Barbados layoffs could be beginning of a gloomy time for CARICOM

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Thursday Decemeber 19, 2013 – The announcement on Friday 13 December by the government of Barbados that it will lay-off over 3,000 public servants in January as a first step in cutting back government expenditure and reducing national demand for goods and services has rightly rattled other Caribbean Community (CARICOM) members. Concern has been greatest in neighbouring Eastern Caribbean countries, particularly the six independent ones that, with the British overseas territory, Montserrat, form the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS).

On top of all this is the high debt-to-GDP ratio of almost all of the CARICOM countries projected for 2013 by the Western Hemisphere Department of the IMF. With regard to debt-to-GDP ratios, apart from Trinidad and Tobago (33.4%) and Suriname (37.1%), the others are troubling. At the high end are Jamaica (142.7%), Grenada (115.8%) and Antigua and Barbuda (95%); and at the lower end are Guyana (58.2%) and The Bahamas (56.1%). None of the others are below 75%. Unless debts are reduced considerably by the countries with debt-to-GDP ratios of over 70%, debt repayment will consume much of their dwindling foreign exchange reserves summoning them to the hard path that Jamaica has travelled recently with the IMF and that now beckons to Barbados.
The financial institutions in Barbados and the members of the OECS are also facing difficulty. The asset quality and profitability of many of the banks are now troubling given that clients are finding it difficult to repay both personal and commercial loans. In the case of some banks – particularly the indigenous ones – over exposure to governments for loans and advances pose a real problem. Some time ago – certainly among the members of the OECS – a programme of mergers and acquisitions of the indigenous banks should have been actively encouraged. Now one collapse could spell calamity.
It is a gloomy time.
Comments
The alternative is “suicidal”…..gloomy times need drastic solutions….
Complete rethink politically economically.
Where is the funding to pay “civil servants” coming from.?
Bank of Barbados or indegenious banks.
Or markets by selling”IOU” bonds to finance government on a pay day to pay day
financing.
The decision is “economic” not “political”…..
I point my finger in the direction of BANK OF BARBADOS.
Central Bank….for gross mismanagement and
the countries dilemma.
Serious consideration should be taken about management of this financial national institution….
Its simple
Either lower or raise interest rates and monitor the direction this decision
takes….China now holds the most USD in reserves than what Americans
use as legal tender “internally”…
In layman language China owns America…..economically speaking.
Even India may also own America or less than 50%….
The EURO will sooner than later replace the USD as the currency of
trade….oil gas gold etc
But not a bad thing and USD paper money will be less value able
than toilet paper….zimbawbee dollar comes to mind…externally/internationally.
Hey I am no economist or politician but more a pragmatist.
Call a spar a spade…
The ways I see it……
I can go on indefinitely but some serious decisions at the highest level
are necessary if Bank of Barbados is to avoid “armagedeon”
Change yesterday not today or tomorrow.
Merry Xmas and happy 2014 caricom
Kamptan