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UWP
Spotlight
Dr.
Lewis, who was speaking to a One Caribbean
reporter and expanding remarks which he recently made at
public meeting in Castries said: “St. Lucians are worried. They
are worried about how the stagnating economy of the country is
impacting on their own incomes and future employment prospects.
Not only are St Lucians feeling the burden of the large number of
taxes, duties and financial levies which Government has imposed in
recent months, but they are becoming increasingly aware that many
employers are beginning to contemplate measures which will
actually reduce employment through, for example rotation; or that
employers are actually beginning a process of downsizing of their
companies, leading to the elimination of some persons employed” Dr.
Lewis observed that people are now beginning to understand the
consequences for the economy as a whole, of the badly implemented
privatisation of the banana industry. People are realising that it
was a major error of judgement on the part of the Government to
simply absorb the debt of the old St. Lucia Banana Growers
Association (SLBGA) and then leave the industry to fend for
itself. “The fact of the matter is that the individual farmer
has been left in a great degree of insecurity. All small
businesses operate on a certain amount of short term credit, but
the small farmer has seen the credit arrangements suddenly
removed, so that he is now constantly short of enough cash to
provide the proper level of inputs to produce efficiently. This
situation has, unfortunately, been made worse by the drop in
prices on the market. The result is that the many farmers have
simply been dropping out, leading to a dramatic decline in
production; while those who remained have seen their incomes, and
therefore their purchasing power, substantially reduced. Dr
Lewis said that the reduced farmers’ income has had a dramatic
effect on the availability and circulation of money in the
commercial sector, leading to an economic squeeze in the business
world: “Almost every businessman is wailing and crying about the
dramatic drop in sales that has occurred over the last year and a
half at least. The business sector is itself realising that we
have never seen such a prolonged recession in the banana industry.
Their salesmen going into the rural areas to service the small
shopkeepers are finding them only willing to purchase small amouts
of goods. People are beginning to realise that this is due not so
much to any external factors, but to internal or domestic factors.
For in spite of the WTO ruling and all that, we still have
our quota of 127.000 tons annually on the European market, but the
fact of the matter is that from producing 105,000 tons in 1995, we
are now down to 65,000 tons in 1999 and all indications are that
we will not do more than that in the year 2000. The banana dollar
has ceased to flow in the St.Lucian economy.
Government, in failing to provide a proper regulatory
framework for the industry, has allowed the development of
confusion and demoralisation in the sector. People now realise
that the privatisation of the industry was conducted more on a
political than an economic basis”. Dr.
Lewis continued to say that the business sector in particular, but
people in general, are coming to realise that the St.Lucia Labour
Party seems to have come into power without any idea of how to
continue the development of the St Lucian economy, and how to
ensure its adjustment in the changing and dangerous international
economic environment: “For the first few years Dr Anthony and
his crew coasted on the projects which they found either being
implemented or already well planned for implementation by the UWP
Government. Now that these are in various stages of finalisation
the Government seems to be adrift as to what to do next to
maintain the momentum which the economy had when they took over.
They have been unable to create any framework of incentives for
investment, especially as far as local St.Lucian investors are
concerned. They have been unable to prioritise any particular
sectors for investment and to create conditions which would draw
investors. And they have failed to regulate the monetary system in
a manner which would ensure credit on reasonable to terms for
medium term investment. This is extremely unfortunate because local investors in particular now face a situation of
increasingly tight credit on the part of the banks who seem to
have grown concerned about the capacity of
current and projected economic activity to sustain
repayment of loans. It seems to me that in the circumstances, the
banks have revised the criteria for loans, making it more
difficult for St.Lucians in particular to access funds for medium
term investment. This is a very bad sign”. Dr.
Lewis said that because of major slowdown of the economy,
Government has, in desperation, been resorting to extensive
borrowing to sustain its own activities, and to try to induce some
movement of economic activity: “But we are particularly
concerned as to how Government has been pulling down financial
resources from institutions like the National Insurance Scheme for
investment in somewhat dubious construction schemes; how they have
been resorting to institutions like, we understand, the Port
Authority (SLASPA) for funds to meet their own cash flow
requirements, thus reducing the substantial reserves which that
institution had accumulated”. Further,
Dr Lewis continued, “we are extremely concerned at how the
Government has been accessing commercial money, particularly from
Trinidad commercial banks for all sorts of activities. We are
concerned about the Government’s capacity to meet repayment
schedules in the future. In other words we are perceiving the
serious situation in which the Government is mortgaging
St.Lucia’s financial future, to the desperate need for funds
which it has in the present. A
lot of this borrowing is not properly being reported to
Parliament.
Dr.
Lewis said that St.Lucians were concerned, as a result of what
they are feeling and experiencing, about the way in which the
economic management of the country is being conducted, and the
unprecedented long recession that the economy is going through.
This is making the population worried not only about the economic
present about the economic future of the country: “ People are
beginning to realise that for the first time in perhaps thirty
years or so, they are unable to plot a future for their own
personal development and for their children’s development,
especially the financing of their childrens’ education.
Government is actually reducing expenditure in some critical areas
of education, and changing for the worse the financial conditions
under which persons engaged in teacher training and health or
nursing training for example, have been able to access education,
particularly at Sir Arthur Lewis Community College. There are
signs to that for the first time in our modern history, Government
is being extremely selective about access to education at the
University of the West Indies. This is an extremely dangerous
trend in an era in which knowledge is being defined all over the
world as the key ingredient in future economic and social
development of countries and peoples”. “Another
aspect of this - what can be called ‘disinvestment’ in the
economy - is the persistent deterioration in the country’s
public health facilities. St.Lucians are beginning to feel that
after all the taxes being extracted from them, they will still
have to turn to expensive private health facilities for safe
health care”, Dr. Lewis said. Dr
Lewis went on to argue that St.Lucians’ current economic
distress is also being converted into concern and worry about the
Labour Government’s general management of the country: “It is
amazing” he said “how people are beginning to feel that there
is increasing lack of equity and fairness in the distribution of
those goods and services over which Government has some control.
For example many small contractors are very concerned about how
Government contracts for public construction are being awarded. We
had warned two years ago that Government’s approach to the award
of contracts for the so-called NIPDEC projects - an approach which
substantially excluded normal tendering processes - would have
serious consequences. We were not listened to at the time, but now
concern about the award of contracts is a widespread one”. “There
are signs too”, Dr.Lewis continued “the so-called
privatisation process is being utilised for private gain. People
are increasingly concerned about the use of formerly public
institutions - now so-called ‘privatised’ or corporatised” -
to provide jobs for well known political activists of the Party.
All this goes against the grain of natural justice”. Dr
Lewis said that there are signs that Government is becoming aware
of the widespread public dissatisfaction about the lack of
progress of the economy: “In any case any inclination to dispute
the extent of public concern has been removed by the songs of the
calypsonians this Carnival season. But Dr. Anthony and his
colleagues are still in denial, being unwilling to accept that
their unplanned and erratic approach to economic management is a
big part of the problem. For example, they still will not accept
that their approach to taxation - the continual imposition of
taxes and levies outside of any real policy on taxation - has been
harmful to investor confidence and has made St Lucia look like a
country of unpredictability. Instability in the taxation system of
any country is a major contributor to instabilitiy in the general
economic climate. Continual rumors about the imposition of a Value
Added Tax in the near future are making this situation worse”. Unfortunately,
Dr Lewis said, the Labour Administration’s response to public
concern and criticism has been to either use their highly-paid
“spin doctors” to try to persuade St.Lucians that what exists is
not the reality and that the reality is different from what
St.Lucians are seeing before their very eyes. We in the opposition
are well aware of the extensive efforts which this Government makes
to try to persuade St.Lucians abroad that what they are hearing from
their relatives at home is not true. But the recent Budget Debate
and Minister George Odlum’s intervention has punched a big hole in
that approach. The UWP’s forceful opposition to Labour Cabinet’s
attempt to grab public funds for themselves under the guise of
“backpay” has also been an eyeopener for many people. The worse
thing about this is that though Cabinet backed off from the backpay,
they have refused to accept that St.Lucians consider the attempt at
the grab as an essentially immoral act”. The
Government’s second approach, Dr Lewis continued, “is to use the
public media to vilify, abuse, denigrate and slander their critics,
especially their critics from the official opposition. This has
virtually become a trademark of this administration. It is now one
of the worst characteristics of our country’s present political
and social life, and is being commented upon by many visitors from
regional countries Many people fear that in the present situation of
Government desperation and hypersensitivity to increasing criticism
this situation will get worse. In other words, expect more
vilification and slander of leading opposition politicians or
journalists who dare to criticise”. Many
St.Lucians, Dr Lewis said, “are worried that this is leading to
increased social division in the St.Lucian community - division of a
kind not seen in our country even in the 1979-82 period. Any
Government which replaces this one will have a tremendous amount of
healing to do within the community”, Dr. Lewis concluded. |
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