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PM: FDI remains ‘engine of growth’

By NEIL HARTNELL

Tribune Business Editor

nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

Prime Minister Perry Christie yesterday said foreign direct investment (FDI) would continue to be “the engine of growth” for the Bahamas and rest of the Caribbean, given that the pooling of local capital remained an “ongoing challenge”.

Delivering the keynote address at the Caribbean Investment Summit in London, Mr Christie said economic stability among all nations was required before the Caribbean could look to greater economic integration via the Caribbean Single Market & Economy (CSME).

The Prime Minister did not explicitly rule out future Bahamian participation in the CSME, saying that “we continue towards development of a single market”, even though the private sector and wider society has long been sceptical of such a move.

And while some observers would probably like to see Mr Christie talk-up, and place more emphasis on, Bahamian and domestic investment, others will argue that he merely recognised the reality of FDI’s importance as an economic driver.

“The relatively flat levels of GDP seen throughout the region can be attributed to the continued servicing by many Caribbean countries of high levels of national debt,” Mr Christie said.

“This means that, for these countries, in the medium term, the engine for growth must continue to be sourced from external, private sector sources.

“That is not to say that foreign investment alone will improve our fortunes, but I believe it will require a dedicated and ongoing process of private sector-led investment to build capacity and enterprise aimed at strengthening our domestic economies and creating a state of employment readiness across all sectors.

“It will also require substantial investment as public-private partnerships in infrastructure development and transportation to stimulate cross-border trade between countries.”

Acknowledging the constraints faced by domestic businesses and investors in the Bahamas and wider Caribbean, the Prime Minister added: “What continues to hamper efforts is the ongoing challenge of local capital formation and entrepreneurship, interrupted business growth, human capital development and skills transfer, and inherent weaknesses in regulatory performance, all of which present constraints to employment and economic mobilisation for many countries of the Caribbean.”

He then suggested that the region needed to prepare much more before it was ready for something such as the CSME.

“Some proponents of the Caribbean Single Market argue that the Caribbean must become a single market to capitalise on inflowing currents of investment,” the Prime Minister said.

“In other words, our individual markets are perceived as too small to deliver sufficient returns on capital and thus to attract significant amounts of foreign direct investment.

“While I am in agreement that more needs to be done to develop linkages in trade to achieve liberalisation, and ultimately, global economic integration, we must firstly recognise the overarching need to ensure that all nations within our sphere of influence are on a path to macroeconomic stability,” he added.

“Although most of the countries of the Caribbean are moving toward regional integration, it is difficult to manage sustained focus on a Caribbean Single Market when our economies continue to be weakened by global economic after-shocks and the punitive actions of international regulatory agencies such as the OECD, aimed specifically at what the EU has called ‘non-cooperative tax jurisdictions’ in the Caribbean in spite of our compliance with international regulatory requirements.”

The Prime Minister also complained about “high levels of revenue leakage from the absence of domestic linkages in the tourism value chain, as well as repatriation by investors of high percentages of profits”.

Comments

MonkeeDoo 9 years, 2 months ago

Strange that PGC would speak about FDI so soon after he killed and buried it all chances the Bahamas might have had. Strange indeed. Nitwit. !

banker 9 years, 2 months ago

Whose going to want to sink money into the Bahamas when the government can take your investment away, sticking their nose into a business deal?

happyfly 9 years, 2 months ago

Good luck to any organization that would give this bafoon the honor of a keynote address. Selling KEY FDI investors out to communist governments; overseeing KEY financial institutions pull out of the country; failing to address KEY crime statistics; impotent in the face of KEY international debt ratings....

banker 9 years, 2 months ago

I can see why Crisco Butt thinks this way. In my conversations with Bahamian patriots who really do want to fix the country, the big elephant in the room is the huge cadre of functionally illiterate, poorly skilled, poorly socialised, young school leavers entering the job market. On top of that, a goodly percentage of the young women are starting to make babies. We have about 20,000 unemployed and a huge economic structural problem of an economy that cannot absorb any more unskilled workers.

So when one looks around and sees the 8,000+ employees at Atlantis, one can begin to think that a couple more Atlantises would solve the problem. The trouble is that we have already saturated the market with rooms, airlift, attractions, etc, and building more will not bring more people. We have had our run of sun, sea and sand, and the world has moved on. We used to be the Tiffany's of vacations, and now we are the WalMart. It's just the way it is.

So how does one gainfully employ people who are largely unemployable? This is the nub of the problem. Other countries typically do it in manufacturing (line workers), resources (miners, treecutters) and service jobs (janitors, fast food, maids) but we have saturated the services sector as well. We cannot run manufacturing because of high cost and unreliable energy. We cannot transition to a knowledge-based economy because of the poorly educated workforce. We cannot expand financial services because of the global trends of transparency and the G20 attack on tax havens. Quite frankly there is only one painful answer.

We must bite the bullet, write off the present unemployed, and concentrate on education to make the school leavers more fitted and suitable to join the higher paid, skilled jobs. And then we must re-build the infrastructure to support the companies that will employ these people, and we must revamp the civil service and laws to create a facile ease-of-business protocols. This is a lot of work, and doesn't exactly guarantee results. So Crisco Butt and company cling to the last hope of cookie-cutter Altantises all over in the islands in the hope that some of it works.

JohnDoe 9 years, 2 months ago

A very good synopsis Banker. The underlying issues, however, may be even worse than the spot-on picture you have painted above. The fact is even before we address the economic structural issues noted above we must address our failing Westminister political system that encourages short-term partisan economic planning, the systemic and structural political & governmental corruption, along with our anti business and antiquated laws all in a socio-economic and legal environment devoid of the rule of law. Public resources, favors and contracts are unapologetically and unlawfully misappropriated by politicians for their or their friends' personal gain to the detriment of the rest of our society with impunity.

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