WHITHER BARBADOS; THE CARIBBEAN MARCH OF DEBT!
By Professor Gilbert NMO Morris:
Almost 3 and a half years ago, I wrote in the NATION NEWSPAPER with a heavy heart for Barbados: here is what I said:
Professor Gilbert Morris December 13, 2013 at 7:40 PM
“The Minister of Finance for Barbados has issued a comprehensive Short
Term Growth & Sustainability programme. It will not work.”
I am constrained to say I TOLD YOU SO!
The difficulty for Barbados – as with the rest of the Caribbean – is
that we inherited a command and punish economic model, that was meant
for controlling ostensibly brainless people of whom nothing was
expected. Our innovation across the region was to add cronyism and the
facilitation of lackeys at the expense of our bright young
entrepreneurial minds. As such, across the region, we have produced an
economic model that is scloretic, for which our politics have become the
tribal art of attempting to defend obvious nonsense.
Our people
know now that their chance of becoming their best selves and living
their best lives is not at home, where – in Barbados as much as anywhere
else in the region – successive governments have succeeded in
cultivating a caste system, incompatible not only with the moral
imperatives of our relevant histories, but also with the yearning,
ambition and native genius of our peoples.
Barbados has lead the world in Literacy Rates, but to what purpose?
Bajans regale themselves with their comparative successes in the mark book, but where is the “silicon valley”?
Barbados needs a comprehensive rethink.
It’s future lies NOT a stale inert economic model that has produced one
billionaire and a host of rent-seeking lackeys in 40-odd years.
The crisis is now in the home stretch: Barbados bond yields led a global
spike and now ranks with the Republic of Congo; its debt is 135% of
GDP; and its reserves have fallen to half a billion; shockingly merely
2.5 months of imports. (They need to cook with steam, for Chrissake!)
Whilst it's interest payments are just over $50 million this year, Janet
Yellen is likely to raise interest rates again this year. Barbados 2022
maturities have risen 146 basis points since January 20th 2017.
Moreover, BREXIT impacts, crony run public institutions and domestic
debt are likely to balloon next year.
A similar fate awaits the Bahamas.
HERE IS WHAT TO DO:
Start over. Rescind all oversight commissions!
Appoint My good friend Sir Courtney Blackman and 16 others to a
National Steering Committee and manage this crisis for the next 6 months
with a maximum of transparency, with the power to subpoena persons and
papers for public testimony on all fiscal and economic issues.
Hold National Public Discussion about the current and Future of
Barbados; deal with structural issues that limit or prevent Bajans from
achieving their best lives in their own country.
Cut government spending now!
End all feckless liberal-minded enterprise projects, which just pay
lackeys at the expense of efficiency and true achievement (Compare
Singapore, which seeds parastatal corporations and then let’s them sink
or swim and if they cannot produce financials they are foreclosed
immediately by the Treasury).
Give EVERY Bajan who wants a
business license to establish a business aimed at export, licensee fee
and tax exemption for 10 years.
Move all government routine
processes – drivers & business licenses, government fees and other
processes to eGovernment platform immediately.
Convert all government payments to blockchain using Bitcoin or other electronic alternatives.
Place all government owned infrastructure and land into a sovereign
fund, 60% held by Bajan citizens, then JV with a global strategic
partner.
Eliminate the Ministry of Tourism.
Convince all CARICOM nations to withdraw from the WTO.
Open Harrison College to South Americans for Boarding school.
JV with Guyana to fund a super trade highway into Brazil, to provide a
staple of Brazilian products to the Caribbean, to compete with Florida.
Set up Barbadian International Business Centre with Arbitration and commercial services for South American business.
Establish a 100 acres area as a tax free zone for international data storage and management.
The first options must be to reduce government expenses, and reduce the
cost of doing business in Barbados, which has one of every tax in the
history of mankind.
Reduce governments tax share of GDP to below 18%.
Use timing options for initiatives, which allows government to maximize
policy options squeezing out efficiencies, then switch to more
sustainable programmes.
Source
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Showing posts with label economic model. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economic model. Show all posts
Friday, March 10, 2017
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Firm steps taken in the updating of Cuba’s economic model
• Council of Ministers Vice President Marino Murillo Jorge, head of the Policy Guidelines Implementation Permanent Commission, reports to National Assembly
O. Fonticoba Gener
DURING the last period between sessions of the Cuban Parliament,
the process of implementation of Policy Guidelines approved by the 6th Party
Congress has progressed at a satisfactory pace, with new measures implemented to
update the country’s socioeconomic model and others, already in place, being
perfected.
This was the essence of the report presented by Council of
Ministers Vice President Marino Murillo Jorge, head of the Policy Guidelines
Implementation Permanent Commission, during the final plenary session of the 7th
Legislature.
In a summary of progress made in the implementation process, he
said, "The tasks which the Commission, national bodies and entities, local
governments and enterprises must complete in 2013 and 2014 will be the most
complex, those of greatest importance and impact on the updating of our economic
model and on society as a whole."
Given their nature and scope, he said, these tasks must be studied
carefully, in order to adopt the best decisions for the country, with the
coherence required.
WORK UNDERWAY
Murillo reported that the drafting of the theoretical conception
of Cuba’s economic model is well underway. This document will guide the work of
all bodies involved in the nation’s development.
He said that also advancing is the establishment of fundamentals
for the country’s long-term Economic and Social Development Program, which
include the definition of indicators to be used to evaluate the model’s
performance and, above all, to precisely determine goals to be met.
Murillo indicated that a timeline is being prepared for the
implementation of macro-economic policies, included among the most important are
a new methodology to determine wholesale and retail prices; monetary policy
measures to be adopted to control the circulation of money; and procedures for
financial planning, as tools to better coordinate macro-economic policy, the
Economic Plan and State Budget.
Murillo made special mention of the new Tax System Law No. 113,
which will go into effect in January, and highlighted the fact that regulations
were included, which is not the case with the current, soon to be replaced,
law.
While the Tax System Law is the highest authority, establishing
the principles and taxable bases, he said, the Regulations detail procedures and
norms governing the law’s application, which can be changed within the
parameters established, without having to propose changes to the general
law.
Murillo reported that work is currently being done on the design
of the first 230 non-agricultural cooperatives which will open the gradual,
experimental process of establishing this new form of economic activity. The
legal framework for non-agricultural cooperatives went into effect December 11.
MORE AUTONOMY FOR ENTERPRISES
According to Murillo Jorge, a number of experimental changes in
the functioning of enterprises will begin January 1, directed at expanding
autonomy and authority in the economic and financial management of enterprises.
This process is being undertaken to advance in the construction of
a working model of the socialist state enterprise and to support macro-economic
policies, among others approved.
The objectives of this process are the re-capitalization of
enterprises; increased earnings to make possible the financing of increased
wages for workers; the creation of a wholesale market and the reconciliation of
costs which the Cuban economy can sustain with their value on the international
market.
The policy to be followed in the implementation of these changes,
he said, has been approved and work is underway on the legal framework.
The experiment will expand the context in which enterprises
function and, on a small scale, allow for trying out needed changes. The process
of full implementation will begin with the consolidated sugar group AzCuba, and
that of the biotechnological and pharmaceutical industries, BioCubaFarma, as
well as the state shrimp farming enterprise.
Murillo explained that the experiment will additionally include
limited changes for other enterprises, selected because of their importance to
the country’s economic development. These will, for example, allow for the sale
of excess production available after state contracts have been fulfilled, at
accorded prices.
OTHER STEPS FORWARD
As part of his report to deputies, Murillo Jorge addressed the
approval process underway of a proposal to make state entities’ social
objectives more flexible, with the goal of allowing such institutions to more
fully develop their potential.
This proposal would allow for the adoption of measures such as the
establishment of the principal social objective by the body or institution
creating the entity, with no reference to the currency in which it will operate.
Another option would be permitting the director of an enterprise or entity to
make decisions about secondary activities, related to the social objective.
Murillo Jorge likewise emphasized the importance of studies being
done on the development of linked production sequences, in an effort to increase
productivity and contribute to a better structural balance within the economy.
These efforts are directed toward the fulfillment of Guidelines No. 7, 89, 103,
129, 132, 136, 185, 217 and 219.
He also reported that work continues to facilitate
self-employment. Among the measures are the inclusion of new activities (such as
real estate agent, measurement instrument repairer and antique dealer), the
renewed granting of licenses for activities previously suspended, as well as a
new regulation which defines the scope of all types of approved work.
The policy which governs the awarding of subsidies to individuals
for home construction, Murillo explained, has also been updated, with more
financing available if the dwelling is to be built in a seismic zone; for
coverage of transportation costs of building materials and for costs associated
with technical documentation or for long-term leasing of land rights. New
categories of persons eligible for subsidies were also established, including
renters or persons living in rented rooms. Subsidies will also be available for
the repair of leaks and plumbing problems.
IMPROVING GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
The experience of Artemisa and Mayabeque provinces, involved in an
innovative project to perfect their administrative systems and leadership
bodies, was also discussed during the National Assembly plenary session.
Second in charge of the Permanent Commission, General Leonardo
Andollo, emphasized the importance of Decree No. 301, which defines state
functions to be assumed by national state administrative bodies and entities
with respect to provincial authorities in the two provinces.
"This decree provides the legal framework allowing the experiment
to operate on an institutional foundation in which the delegation of authority
and attributes at the different levels are clearly defined."
"No antecedent to this document exists and it is an important
foundation for the future, since today there is no such regulation which defines
precisely and comprehensively, the procedures involved."
He explained that as part of the project, in Güines municipality,
Mayabeque, an effort is being made to consolidate, in a single building, all
administrative services the population requires. Plans include the creation of a
single administration and shared logistical support, for example, in the area of
data and telecommunications, while studies continue to guide improvement of the
project.
Andollo reported that regulations for Government Information
Councils and Technical Committees in the two provinces have been approved and
that the process of integrating all higher education centers is underway there,
as well as in the Isle of Youth.
One important accomplishment of the experimental project, he said,
is that throughout the process thus far, there has been no administrative
instability, significant when taking into consideration that administrative
structures in each of the two provinces have been staffed with 26% of the
original personnel and the principal indicators of development have been
maintained at levels similar to those of other provinces.
Despite the progress made, Andollo indicated that difficulties
persist. Among these are limitations on efforts to concentrate leadership bodies
in the smallest number of locations possible and the insufficient availability
of supplies needed by leadership bodies and service providers.
December 18, 2012
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