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Study: Living wage in New Providence is $2,625 and $3,550 in Grand Bahama

By RASHAD ROLLE

Tribune Senior Reporter

rrolle@tribunemedia.net

A 2020 study by the Government and Public Policy Institute of University of The Bahamas concluded that a living wage in New Providence and Grand Bahama is $2,625 and $3,550 per month respectively.

The September 30, 2020 study is authored by Lesvie Archer, Olivia Saunders, Bridget Hogg, Vijaya Permual and Brittney Johnson.

“Our gross living wage estimate for New Providence is 26 percent lower than the Grand Bahama living wage estimate, nearly 200 percent higher than the national minimum wage, 127 percent higher than 2013 poverty line and nearly 75 percent higher than the minimum wage hike proposed by a local union,” the report says.

“Our living wage estimate for Grand Bahama is nearly 300 percent higher than the living wage, 200 percent higher than the 2013 poverty line and 140 percent higher than the minimum wage hike proposed by a local union.”

The country’s minimum wage is currently $210 a week.

To calculate the living wage, researchers considered costs of an affordable and nutritious diet, house and utility, education, healthcare, transportation, clothing, recreation, emergency and unexpected event funds, savings and investments, among other things.

Their research followed a model laid out by economist Richard Anker who defined a living wage in terms of what the researchers say is its ability to sustain a person’s “physical, emotional, social and cultural needs and that of their family beyond mere subsistence.”

Researchers concluded that the daily cost of food on a “model diet” averages $10 per person in New Providence and $1,150 per month for a nuclear family of four when accounting for free school lunch programmes.

“The model diet reflects a nutritious diet, local food preferences, low-cost selections, and is calorie sufficient,” they wrote.

In Grand Bahama, the cost of food on a model diet is likewise $13 per day and $1,550 per month for a nuclear family of four.

Researchers concluded that $650 and $900 respectively are the monthly costs for basic but decent housing in New Providence and Grand Bahama. This includes $400 and $700 respectively for rent, and $250 and $200 for utilities like electricity, water and gas.

Non-food and non-housing costs were estimated at $2,200 in New Providence and $2,800 in Grand Bahama. For nuclear families of four, the costs were estimated at $4,000 and $5,750 respectively.

Researchers’ methodological strategy involved fieldwork on New Providence and Grand Bahama, including examining houses and the prices of items in food stores; and secondary data sources like the 2020 University of the Bahamas Housing Registry, 2019 Labour Market Information Newsletter, 2017 Labour Force Report, 2016 Government of the Bahamas Salary Book, etc.

Following Richard Anker’s work, researchers distinguished between a living wage for New Providence and Grand Bahama.

They wrote: “Our decision to estimate separate living wages signifies a sensitivity and respect for each island’s unique socio-economic composition. First, New Providence reflects an urban environment and houses more than 85 percent of the nation’s population…Grand Bahama, on the other hand, reflects more of a suburban jurisdiction, especially when compared to the more rural islands across the Bahamian archipelago. Per the latest Housing Expenditure Survey Report, Grand Bahama is under-represented in the poorest and second highest quintiles and is over-represented in the middle quintiles (quintiles 2,3 and 5). This middle over-representation suggests Grand Bahama island would benefit greatly the implementation of a living wage. This suburban-urban-rural difference is an important distinction as it has implications on each island’s poverty rate, level of employment and cost of living.

“Cost of living expenses vary across islands due to inter-island transportation expenses. This means that the cost of living on each island is largely influenced by the cost of transporting goods and services therein. As a nation that imports over 90 percent of its food and materials, New Providence island operates as the hub for related warehousing, administrative and distribution activity.

“New Providence receives bulk import orders, breaks them down and distributes them to the remaining islands, some of which are more than 200 miles away. Transportation costs generated from this distribution process affect the cost of living. For example, on March 11, 2020, the cost of gasoline was estimated at $4.50 on New Providence but $6.50 in the nation’s most southern island of Inagua. Accordingly, the variation in living expenses across all islands of the Bahamas suggests the inadequacy of proposing to calculate a single living wage for low-wage workers across the entire country. Therefore, inspired by the International Labour Organisation’s living wage specialist Richard Anker’s call to respect the differences between urban and rural environments by calculating their living wage estimates separately, this study offers two living wage estimates, one for New Providence and one for Grand Bahama.”

Comments

DDK 3 years ago

Good luck on that. Suspect this is an attempt to get another rise on the minimum wage. Suggest government lower import taxes to ,say 25% across the board duty, do away with the disgusting VAT, further suggest government and it's civil servants stop stealing and wasting tax money and run the Country honestly and efficiently. Also think it would be nice if employees at least attempted to put in an honest day's work. That would all be SO refreshing!

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JokeyJack 3 years ago

We need VAT. The exemptions to VAT need to be canceled and it reduced to 10%. It's the only tax that illegals and under the table people pay. Why should they not pay? Also havent you noticed more Bahamians questioning govt spending and natural resources etc ever since it affects their pocket? Reform govt waste THEN reduce VAT to 7% and lower. Reform must come first. If you remove VAT then the people dont care about reform. Oh yeah, and be sure dont vote for no independent candidates, they have no experience in tiefin. LOL. Someone told me they were inexperienced, im guessing thats what they meant?

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DDK 3 years ago

I maintain hat people collecting any form of duty on behalf of the government should not steal. Then of course, nor should government🤣. VAT is a terrible form of taxation.

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tribanon 3 years ago

Researchers concluded that the daily cost of food on a “model diet” averages $10 per person in New Providence and $1,150 per month for a nuclear family of four when accounting for free school lunch programmes.

“The model diet reflects a nutritious diet, local food preferences, low-cost selections, and is calorie sufficient,” they wrote.

All three of these researchers at the Public Policy Institute of UB must be thin as a rail and eat only one meal a day on the five days of the week when they are not fasting. I assume they must fast at least two days of the week.

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ohdrap4 3 years ago

I noted the "free lunch".

Here is how to reduce your grocery bill:

  1. Steal tea bags, instant coffee and sugar packets from work.

  2. Get extra ketchup, napkins, soy sauce, duck sauce, salt and pepper packets, and mustard from fast food places.

  3. Visit your cousin on Sunday after church an get the left over macaroni.

  4. Buy a mini meal from the chinese or buy a regular meal and divide by four.

  5. Buy the 99 cent chef boyardee can or tamen noodles. If that fails, eat the cat's mackerel.

  6. Bring foil to all potlucks at wk and load up enough for 2 days.

  7. Use one turkey leg to flavor a whole pot of rice.

  8. Buy sliced bologna at super value and fry with onions. Serve on top of special blend bread.

  9. Make curry out of miscut chicken wing.

Finally , make pig feet souse. It is actually ketogenic.

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proudloudandfnm 3 years ago

How can GB be higher than Nassau? Our rent is way lower, electricity lower, we can buy goods duty free with a bond. No way GB would be higher than Nassau. In Nassau a dumpy, crappy apartment costs over a $1000.00 a month to rent. You burn more gas in Nassau stuck in perpetual traffic. And I swear groceries cost less. I aint buying this..

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DWW 3 years ago

they are referring to minimum wage earners not the ones with cushy gov't or port jobs. does GB have bus service? transport may be the biggest cost difference between the islands. GB is a big island, you can't walk to work can you? electricity is higher in GB than the rest of the Bahamas and you know that. you cannot buy food duty free with a bond.

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proudloudandfnm 3 years ago

We do have bus services and we also have the cheapest, most reliable electricity in the country...

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John 3 years ago

ONE of the biggest problems with Bahamians is that they forgot how to ‘throw something in da pot.’ Even though there may be several people living in the same house, errybody doing their own thing. Rather than put together and cook meals they each buy separate meals, top up their own cell phone and nothing is shared. And that is the advantage Hait, for example, even the illegal ones dem, They pool their resources and so a dollar goes much further than being selfish and trying to live for ya self. So the quality or standard of living for a Haitian making the same wage if many Bahamians is greater.

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bahamianson 3 years ago

Good point, pòol resources. One roasted chicken from Super Value can feed a.family of 4 for dinner. Cost is 8.95 divid3d by 4 is around 2.25 per person , add a romaine salad for another .60 cents per person. It is healthful and affordable.so, for $3 each a family of 4 can eat dinner. What we have is , each spending $10 for their own personal meal . So, some form of pooling can work. $15 for one conch snack times 4 is $60. Conch ,chicken, even burgers used to be the food of the people whom wanted to save money, now, you cant even afford a $15 conch snack. We also lime to spend in restaurants, I dont understand it. Birthdays, celebrations all warrants an expensive restaurant, new clothes and instagram pictures. We have bought the lie

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sage 3 years ago

Kudos to the team at the University of The Bahamas. We are finally making good scientific use of the myriad of data lying around the place and turning it into very useful reports that can finnaly be used to shake this country out of its daily delusions.

Whether we agree with their findings or not, out country need to move from guestimations and gamesmanship when it comes to setting policies and practices that no one is measuring...folks just pulling stuff out from "you know where" and calling it facts.

Continue to grow UB research team. End the delusion of impact of continued taxation here in this country.

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