Kent Gammon: What Are the Priorities of the New Jamaican Government?

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - January 2, 2012

By Kent Gammon
Op-Ed Contributor

The Peoples’ National Party led by the Hon. Portia Simpson-Miller, was handsomely rewarded by the Jamaican people in the country’s 16th general election, taking 42 of the 63 seats in the House of Parliament. The Jamaican people seem to have made a direct association with the current very high cost of living, caused in large part by the global financial crisis, with the incumbent Jamaica Labour Party government.

The new government has to tackle the lingering global financial crisis and a declining per capita income set against an International Monetary Fund (IMF) agreement to end in May 2012.

The first order of business is for the new government to meet with the IMF and establish new terms of engagement given the history of the PNP’s aversion to the IMF. The IMF’s representative in Jamaica, Dr. Gene Leon, sated this week quote “Jamaica is at a crossroads and the country can either choose to do something or it can choose to do nothing. Every challenge presents an opportunity, but how you manage that opportunity is an exercise in choice, and that choice is either one of action or one of inaction, but it is a choice nonetheless.” end quote.

The new government has to resist any temptations to go back to the private equity markets, not that there is much room there to operate, where the interest rates on financial instruments are bound to be much higher than when they left office in September 2007.

Placing the horse before the apple cart

The new government campaigned aggressively on creating jobs through a programme called Jamaica Emergency Employment Programme, (“JEEP”). Their mode of creating these jobs would be by employing people to, among other things, clear land and with river training techniques.

The nature of such work, not denied by the PNP when confronted with this, tends to be short term, but there must be the prospect for medium and long term job creation. The types of industries that create such jobs are technology driven industries that only come when the economy is stable and there are large pools of skilled labour.

The Jamaican economy has been stabilized over the last 4 years, albeit anaemic and highly indebted.
The new government will need to put more resources in large-scale training programmes so as to create larger pools of skilled labour.

The public sector will need to be pared down and made more efficient so as to contain the public sector debt ratio to Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

The private sector is the only true creator of real and sustainable economic growth. The PNP has not adopted this philosophy in their modus operandi, preferring to resort to their socialist philosophy of the state being the creator of jobs.

The latest ranking by Transparency International has Jamaica ranked as 86 out of 183 countries, not impressive by any means. If the country is to attract much needed foreign investment. The new government has to curb the corruption epidemic that has been setting in, particularly strongly since the 1990s, if the economy is to have a real chance of expanding to meet the demand for jobs.

And now for the bitter medicine

The current Prime Minister Honourable Andrew Holness may have been too candid in his recent campaigning that there was bitter medicine to be taken. While this may have been understood by rational-minded individuals, given the current global economic context, such candidness doesn’t resonate with individuals who are only concerned with the here and now.

The PNP know that the Jamaican people have no stomach for such fiscal discipline and riled up the Jamaican people as they know so well how to do. But there is no denying that the Jamaican economy has to resort to the IMF to get through its short and medium term financial demands. The JLP government agreed to the IMF conditions, being left with no choice when they inherited office in September 2007, and paid for the most part the political price for it that should have been to the account of the PNP.

Kent Gammon is a former candidate for the Jamaica Labour Party and an Attorney-at-law.

Note: the opinions expressed in Caribbean Journal op-eds are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caribbean Journal.

Popular Posts cape santa maria

From Anguilla to Aruba, the Best Caribbean Beaches to Visit This Summer

Forget the Hamptons, forget Santorini. And Florida? There’s a reason snowbirds go home in the summer. If you’re looking for a summertime beach getaway, the Caribbean is it. The water is deliciously warm, the trade winds keep you cool and […]


From Belize to Grenada, 10 Little Caribbean Beach Resorts to Visit Right Now 

karibuni

There are different resorts for different vacations, different tastes, different moods. For some, there’s something delicious about a pint-sized, tiny Caribbean resort, where the emphasis is on the intimate, the serene. Where the soundtrack isn’t a piped-in DJ set, but […]


The Winners of the 2024 Caribbean Green Awards 

caribbean green

With almost 20,000 votes, the winners of the Caribbean Green Awards 2024 Presented by E-Finity have been crowned.  From state-of-the-art marine conservation projects to hotels that are redefining sustainability, the Green movement has never been stronger in the Caribbean.  “This […]


Related Posts jamaica travel advisors

Jamaica: Travel Advisors “Critical” to Tourism Growth 

Travel advisors are critical to advancing the growth of tourism in Jamaica, Tourism Minster Edmund Bartlett said this week.  Bartlett, who was addressing a group of top travel advisors in New York, said agents and advisors had an essential role […]


Montego Bay, Jamaica Is Hosting the Caribbean’s Biggest Travel Conference Next Month

montego bay jamaica conference

Hotel companies. Tour operators. Airlines. Tourist boards. Meeting planners. Travel advisors. Media professionals. Caribbean Travel Marketplace is the world’s biggest Caribbean travel conference, and it’s back again this year in the heart of Montego Bay, Jamaica.  This year’s Caribbean Travel […]


Riu’s New All-Inclusive in Montego Bay Has an Opening Date 

jamaica falmouth riu resort with beach and blue water

Riu’s highly-anticipated new resort in greater Montego Bay now has an opening date: May 4, 2024, Caribbean Journal has learned.  The new all-inclusive resort is now taking reservations for stays, according to Riu’s Web site.  A 753-room resort, it’s the […]


SUBSCRIBE!

Sign up for Caribbean Journal's free newsletter for a daily dose of beaches, hotels, rum and the best Caribbean travel information on the net.


No. Thank You