News

Op-Ed: The IMF, Chavez, and Jamaica’s Economic Future

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - January 11, 2013

By David Rowe
Op-Ed Contributor

FOR THE LAST 12 MONTHS, Jamaica has been in intermittent negotiations with the IMF. These negotiations have not yet yielded a new agreement.

It is now acknowledged internationally that Jamaica is in an economic crisis. This economic crisis has occurred in large part due to excessive borrowing and the country’s incapacity to repay that debt. The amount of Jamaica’s national debt is almost 140 percent of its gross domestic product.

Interest payments to service the debt suck away more than 60 percent of Jamaica’s total annual budget. Jamaica’s main banker, the IMF, is demanding a major reduction in the public sector, a major policy shift in pension planning which will force government workers to pay significantly for their own pensions and tax reform that will prevent the Minister of Finance the discretion to grant tax waivers to major importers.

Since there are essentially no practical international alternatives to borrowing money from the IMF, it does not appear that further delay of the agreement with the fund and the subsequent announcement of the new rules to local Jamaicans will achieve anything.

Additional delay will do nothing to reduce Jamaica’s $1.6 trillion debt — nor will it improve Jamaica’s borrowing power or the international confidence in Jamaica’s economy.

The only short-term solutions to Jamaica’s overwhelming debt crisis seem to be the reduction of public spending and major improvements in public sector efficiency.

The country simply needs to earn more from its viable industries. Of course, a reduction in the murder rate and a reduction in violent urban crime will be good for enhanced productivity, too.

Perhaps the first strategy should be to adopt the policy proposed by influential private sector voices to convert the Ian Fleming Airport in Portland to a true international airport and thus create a new tourist center in the Northeastern region of the island.

The powers that be in tourism indicate that this would attract many new arrivals and create the opportunity for immediate inbound revenue.

The decision by the Chicago Tribune’s editorial writers to compare Jamaica with Greece and to detail the country’s enormous debt burden was a timely signal to the one-year old People’s National Party government that the international perception of Jamaica as a desultory debtor nation has now been cemented. The time for self-congratulation is over. The time for creative thinking and crisis solution is at hand.

The crisis has not been alleviated by the continued poor health of Hugo Chavez, Venezuela’s President.

Jamaica’s fuel imports are heavily subsidized by the PetroCaribe Agreement between Jamaica and Venezuela. Under this very preferential agreement, Jamaica pays Venezuela only just over half of the oil it imports, with the remainder of the oil bill financed over 20 years at an interest rate of only 1 percent.

If PetroCaribe were to be discontinued there would be an immediate $600 million increase on Jamaica’s annual import bill.

Jamaica has also arranged to pay part of the 40 percent through the barter of goods. The continued existence of the Petrocaribe bilateral arrangement is vital to Jamaica’s financial interest, and any cessation of PetroCaribe would make a very awkward financial crisis considerably worse.

David P Rowe is an attorney in Jamaica and Florida and a law professor at the University of Miami School of Law in Coral Gables, Fla

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 swim-up rooms with translucent walls and green lawn

Montego Bay Is Getting a New Riu All-Inclusive Next Month 

It’s no secret that Montego Bay is hottest place in Jamaica right now, with a growing number of all-inclusive resorts, a revamp of its famous “hip strip,” more new otel projects and even a new real estate development on the […]


Planning an All-Inclusive Montego Bay Vacation? This Resort Is a Great Option. 

Montego Bay Jamaica Flights

It’s a different kind of all-inclusive in Montego Bay, one of the Caribbean’s all-inclusive capitals. The S Hotel Montego Bay is not what you might expect: its boutique, with a world-class spa, an adults-only vibe and a sophisticated, cool aesthetic.  […]


Jamaica: Travel Advisors “Critical” to Tourism Growth 

jamaica travel advisors

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 […]


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