|

Business

Eastern Caribbean moving towards greater integration

Sunday, February 19, 2012



Deeper economic union is at the centre of the Eastern Caribbean's attempts to build a platform for sustainable growth, the Governor of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank said on Thursday.

But others may need to take a different path, warned Sir Dwight Venner. "Each country and region must establish its own trajectory on the way to accelerated growth."

The Eastern Caribbean is conducting "an experiment of great importance to the region," he said, according to a transcript of his speech to Sterling Asset Management's 10th anniversary celebrations at Hope Gardens, Kingston.

The Revised Treaty of Basseterre, which came into being on January 21, 2011, provides for full economic union and creates the framework for a single financial and economic space, he said.

"The movement towards consolidation of the major institutions such as banks and insurance companies should lead to a more efficient and cost-effective financial system."

The Eastern Caribbean also responded to the recent global crisis with an eight-point stabilisation and growth programme, he said.

The islands began their union in 1981 with the original Treaty of Basseterre, which centralised the judiciary, central banking, civil aviation and telecoms regulation as well as banking and securities regulation.

The new treaty aims to increase functional co-operation in tourism, manufacturing, agriculture and information technology, as well as health and education.

Sir Dwight pointed to the daunting task facing island nations in restructuring their financial sectors after they became independent against a background of international upheaval.

The last time there was relatively stable growth in the global economy was in the 1950s and 60s, he said, noting that oil, currency, banking and financial crises followed the demise of the Bretton Woods agreement in 1971, when the US broke the link between the dollar and gold.

"Our countries have had to chart a development path in which our financial institutions have had to play a significant role," he said.

"The economic arrangement centred on the export of raw materials and the importation of consumer durables, capital and intermediate goods and even food.

"Foreign commercial banks dominated the financial system and their lending was oriented to facilitating this anti-developmental economic system."

Different parts of the English-speaking Caribbean dealt with this in different ways, some by leaving the bank alone, some by nationalising them, and some by forcing local ownership participation on them or establishing state-owned competitors.

But since the first oil price shock in the early 1970s, the economic progress of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union countries has been challenged.

Although growth hit an annual average of six per cent in the 1980s thanks to the banana boom, tourism and foreign direct investment, it has fallen to around 1.5 per cent in the last decade.

The region is now one of the most highly indebted in the world, Sir Dwight said, with debt to GDP ratios of over 100 per cent, partly because the standard of social welfare is that of a middle to high-income country, while economic development has not kept pace.

"The economies must be reoriented to create domestic efficiencies that make them more competitive, both regionally and internationally," he said.



POST A COMMENT


You must first register and then login to be able to post a comment.

HOUSE RULES

 

1. We welcome reader comments on the top stories of the day. Some comments may be republished on the website or in the newspaper – email addresses will not be published.

2. Please understand that comments are moderated and it is not always possible to publish all that have been submitted. We will, however, try to publish comments that are representative of all received.

3. We ask that comments are civil and free of libellous or hateful material. Also please stick to the topic under discussion.

4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.

5. Please don't use the comments to advertise. However, our advertising department can be more than accommodating if emailed: advertising@jamaicaobserver.com.

6. If readers wish to report offensive comments, suggest a correction or share a story then please email: community@jamaicaobserver.com.

7. Lastly, read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy, and before commenting you need to register, conveniently, by clicking the link above.



Comment (required):

You have characters left.
captcha 09acecfd56d34f59ac59975656788ded
Enter text seen above:

For information about privacy please read our Privacy Policy.

I have read and accepted the Terms and Conditions


COMMENTS (0)

Red Stripe to grow own raw materials in Jamaica

  4 comments

 

Facebook falls flat in public debut

  2 comments

 

IT company launches cash recycler machine

  0 comments

 

'How bush can get us billions'

  0 comments

 

Slow growth projected for Deposit Insurance Fund

  0 comments

 

Beyond Facebook: A look at social network history

  0 comments

 

How to do tax reform when facing a fiscal crisis?

  0 comments

 

Jamaica National launches money transfer service in Ghana

  0 comments

 

Telecoms show support for customers

  0 comments

 

COK credits aggresive cost, debt management for turnaround

  0 comments

 

Exploratory oil well off Cuba comes up dry

  0 comments

 

Salary: Not a secret in the home

  0 comments

 

Pan Jam buys 20% of Chukka

  0 comments

 

C2W Music IPO clears $129-m

  0 comments

 

Growth will not come from the budget

  6 comments

 

Regional FDI hits record

  0 comments

 

Crime takes 6% of GDP

  0 comments

 

How Jamaica can escape international crisis

  0 comments

 

SMEs to access cheap software

  0 comments

 

Business climate needs fixing for growth

  0 comments

 

Today's Cartoon


Poll

 Do/Would you disclose details of your salary with your spouse? 
Yes
No

View Results

Results published weekly in Sunday Finance


Username:
Password: