(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) More than a hundred representatives of the
Services Sector in the Caribbean will gather in St.
John’s, Antigua and Barbuda next week to begin
charting a more structured approach to the
development of the Sector within the CARICOM Single
Market and Economy (CSME).
Chief Executive Officers of large, medium and
small sized enterprises operating in the Sector,
international experts, representatives of the
academic community and senior public service
officials are among those who will participate in
the Regional Symposium on Services which will be
held in St. John’s from 15-17 July 2009.
An organizing committee is working assiduously to
ensure the smooth running of the Symposium which is
being organized by the CARICOM Secretariat in
collaboration with the United Kingdom Department for
International Development (DFID), the Spanish Agency
for International Cooperation for Development (AECID),
and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
It will be held under the patronage of the Hon
Baldwin Spencer, lead Head of Government with
responsibility for Services in the CARICOM Quasi
Cabinet.
In recognition of the importance of the Sector to
Regional economies, Heads of Government of CARICOM,
at their just-concluded 30th Meeting held at the
Guyana International Conference Centre in
Georgetown, Guyana, agreed that Member States’
delegations to the Symposium will include the
highest possible level of public sector
representation and a Ministerial representative,
especially of those Heads of Government whose
portfolios in the Quasi Cabinet overlap with that of
Services.
The Sector, which covers a range of activities,
is the driver of economic growth in the CSME,
accounting for more than 66 per cent of GDP and
employment and no less than 70 per cent of export
earnings. Activities in the Sector range from retail
and distribution services, cultural and
entertainment services, consultancy services and
financial services. Broad sub-sectors include
Communications; Business; Construction and Related
Engineering Services; Education; Environmental;
Financial; Health-related and Social Services;
Tourism and Travel Related Services; Recreational,
Cultural and Sporting Services; and Transport;
Distribution.
The three main aims of the Symposium are to:
• Sensitise the key stakeholders in the
sector on how to capitalize on the Region’s
comparative advantage in the area of Services
for the increased development of the Community
• Develop a plan of action for the period
2009-2013/14
• Identify elements of the Services component
of the Regional Strategic Plan for Development
within the Context of the CSME.
Heads of Government said they looked forward to
receiving the Draft Strategic Plan for Services and
the Plan of Action for the next five years which is
to be considered by the Council for Trade and
Economic Development (COTED) and presented at the
next Inter-Sessional Meeting of the Conference
scheduled for Dominica in 2010.
Presentations at the Symposium will be done under
the themes `The Single Economy Vision’; `Investment
Trade and Development Linkages’; `Regional
Challenges and Opportunities Confronting Trade and
Development in Services’, `Making Services Work for
Development’ and `The Vision of the Leader’.
Presenters at the three-day event will be drawn
from among the World Trade Organisation (WTO),
UNCTAD, and the CARICOM Secretariat.
The Symposium is being held even as Heads of
Government acknowledged the debilitating effects of
the global economic and financial crisis on the
Services Sector.
His Excellency Bharrat Jagdeo, President of the
Republic of Guyana and Chairman of the Conference of
Heads of Government referred to the challenges in
the Tourism and Financial Sectors, in particular.
“Several of our countries have been faced with
devastating consequences because of this global
financial crisis. Many of the sectors that we have
encouraged in the past, particularly our Services
Sector, have been decimated by the global events.
Tourism, which provides a significant part of our
income; financial services because of what’s
happening with the CLICO and Stanford situations
have taken tremendous hits,” President Jagdeo noted.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org