BVC - Nov 2014 - page 51

Business View Caribbean - Nov 2014 51
2.9 billion. We have, over the years, been borrowing
money to pay for this trade deficit on the international
marketplace. We have run out of borrowing power.
We have an overseas debt of about 130-140 percent
of the gross national product, so therefore we can no
longer continue to borrow. We entered into a program
in March (2013), an IMF agreement, and obviously with
the IMF agreement what you do have right now is fiscal
consolidation. But for the first time with an IMF agree-
ment, we now also have a growth agenda. There are
quarterly tests – IMF agreements are for four years, so
we have 16 tests to go through in the four years. We’ve
gone through two tests already and we passed them
with flying colors – that is as of the end of June and the
end of September 2013.
Now, unlike previous agreements, we have agreed
with the IMF that we must have a growth agenda and
a growth agenda has been negotiated with the World
Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank. Each
one is for 500 million U.S. dollars over four years, each
125 million, so that’s 250 million U.S. dollars per year
between the two of them. There have been negotia-
tions going on, since the IMF agreement was signed
in early April, with the multi-laterals, that is the World
Bank, Caribbean Development Bank and the IADB.
Because of this, for the last nine months, because of
the fiscal consolidation that the government has been
forced to take on – minimum capital expenditure, cen-
tral treasury management, cut back a lot of the social
intervention programs – the country has gone into a
recession. And, it’s only in the September quarter that
we had half of 1 percent growth, but we’re still in a
recession and we continue in the recession now. The
industries that are growing right now are mining and
agriculture, but there are other industries that we have
to get into. So, that’s the conditions that we are in now
and the five or six things that we’re dealing with the
World Bank and IADB on, is for them to provide grant
funding for the master development plan for the rede-
velopment of the two major city areas so that we can
get foreign direct investments, to rebuild infrastructure
and put new business in.
The other one that they’re negotiating is to open up,
bring agriculture in Jamaica, which has been very in-
formal, into an organized way, whereby farmers grow
to specifications and the products are bought, graded
and sold. Because we have a very informal system, a
lot of our hotels do not buy locally, they buy agricultural
products out of Miami and bring them in, so that’s for-
eign exchange going out. They are looking for agricul-
tural exports and import substitution. And then they
are also going to put in a program which is more me-
dium to long term, to go after the MSME sector, small
business sector, but that’s going to take time to build
a sector.
JAMAICA
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