(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) The State of implementation of the CARICOM
Single Market and Economy (CSME) will come under
focus next week when the Caribbean Community’s
Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED)
meets in Georgetown. Officials began meeting
yesterday, 4 February in preparation for the COTED.
From Monday, 8 February, the Ministers will
scrutinise a Report on the Appraisal of the CSME
which was itself the subject of a Meeting of Senior
Officials of CARICOM Member States last month.
Ahead of the two-day Twenty-Ninth COTED, a series
of meetings related to the functioning of the CSME
were convened at the CARICOM Secretariat.
The back-to-back meetings in January at the
CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, focused on Contingent
Rights, the state of implementation of the CSME, the
treatment of monopolies, and free circulation and
safeguards.
Delegates at the meeting of Senior Officials to
Consider and Review the Draft Report on the State of
Implementation of the CSME heard that while the
CARICOM Single Market (CSM) was working, there was
need for a greater level of coherence among Member
States. Challenges remained in areas such as the
establishment of the legal framework within which
the CSM would effectively operate; and in giving
effect to the right of establishment and the free
movement of skills, among other areas.
Among other recommendations, the Report
underscored the need to build the additional
capacity that is required to develop the CSME; for
maximum facilitation of the free movement of skills
and capital and of the movement of services across
borders.
COTED is also to receive a report on a meeting on
Contingent Rights held January 18-19. Contingent
Rights are defined as those rights which are granted
to a CARICOM National and his or her spouse and
immediate dependent family members, if the principal
beneficiary has exercised the right of
establishment, provision of services, movement of
capital or free movement of skills.
Member States have acknowledged that buy-in and
ownership of the process at the national level were
critical to moving forward on Contingent Rights.
While there were spirited discussions and unresolved
issues in a number of areas, participants were able
to get a better appreciation for some of the
concerns that influenced the position of Member
States on matters related to the Protocol on
Contingent Rights. Negotiations for the Protocol
which would guide the implementation of those rights
began about four years ago.
Some of the proposed measures to be included in
the Protocol led to discussions on moral
considerations such as the preservation of the
family; capacity concerns, particularly in the
health and education sectors; as well as the
identification and verification of the status of
some categories of persons who may seek to move
within the CSME as dependents. Among the latter are
`common law spouses’ a category which is not
recognized in the laws of some Member States.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org