What the association was wary of, however, was an absence of details pertaining to some of the measures announced, which it said presented an impediment to full analysis of the implementation and impact on businesses and the private sector.
    “Whilst the BPSA welcomes all initiatives that improve the efficiency with which the Government of Barbados collects and secures tax revenue, serious concerns as to the operationalisation of these measures exist. The measures announced that affect the duty-free sector and recipients of tax concessions are highlighted in this regard. We therefore caution that these measures must be implemented seamlessly so as to avoid compounding the present complexity of doing business in Barbados,” Tannis said.
    “In addition, we recommend clarity in regards to what aspects of the recommendations surrounding the amendment to the Customs Act were accepted as this will have implications on how various tax structures are applied in the near future.”
    She said the association, although being previously apprised at a strategic level of some aspects of the reform of state-owned enterprises, also asked for a more detailed update. She said the progress and impact on the budgetary estimates would have been preferred, given the critical role that these reforms must play in rehabilitating the macroeconomic performance of the country.
    “The need for growth is well articulated and it is indeed the primary plank of the BERT 2 (Barbados Economic Recovery and
    Transformation) programme. While it is acknowledged that BERT 2 has been tabled and provides key indicators and targets for national economic development, the overall framework to promote growth is not as clearly identifiable in Tuesday’s Budget.”
    Tannis added that they appreciated the service sector-oriented focus on the film industry and supported members in the Barbados Coalition of Service industries, anticipating the identification of further measures to expand on the platform provided by Government in the Budget.
    “We also encourage the accumulation and publication of more accurate data so that the assessment of economic output and income, particularly on the contribution of the services sectors, can be comprehensively assessed and published,” the BPSA head said.
    She also said the private sector applauded the dual efforts to train young school leavers as well as new graduates who could take advantage of the public sector management trainee programmes.
    “These initiatives ensure that we retain and train our youth, creativity and ingenuity towards collective productive efforts towards excellence and competitiveness. Care has to be taken, though, in ensuring that the catchment mechanisms for eligible youth are free of political interference and bias. It is also critical that the systems and processes where challenge has been identified in the Civil Service, also be addressed for this initiative to have the best possible opportunity to succeed.”
    Tannis said the association recognised the continuing challenges related to securing non-concessional international financing due to the non-investment grade of sovereign debt instruments.
    “The Government’s efforts to restore domestic confidence in the local capital market though the establishment of the framework of a Unit Trust, and the repayment of the Series E bonds will set the appropriate platform for this confidence. We also highlight the fact that the commercial banking sector has signalled its intent to take the
    lead in this effort and participate in the local capital market more significantly after the restructuring of its debt portfolio in 2018.” (BA/PR)

    Source: Nation

  38. Yolande Grant African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    I see what you mean..

    “Sri Lanka Recession Deepens As IMF Bailout Looms

    Sri Lanka fell deeper into financial catastrophe in Q4 of 2022 as borrowing costs hit a two-decade high in a desperate bid to stave off inflation.”

  39. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    More and more info being revealed as a food processing company domiciled in Jamaica is now tied to pfizer re digital IDs…a real looming mess…

    Hope the pretenders and wannabes know that everyone including myself hold a certain position and will in no way be moved or deterred, they will now see the stern stuff our combined ancestors, from both sides of the divide, are made of.

  40. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    Pacha..we can’t make this up…just saw a clip where the PM dude in UK was doubling down on giving illegal immigrants a laundry list of what they will not be able to do knce landed in UK…and one of it was, i quote:

    “You will not be able to access the modern slavery system”

    That is obviously based on who he was speaking to prior to that cockup that slipped out. There was no glitch in the video, it was clear as day..

  41. Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear To Tread) Avatar
    Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear To Tread)

    Fools rush in
    Where angels fear to tread
    And so I come to you my love
    My heart above my head
    Though I see
    The danger there
    If there’s a chance for me
    Then I don’t care

    While people in 🇱🇰 Lanka the Land of Demons 😈 are looking to sell up and leave..
    .. I man am looking to do the reverse and buy a house by the beach with a pool on the cheap

    Fools rush in
    Where wise men never go
    But wise men never fall in love
    So how are they to know


  42. Waru
    These people like Sunak, and his equivalent in Barbados, are always seeking to impress the White establishment that they are even more reactionary than the Whites themselves. A hallmark of institutional racism writ large!

  43. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha, William, TLSN…

    A journalist friend of mine is laughing their ass off…but it’s very clear from the perspective of pretenders and wannabes in Slave Society Barbados, the entire plot revolved around, in my case, i can only speak for me and mine at this stage…TIEFING our entitlements and reparations, then ENSLAVING us in their modern slavery scam system…more of the same anti- Afrikan, antihuman crimes for centuries more to come….even though the present company of small island political scum will be long dead in a couple more decades or sooner..the traitor bloodlines..

    .but MFs you will NOT get an opportunity to further disenfranchise my family and future generations without severe life altering repercussions…you can take that to the BANK..

  44. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    Pacha…..Kush Quarterly March – June 2023….publishing by month end .has an excerpt from my book Collapse on those types like the UK dude and their damaged psyche..which now includes a delusion that they have finally taken full control of the white world as generational puppets…they have convinced themselves of that illusion…and nothing can change that…until a white wakeup call occurs.


  45. Waru
    Things, on all fronts, keep going from bad to worse. Besides this banking or economic crisis, we see that the IAEA cannot account for a large amount of uranium as stored in Libya, under their supervision, inspection, before the NATO invasion. Something is coming down the pike! Maybe as a distraction from the lost of global power. Nowhere in the histories of lost of empires can we find these levels of desperation, recklessness, to maintain. “These days are indeed funny nights”.

  46. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    “Things, on all fronts, keep going from bad to worse.”

    That’s what am seeing in every area…that’s why am picking my battles very carefully and only fighting those involving any threats to my family and I….Pacha…we gotta protect our own at all cost…as it’s now down to the wire.

    ..this is the true definition and an indication that everything has gone to HELL….and those who dont want to see it, that’s on them, just stay the fcuk away from me and mine and keep us out of your mouths and thoughts..

    Only the small island fraudsters in the Barbados locale got “the good news is, there is no bad news” while the people starve because they can no longer feed themselves let alone bury their dead…. and die for one reason or the other with the lone hospital and morgue filled to overflowing.

    But dont worry, their insignificant fowls and imps will tell ya, so what, it happens everywhere…and i glad fuh dem.

  47. Yolande Grant - African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved. Avatar
    Yolande Grant – African Online Publishing Copyright (c) 2023. All Rights Reserved.

    And as Karma would have it, it’s the same platform that the Sunak dude outted himself on boasting about midern slavery…with the odd looking, selfhating bobbleheaded Suella in the background nodding her head in agreement like it would fall off…apparently the dude broke the law…open secrets are not to be spoken about openly….lol

    In his elevated billionaire world up in the clouds…he probably dont even know that slavery is illegal…hence the advertising /promotion of his modern slave system..to illegal immigrants.

    “TikTok Banned on ALL 🇬🇧 Govt Devices with Immediate Effect – Reports

    Days after PM Rishi Sunak was outed on the platform breaking the law, Westminster decided to outlaw use of the social media.”


  48. @John (Rabbit)
    https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/03/14/btcolumn-where-is-the-privatization-programme-for-the-sugar-industry/

    In today’s epaper (3/15) there is a new article “Privatising the sugar industry” and I feel it would be good to hear your opinion on this matter. I value your opinion on these items…

  49. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Doubt I have ever seen so few comments on a Budget in Buhbaydus, which suggests there was little in it?
    Years back, as Toronto sought entry to the filmmaking business, they built several professional studios. Shortly after opening, one got busted. The person tasked with identifying potential grow-ops, by their high electricity usage, had zoned in on a studio. That alone, given the cost of power in B’dos makes filmmaking an interesting choice.
    The CBB once reported that >4000 Reslife customers has received Series B bonds. Hence, I’m unsure how a move to pay 5400 an avg of $13.5k ea represents a move to spur investment versus buying favour with said recipients.
    No reason beyond the emotional to invest before the budget, less after. Less? Failure to address the revenue/expensive imbalance, or it’s funding.


  50. @NO

    It is the optics and how it feeds public perception?

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