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

    Pacha…they claim they found it..

    “Libya uranium: Missing barrels recovered, say eastern forces
    By Robert Plummer
    BBC News
    16 March 2023, 16:01 GMT
    Updated 2 hours ago

    Video caption,
    Video shows an official inspecting drums said to contain uranium ore

    Armed forces in eastern Libya say they have found about two and a half tonnes of uranium ore that were reported missing by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

    Ten drums containing the ore were found near the border with Chad, said the head of the forces’ media unit.

    The IAEA said it was “actively working to verify” media reports.

    The agency sounded the alarm after a visit by its inspectors earlier this week to the undisclosed site.

    The area was not in government-controlled territory.”


  2. Waru
    The IAEA, the UN and ALL socalled international agencies, NGOs, are captives of Washington.

    There is no international law, no independence of the socalled international frameworks, no sovereignty of socalled independent states, which empire recognizes.

    Anybody otherwise minded is an idiot! Its America which for example gave Barbados its independence by running the British out. So too 80 or 90 countries. Why would they have to respect them or the European states for that matter.

    Any truly independent state like Iran, Russia, Haiti, Venezuela, Cuba, Syria will have, of necessity, problems with the racist American empire.

    Saw that convenient report and so thought. How convenient! Especially when Russia supplies, and still supplies, most uranium products to the world. Its like the Israeli 400 nuclear weapons which have no presence in critical discourses. That uranium could disappear and appear because empire wants that. An empire which broke all the socalled rules so that Zionists can kill Arabs en masse.


  3. @ David

    I want to know bout the plan to address these issues. What is missing here is details in terms of application of the items in the budget. Plus remember there will be a cost of implementation and we have yet to hear what that is and how this budget will be financed.

    As Corporate Barbados has said today we want details.

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

    I never followed up on how these agencies are structured so did not understand the dynamics, it’s only now they have become so visible, the roles they play are becoming clearer.


  5. @John A

    The PM with all her oratorical skills is not big on details and technical.


  6. Don’t get those farmers vex!!


  7. Private Investors Bid To Take Over B’dos Sugar Industry – Starcom Network

    https://starcomnetwork.net/blog/2023/03/16/private-investors-bid-to-take-over-bdos-sugar-industry/

  8. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David, oh noooo!

    This is a big slide along the continued very slippery slope of the new type of colonization and giving up the last of the crown jewels…

    Lots of the pretty talk about employee share options but when these large tracts of Bajan land are sold off or leased off we will be truly screwed!

    How can these guys make sugar profitable (on our limited scales) based on the long history of major concessions and market upheavals … this is a big foot fancy move that will be to our detriment.

    I’ll not even touch on the fact that such a major ‘distillation’ of this ‘crack liquor’ is being done in the back rooms!

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

    Pacha…something is happening, there is movement.

    “US regulator expects bids for SVB and Signature Bank by tomorrow

    The US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has asked banks interested in acquiring failed lenders Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank to submit bids by March 17, Reuters reported.

    This is the FDIC’s second attempt to sell SVB after a failed effort on Sunday. Among the institutions that studied but decided against an offer during last weekend’s auction for SVB were PNC Financial Services and Royal Bank of Canada.

    As for crypto-friendly Signature Bank, any possible buyer would have to agree to give up all the crypto business at the bank, according to sources.

    The FDIC is seeking to sell both SVB and Signature in their entirety, while offers for parts of the banks could be considered if whole company sales do not go through.”

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

    I was aware of FDIC as the watch dog and guardian for banking rules and regulations, because of experience in the private banking sector….but that was it, now i know they have a much wider reach..


  11. “How can these guys make sugar profitable (on our limited scales) based on the long history of major concessions and market upheavals … this is a big foot fancy move that will be to our detriment.”

    When the choir starts to sing off-key then we know we are in trouble.


  12. TheOGazerts on March 16, 2023 at 7:57 PM said:
    Rate This

    “How can these guys make sugar profitable (on our limited scales) based on the long history of major concessions and market upheavals … this is a big foot fancy move that will be to our detriment.”

    When the choir starts to sing off-key then we know we are in trouble.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Here are numbers from Peter Webster!!

    https://bstabarbados.org/articles/tag/peter-webster/

    This is good too, looks like he got his graph from me!!

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2023/03/16/btcolumn-privatising-the-sugar-industry/

    “The International Society of Sugar Cane Technologists stated in 2008 that the smallest financially viable sugar industry in the world was 12, 000 hectares or 30, 000 acres. Yet some in Barbados expect to have a financially viable sugar industry in Barbados with less than one quarter of the size needed to achieve the required economies of scale for financial viability.

    The reality is that the Barbados sugar industry currently being managed by the Government of Barbados, is producing less than 8, 000 tons of sugar annually at $4, 000 per ton and selling it at the market price of $2, 000 per ton – financial folly! At the same time, it is selling its molasses to the favoured rum industry at almost $100 per ton, less than the imported price. The Government has been able to do this simply by subsidizing the sugar industry’s losses using taxpayer’s money that is also needed elsewhere. So what magic wand does the private sector have that would change all of this?

    Has the Government rescinded all the legislation that gave it control over the industry and allowed it to dictate wages and tax the industry to bankruptcy? Where is all the capital to come from to revitalize this industry? And why would anyone in their right mind invest hard-earned savings/capital in such a risky, loss-making venture without the prerequisite assurances?

    Round and round we go…”


  13. Just to find somewhere to scotch the $100 million Geriatric Hospital required rezoning Zone 1 land around the Belle to fit it in at Waterford!!!

    Our leaders need putting in the Psychiatric Hospital!!

    https://gisbarbados.gov.bb/blog/construction-of-new-geriatric-hospital-begins/


  14. If they are scrounging to find land to put the Geriatric Hospital, you know all this talk about sugar is pie in the sky!!

  15. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Well it’s pie in the sky for the average Joe Clarke or Millicent Brathwaite Bajan but a wonderful long term windfall for the selected pols and legal and financial elites!

    Different but not grossly dissimilar to how you and your family eventually cashed-out on that land matter: get hold of the land and in the end you get hold of it’s worth!

    Absolutely awesome when you are an insider!


  16. pussycat doll still nice.


  17. My grandfather bought his first plantation in 1939, just before WWII started when economic conditions were extremely bad in Barbados.

    Ask Simple!!

    He benefitted from the rise in sugar prices and demand for the commodity.

    What inside track could he have possibly had to lead him to gambling on the purchase of a plantation?

    It was heavily mortgaged.

    Because prices were high and demand insatiable, he reinvested profits in mechanisation, increased output and by 1958, with his wife and seven children owned 1,133 acres of land in Barbados entirely mortgage free.

    They formed a limited liability company to limit their liability given the loans they had taken out to purchase tractors and equipment to move the cane from field to factory and cultivate.

    Several other Barbadian families did likewise, eg the Chandlers at Portland/Alleynedale and Todds Lemon Arbour, the Wards at Newton, Staple Grove and with the Simpsons at Thickett, Robinsons at Constant, Arthurs at Yorkshire, Evelyns at Wotton etc. etc. etc.

    What the politicians are dreaming of actually did happen in the 1940’s and 50’s, the private sector invested heavily in sugar, increased wages and made more jobs available. The reason that happened was because the politicians were not around back then to destroy and steal. All they can do is dream.

    For you to understand why it is unlikely to happen again you only need to look at the picture of Barbados taken from the KLM plane to understand there is insufficient land to meet the 30K acres for there to be a critical mass to ensure viability.

    All you have to do to understand how we got to this stage is to read Peter Webster!!

    “Forty years ago, a Caribbean political leader challenged the private sector to invest more in their country and, after a few months, complained bitterly that the “private sector” had not responded. This in a country where the private sector had been battered for years, almost to extinction, by socialist policies that had depleted its capital and without capital there is no private sector.”

    Hosea 8:7
    King James Version
    7 For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind: it hath no stalk; the bud shall yield no meal: if so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up.

    Strangers have swallowed it up!!

    Until the 40’s to the 60’s sugar had never played a pivotal role in economic output of Barbados.

    It was the use of Sugar Cane as a cover crop that made it possible to produce the other agricultural produce to reprovision ships that allowed trade to become a pivotal factor of our economy.


  18. We are soon entering the fifth IMF programme.I am already forecasting the sixth and seventh for 2028 and 2033.

    You all need to realise that slavery never ended in Barbados. Self-determination of the people is an illusion. Our society is built on the quicksand of an uncontrollable national debt. The fences of the old plantations no longer exist. They have been replaced by gated communities, where the real rulers live behind new fences, invisible to you, but controlling everything and everyone.

    Currency devaluation is inevitable sooner or later.

    Tron, year 5 SL, year 2 NR


  19. Banks back in bonds
    By Colville Mounsey
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com

    Some banks are back buying bonds.
    Chairman of the Barbados Private Sector Association Trisha Tannis disclosed yesterday that based on recent discussions with the banking sector, a number of executives are once again keen on investing in Government instruments.
    She said it means that Government’s partial reliance on the domestic capital market to bridge the near $1 billion deficit gap for the 2023 to 2024 financial year is likely to be realised.
    This is now five years since the banks took a substantial haircut in 2018 in Government’s debt restructuring exercise.
    Tannis’ outlook was supported by managing director and chief executive officer of Republic Bank, Anthony Clerk, as well as managing director of CIBC FirstCaribbean International Bank for Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean, Donna Wellington. It was revealed that these two major players in the banking sector have now set their sights on the acquisition of Barbados Optional Savings Scheme (BOSS) Plus bonds.
    “We are very happy by the attempt to reintroduce confidence in our local capital markets and that is a signal that we cannot underscore. It is my understanding that the local domestic players will be coming back to the table,” Tannis said.
    “The commercial banks took quite a bit of beating but they are signalling that they will be returning to the domestic capital market in a very significant
    way, and that is a major signal after the debt restructuring of 2018.”
    Back in 2018, commercial banks reported millions of dollars in credit losses as a result of the domestic debt exchange. The Trinidad and Tobagoowned Republic Bank (Barbados) Limited was one of those most impacted by the debt restructuring. It reported then that when the financial year ended on September 30, 2018, the group had about $194.4 million in “expected credit losses” related to the Barbados subsidiary.
    FirstCaribbean, which had about $1 billion in Government loans and investments on its books before the domestic debt exchange, reported a $318 million profit for that year ending October 31, 2018. However, it was reported that these results were affected by several items, including $176 million of incremental provision for credit losses as a result of the Government’s debt restructuring.
    Clerk, who is also the president of the Barbados Bankers’ Association, told the Weekend Nation his bank bought a substantial amount of BOSS Plus bonds last month and earlier this month.
    Growth mode
    While he declined to disclose the amount invested, he said it was substantial.
    “I can speak for Republic Bank, and I can tell you that we have made an investment in the BOSS Plus bonds and we are back in the domestic capital market as it relates to the Government bonds . . . . A few years have passed since the debt restructuring and we feel that the Government is doing all that they can to resuscitate the economy. It has brought the economy through COVID-19
    quite successfully and Barbados is back in a growth mode again,” Clerk said.
    Last September, the Central Bank opened the bonds to the public. The issue will be for a nominal sum of $200 million at par with a fixed interest rate of 4.5 per cent per annum payable on February 28 and August 31 of each year. The bonds may be redeemed at par by the bond-holder 24 months after the date of first issue. It has also been legislated that the bonds cannot be subject to any debt restructuring.
    “We think that there are a lot of opportunities that the Government is trying to create. So we are confident in the Barbados economy at this time. We have more appetite for Government paper . . . . We just made a large investment and as the Government issues these bonds on an annual basis, we will review where we are, based on how the economy is performing,” Clerk added.
    Wellington said FirstCaribbean has also signalled its interest in a return to the domestic capital market.
    “We note Government’s efforts to restore confidence in the domestic market and I am hoping that it does work. We hope that folks understand that for banks to go back to the capital market when we were the ones hit the hardest, shows that we believe Barbados is moving forward. We want to support the initiative at the structure of the BOSS Plus bonds, which is an instrument that has good features on it, so this is the instrument that we are comfortable with at this time,” she said.

    Source: Nation


  20. @Artax

    Ex-LIAT workers to get $75 000 in cash

    Barbadian former employees of LIAT finally have something to smile about.
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley informed the country last night that severance payments for around 89 former workers of the collapsed regional airline can finally be made by her Government.
    In her hour-long wrap-up to the 2023 Financial Statement And Budgetary Proposals in the House of Assembly, she said each former worker will get $75 000 owed to them in severance. For those owed more, the remainder will be facilitated via Government bonds.
    “This is a Government that sees people, feels people and hears people,” she said to loud applause.
    The Prime Minister said the entire debacle involving LIAT had caused her “many sleepless nights” but she felt a sense of a relief now there was financial capacity within Government’s coffers to help the former airline workers.
    “The Government of Barbados will take responsibility for all the Barbadian workers of LIAT,” she stressed.
    Mottley said the Director of Finance was out of the country on business but as soon as he returns next week, meetings will be held with the workers’ representatives to get the payments process under way.
    She revealed that the severance payments will amount to just over $4.07 million, while the bonds
    will value just under $6 million.
    Two years ago, Mottley’s administration offered a helping hand to the displaced Barbadian workers after an hour-and-a-half-long Zoom meeting with dozens of them who had been waiting for well over a year for entitlements from the regional carrier.
    Those workers were each provided a one-off gift of $2 000 by Central Government, giving local authorities time to put other measures in place that would offer further relief over a much longer period.
    All former Barbadian LIAT employees who were based here, paid contributions into the local National Insurance Scheme (NIS) and were therefore entitled to severance, also benefited from expedited hearings by the NIS Tribunal.
    Deadline for plan
    On July 24, 2020, the government of Antigua and Barbuda, the largest shareholder in the airline, secured an order for the administration of LIAT and named Cleveland Seaforth as administrator of the company. Seaforth was given a 120-day deadline to devise a restructuring plan and present it to the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court.
    LIAT (1974) Ltd., also known as Leeward Islands Air Transport Services, is headquartered in Antigua. It operated high-frequency inter-island scheduled services to 15 destinations in the Caribbean. The airline’s main base was
    V.C. Bird International Airport in Antigua, with a secondary base at Grantley Adams International Airport.
    On June 27, 2020, Antigua’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne had announced that LIAT would be liquidated following increased debt and the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The airline was to be reformed into a new entity, LIAT (2020), which would continue to provide connections between the Caribbean islands. (BA)

    Source: Nation


  21. @John A

    Mottley: Details on path to growth in Budget

    Questioned by opposition voices for examples of growth and asked by the private sector for details about how measures in her Budget will work, Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley last night sought to clear the air on both.
    In wrapping up the 2023 Financial Statement and Budgetary Proposals in the House of Assembly, Mottley said she thought they were both there to see but decided to elaborate.
    “We laid the BERT 2.0 (Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation) programme last year and said growth is at the centre of it. This budget speaks to it. Some said we haven’t given enough details, but let’s be real. This Budget does not stand in splendid isolation from everything else the Government has done.”
    She said that as part of BERT 2.0 they had structured seven pillars of growth, and the Budget was a clear continuation of those policies. Mottley said an increase in the country’s fleet of electric buses, training for over 1 000 temporary workers, a loan facility for public service vehicle
    operators to engage Fund Access, a tissue laboratory, and an environmental fund all could help trigger growth in the Barbadian economy.
    She also spoke of increased housing opportunities for Barbadians.
    “Anyone going down Lancaster or to Chancery Lane and Whitepark Road can see the houses being built. Yet I hear we aren’t doing anything for Bajans,” she said while referencing criticism previously levelled by the president of the Democratic Labour Party, Dr Ronnie Yearwood.
    “The skills and training development we have created is also there for all to see. I defy anyone to show anywhere else in the Caribbean where people who were laid off have a government hold their hands to carry them into an activity so they could eventually support themselves while they try to find a job,” she contended. “We’ve carried along 3 000 Barbadians.”
    According to the Prime Minister, access to finance is the oxygen of growth, and the establishment
    of a United Trust Corporation in the Budget puts Barbadian agencies in a position to build out the business, another form of growth.
    “We also reduced fees for regional travel and put more money into the Barbados Tourism Marketing Inc. We may be three years late in getting some things done, but I say better late than never.”
    Mottley also referenced the capital works projects which will see hotel developments for Royalton, Hyatt, a new Geriatric Hospital, dorm construction for the Barbados Youth Corps and development of the Newton Industrial Park as programmes that will fuel growth through the employment of thousands of workers.
    “This was a Budget for Bajans,” she added, while also taking the time to mention two salary increases for public servants, as well as a $1 500 lump sum payment. (BA)


  22. Straughn outlines SOEs reform plan

    Government should realise at least a 20 per cent reduction in transfers and subsidies when the reform of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) is complete.
    This was revealed by Minister in the Ministry of Finance Ryan Straughn, who was a panellist yesterday on the Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s post-Budget discussion at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre.
    “It is our estimation that between April and September this year we will begin to see the necessary adjustment and we would expect to see a 20 to 25 per cent reduction in transfers and subsidies. So this is something that we will be pushing for over the next few months,” he said.
    Pressed on the Budget’s absence of details on the reform of SOEs, which is a critical component of the Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT II) programme, Straughn explained that Government was balancing cost cutting and the ability of these entities to effectively provide services. He therefore cautioned that the exercise, though critical to the country’s economic prospects, must go through the proper process.
    “We are in consultation with unions in relation to what needs to be done to be able to enfranchise some people where appropriate, and to introduce specific reforms in some stateowned enterprises so that the services are delivered to the public,” Straughn pointed out.
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley’s delivery of the 2023 Financial Statement and Budgetary Proposals on Tuesday has seen a number of queries about the lack of details relating to the growth plan and reform of SOEs.
    Professor of Finance at the University of the West Indies Cave Hill, Justin Robinson, who was a member of yesterday’s panel, said: “I was expecting some details on the reforms of the stateowned enterprises, which was a central feature of the Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation programme. In many ways those details were sadly lacking. We are not really significantly wiser about how that will play out.”
    Chairman of the Barbados Private Sector Association Trisha Tannis said the private sector was lacking the granular facts regarding Government’s vision for a diversified economy, in which the sector is expected to double its investment from $1 billion to $2 billion. She also echoed the calls for details on the reform of SOEs.
    “We need to drill down on the details and if Tuesday was not the time to do that, then I think
    we have to run very quickly to the time that we have to do that. This is because we need the investment capacity now, we need the growth now. Our debt service, though not uncomfortable, is climbing and there is the feeling that time is not on our side. Tell us how we are going to save the close to half of a billion dollars in fiscal leakage from stateowned enterprises that we so desperately need,” Tannis said.
    Similar concerns were raised earlier by general secretary of the National Union of Public Workers Richard Green, who 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.
    However, Straughn pointed out that apart from the unions, Government placed priority on ensuring that the public is kept in the loop every step of the process.
    “At the end of it, whatever is determined for an individual SOE, there still has to be some level of consultation, not just with the unions, but with the public. You would recall that when we came into office, we conducted surveys and people gave their input on those things they considered essential. We have been very consistent in the manner in which we address that,” he said.
    (CLM)

    Source: Nation


  23. Barbados appears to be attracting a lot of cruise ship activity, could it be giveback by the cruise industry because of Barbados’ welcomning stance during the pandemic?


  24. Waru
    Yes, there are always sharks in bloodied waters.

    Crypto is only a small to moderate proportion it seems.Think it was SVB which has long been trying to get it off its books.

    However, again the medicine, a takeover, maybe worse than the disease.

    We’re dealing with two main factors. One, regional banks verses national banks. Two, the four biggest national banks have collectively 650 TRILLION dollars in derivative exposures. These are the ones most likely to gobble them up. Meaning JP Morgan, et al

    To put this in context that’s about seven times the GDP of the entire world.

    Until real solutions deal with this underlying problem, and others. All shadow dancing!

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

    “You all need to realise that slavery never ended in Barbados. Self-determination of the people is an illusion.”

    Tron…is that really you?


  26. Hosea 8:7
    King James Version
    7 For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind: it hath no stalk; the bud shall yield no meal: if so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up.

    Strangers have swallowed it up!!

    https://youtu.be/rum1BlSrZSE


  27. Tron on March 17, 2023 at 12:39 AM said:
    Rate This

    You all need to realise that slavery never ended in Barbados. Self-determination of the people is an illusion. Our society is built on the quicksand of an uncontrollable national debt. The fences of the old plantations no longer exist. They have been replaced by gated communities, where the real rulers live behind new fences, invisible to you, but controlling everything and everyone.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Between 1680 and 1817 the population of slaves doubled!!

    Clearly one type of erection that did not exist in the days of slavery was the fence!!

    Today however, the fence would seem to be the only erection in Barbados as we watch its population level off and soon fall.


  28. David

    On February 2, 2023, Minister of People Empowerment and Elder Affairs, Kirk Humphrey, disclosed ‘government’s’ plans to amalgamate all departments providing social services in Barbados, including the Child Care Board, National Assistance Board, National Disabilities Unit and Welfare Department to form the ‘Department of Family Services.’

    Although he did not mentioned anything about Rural Development Commission and Urban Development Commission, both SOEs also provide social services as well.
    Assuming RDC and UDC are included in the amalgamation, then, it would six (6) government agencies slated for reform.

    Each agency has its own organisational structure. Obviously, there wouldn’t be a need for six (6) heads and assistant heads of departments, accountants or assistant accountants.
    Additionally, although I believe Welfare Officers may not be affected, some support staff, such as Senior Clerks, Clerical Officers, Secretaries, Clerk Typists, Receptionists, Driver/Messengers, Maids etc, at each agency, will come under scrutiny.

    The Welfare Department is not a SOE. Assuming the Department of Family Services will be a statutory corporation, a situation may occur, for example, similarly to what occurred when the QEH transitioned from Central Government to a ‘Board,’ whereby employees who opted not to remain with the hospital, were either transferred to other government departments or paid a monthly salary for a predetermined amount of time.

    I suggest those individuals who are qualified in accounting, could be given an option to transfer to the Auditor General’s Office, after undertaking the required training.


  29. @Artax

    The prime minister/Straughn mentioned packages. There was no mention of facilitating transfers or soft landing options other than severance. Should the union be leading this conversation with government?


  30. @ David

    I understand the amalgamation is supposed to be completed by March 31.


  31. That is aggressive Artax in light of what Toni Moore has been messaging the public. Then again, we understand how these things go.

  32. Dance Away (Extended Remix) Avatar
    Dance Away (Extended Remix)

    “You all need to realise that slavery never ended in Barbados.”

    You all need to realise that slavery never ended inside each individual Bajan mind body and soul

    It is embedded inside their DNA and psyche

    the only cure is to dance away the heartache

    sometimes I think I am too deep for you all of y’all


  33. John on March 17, 2023 at 12:06 AM said:
    Rate This

    Several other Barbadian families did likewise, eg the Chandlers at Portland/Alleynedale and Todds Lemon Arbour, the Wards at Newton, Staple Grove and with the Simpsons at Thickett, Robinsons at Constant, Arthurs at Yorkshire, Evelyns at Wotton etc. etc. etc.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The Thorne Family was another family active and investing heavily in sugar in the 20’s and 30’s when economic activity was at a low ebb. That family owned over 2,000 acres (8 plantations if memory serves me right) in St. James and operated Sandy Lane Sugar Factory.

    They were financed by Dacostas, one of the Big 6 families at the time. Sugar prices were low and Dacostas foreclosed which meant an up and coming private enterprise, BS&T got the assets. Sandy Lane was replaced by Porters Sugar Factory and of course there was Warrens Cooperative Sugar Factory in which my Grand father had shares.

    In the late 50’s BS&T used these assets to diversify into tourism … Sandy Lane Hotel, Sunset Crest etc etc.

    Vaucluse was also nearby and was served by plantations many of which were owned by the Mahon family. In St. Lucy there was the Ward family that operated Fairfield Sugar Factory.

    These are some of the families that would have invested in sugar when the investment climate favoured investing, before independence. That climate was destroyed by our politicians and national heroes.

    While it existed, those families provided a booming economy based on sugar and the natural resources of Barbados.

    Eventually BS&T got swallowed up!!

    Here is the problem. Not a single politician can point to any long term economic activity they have successfully pioneered.

    They have orchestrated the theft of capital invested in the economy by generations of Barbadian families looking to earn a living and benefit others by the economic activity they generated.

    The workers who supported the activities of these families have watched as their labour was stolen by the same people they voted to elect to represent them.

    The result is strangers have swallowed up Barbados as those families and their workers have disappeared from the scene.

    The Bible is pretty good at describing how to live and work together and what happens when its basic principles are flouted.

  34. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @anyone
    I have seen this United Trust corporation mentioned a few times. What is it?
    T&T have a similarly named entity, are they related?


  35. So we will just pretend the permanent damage to the reef was the cost of doing business. For a country begging for green and blue economy funding the lack of an assessment of the damage to the reef is shameful. But alas beggars have no shame


  36. @Redguard

    In which capitalist society economic considerations will not outweigh all the others?


  37. Unit Trust… Is there a relationship between the two or like it like every island having a “Tourism Board”

  38. JUNIOR DELGADO ♦ Yard {DUB PLATE 12"} Avatar
    JUNIOR DELGADO ♦ Yard {DUB PLATE 12″}

    @ John Boy Knox
    You got to realise that your family thrived on the exploitation of human manual labour of those who toiled in the fields and sugar cane mills for a barely liveable wage, and they adopted the same slavery and colonial business model that was the legacy of the worst crimes to mankind.
    Humanity was not humane and still isn’t.
    You have stated that slave workers and their families were happy and well looked after, but that was also part of the evil self serving scam of exploitation and pure greed.

  39. Junior Delgado - None Shall Escape Avatar
    Junior Delgado – None Shall Escape

  40. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    TheO
    My phone pulled one of those autocorrects..albeit correctly it seems.
    While the above article states
    “and the establishment
    of a United Trust Corporation in the Budget puts Barbadian agencies in a position to build out the business, another form of growth.”
    I think elsewhere I have seen the term Unit Trust, and that was the term I had intended to use. Mutual Fund?


  41. @NO
    I have seen this United Trust corporation mentioned a few times. What is it?
    T&T have a similarly named entity, are they related?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    It is the kind of shiite that is done when leaders are bluffing, and when they have no clue about the way forward.

    Can you imagine that Barbados ALREADY has a Cooperative Movement that has been spectacularly successful at raising funds over the past decades -with billions of dollars in savings…?
    Their problem is that, try as they have, politicians have not yet figured how to access those savings….for their usual splurging..
    The challenge is the TOTAL transparency of cooperatives…. and men like Caswell… LOL

    What the politicians HAVE DONE however, is to pass some shiite LAWS that PREVENT the credit unions from investing those funds in any OTHER shiite, BESIDES government bonds – or in the foreign banks. for the albino vultures’ convenient access.

    So perhaps the PM can explain the need to START a Unit Trust scam now …. when an extremely SUCCESSFUL credit union group ALREADY exists….

    Madness is doing the same shiite OVER and OVER ..and expecting different results.
    Also…
    Quos Deus vult perdere prius dementat

  42. Ghetto Priest ft. Junior Delgado - Slave State Avatar
    Ghetto Priest ft. Junior Delgado – Slave State

    It does not feel like freedom to me
    Slave State
    Disaster Capitalism
    Digital War
    Is it too Late

  43. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Bushie
    I confuses easily.
    A “trust” by definition is not incorporated. It is a Trust. In Canada they are known as Income Trust’s, and Unit Trust’s have different meanings in different countries.
    Hence “United TRUST Corporation” is an interesting animal.
    My fear whenever pols toss out a name without specifics, is next we’ll hear the UTC is replacing the NIS. And when people say I didn’t know that, they’ll be told it was “mentioned several times, in the budget, in the estimates etc”


  44. UTC is basically a Trinidadian based investment company that specialises in mutual funds, short to long term investments, personal financial management and, interestingly, since NIS was mentioned…… manages a Universal Retirement Fund (URF).

    What surprises me is that UTC was established under the ‘Unit Trust Corporation of Trinidad & Tobago Act, 1981.’

    If what we’re hearing is true, then it is a situation where, rather than reforming the NIS, ‘government’ is seeking to use Trinidadian quasai government entity to oversee the Scheme, which would obviously incur a fee.

    In the interest of transparency and accountability, matters such as these, should have been discussed with the public before any agreements are negotiated.

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

    William…saw this but did not realize the impact it will have until i took a second look.

    “Florida, Mexico and Caribbean brace for incoming 8,000-km-wide seaweed blanket
    By Sarah Do Couto Global News
    Posted March 15, 2023 4:33 pm EST

    WATCH: “It’s been like this more and more and sometimes you can’t even get into the water because it’s all in the border,” Miami resident Kano Mirth said.

    It sounds like the stuff out of a horror film: a giant, blob-like blanket of seaweed that is so big it can be seen from outer space.

    The over 8,000 kilometre-wide brown glob of seaweed, known as the Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt, is not new — but it is on the move and could potentially wreak havoc on beaches in Florida, Mexico and the Caribbean this summer.

    Scientists have claimed this year’s bloom of sargassum is the largest ever recorded.”


  46. @ David
    I am a little confused by comments on this post which seek to point to the
    debt. Barbados has reduced it’s debt levels from 175 percent of GDP to120 percent in recent years. The government is on a clear path towards debt reduction in the coming years. The only question is how sustained will growth be? I think that the key to this will be determined by structural reforms to be undertaken. The other mistakes that I believe some commentators are making is that they view the budget speech in isolation and not in conjunction with other reforms being undertaken all at once. Education Reform Commission, Population Reform Commission and the digitization of government services.

    Another thing I noticed that seems to be lost on some people is that this budget was done as a second reading of the appropriations bill, which is something that this government has done for the last three years which is something that the late Owen Arthur recommend from as far back as 2004. Therefore this is not a conventional budget, but more or less a summary of governments new programmes and initiatives,

  47. Sweet Mary Jane Avatar
    Sweet Mary Jane

    More serious dub pressure
    Sweet Mary Jane’s lament for GM weed.
    Mourning man’s cutting of Mother Nature from the THC DNA-spliced loop.

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