Press release 30/2008
(8 February 2008)
Mr. Chairman,
Colleague Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the
Community Council,
Secretary General of the Caribbean Community,
Excellencies,
Senior Officials,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is an honour for me to welcome you to Barbados
on the occasion of the 21st session of the Community
Council.
Barbados is pleased to extend the hand of
hospitality, particularly as we gather to further
advance the shared imperative of regional
integration. I am personally honoured to be among
you, many of whom I have known and worked very
closely with in another capacity. I look forward to
working even more closely with you as the Minister
of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and International
Business of Barbados. I wish to assure you that
Government of Barbados is committed to full and
productive engagement as we, together, continue this
dynamic regional integration project.
The establishment of the CARICOM Single Market
and Economy (CSME) framework represents for the
nations of the Caribbean states, the natural
progression of a broader, deeper and more complex
form of integration. The Declaration of Grande Anse
and the work programme for the advancement of the
integration movement, outlines a vision for the
creation of a single, seamless economic space.
Harmonisation of foreign, economic, fiscal and trade
policy are key components in the integration
strategy, as is the coordination of laws on foreign
investment and incentives.
The CSME also represents, a mandatory response to
global economic changes, and creates a springboard
from which the CARICOM is catapulted into the global
economy. Individual nations, small market size,
limited resource endowments all converge into a
single equation to make a strong case for the
establishment of a single market.
Yet, as we move towards the further consolidation
of the single market, and ultimately a single
economy, there are strong indications that we have
yet fully to realise the scope of the opportunity
before us, even in the face of inherent challenges.
We have before us on the agenda of this meeting, the
important matter of functional cooperation. Anaemic
intra-regional trade flows have shown that the
strength of the community lies not singularly in
economic and trade policy, but that there is a
strong case to be made for the development of the
non-tradeables. We must work assiduously towards the
full development of the functional cooperation
mandate in the Region. We must approach this
project, with visionary foresight, and with the
passion for regional cooperation that energised the
crafters of the early integration movement.
I am particularly enthusiastic about the report
to be presented by the Secretary General on the
meeting held with Heads of Regional Institutions. As
many of you know, my recent past was spent among the
NGO and advocacy community in Barbados and across
the region. The imperatives of regional integration
mandate that Governments, the private sector,
regional inter-governmental oganisations and the NGO
community, press ahead with strategic partnerships
in furtherance of the integration movement.
Functional and technical cooperation can be
dramatically transformed into dynamic tools of
region wide economic, social and human development,
if we embrace the modalities of consultation,
dialogue, and commitment to the implementation of
shared goals.
Another important matter that will occupy us
today, is the follow up to the Conference on the
Caribbean. The Government of Barbados is
particularly anxious to see the potential of this
initiative fully realized. As the election machinery
in the United States gathers momentum towards the
November election, we must prepare for strategic
engagement of the new administration. The terms,
scope and character of the CARICOM – US relationship
must be fashioned in a manner that is mutually
beneficial and reflective of contemporary
priorities.
The late Errol Walton Barrow, National Hero of
Barbados once said, ‘foreign and domestic policy are
the obtuse and obverse sides of the same coin.’ The
recently initialed Economic Partnership Agreement
between CARIFORUM and the European Community is
perhaps the most current illustration of this
statement.
The CARIFORUM – EC Agreement goes well beyond the
traditional scope of trade agreements, and
incorporates elements that have been, up until this
point, the sole purview of national and regional
jurisdiction. It goes beyond the existing
arrangements within the Community and will shape
every subsequent agreement CARICOM negotiates with
extra-regional partners. It will have a significant
impact on all our national economies, our tax
structures and on competitiveness. When Errol Barrow
made this statement, there could have been no
appreciation for the pervasiveness of modern
globalization and the consequential interdependence
of foreign and domestic policy.
The Region has had to adapt to a fast paced
information and communications technology driven
international economy, while simultaneously building
competitiveness and developing mechanisms to attract
foreign investment. We have had to implement
measures to increase domestic and cross border
capitalisation, improve systems of governance and
promote sustainable development. We continue to
stand at the cross roads of decision even as the new
international economy takes shape and identity.
History is being written with each meeting of
this kind that engages some of the most experienced
and brightest policy making minds our region has to
offer. We must appreciate that the future prosperity
of our people depends on us. In every practical
sense, there is and can be no divide among our
foreign, regional and domestic policy. Unless we
give force of law and domestic implementation to the
decisions taken at a community level, the realistic
expectation that the CSME will be the engine of
economic growth and development will be unrealized.
Barbados remains committed to completing all
obligations under the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas
and giving effect to both the spirit and intent of
the CSME.
The Community Council as the second highest organ
in the community, bears the weighty responsibility
for the development of Community Strategic Planning
and coordination in areas of economic integration,
functional cooperation and external relations. The
matters which we will consider here today, are of
critical importance and form an important pillar in
the CARICOM institutional architecture.
Colleagues, I wish to leave you with one last
thought. I am fully persuaded that many of those who
have gone before us have provided us with a platform
upon which we can launch our future. Victor Hugo
writing in 1867 said this:
"In the 20th century there will be an
extraordinary nation. This nation will be large,
which will not prevent its being free. It will be
illustrious, rich, thoughtful, peaceful, friendly
towards the rest of humanity……it will be called
Europe."
This statement projected a future for Europe, as
a single nation, long before the 1994 Maastrict
Treaty. I look forward to future generations having
an opportunity to reflect on the region, and on us,
as visionaries, who added important layers to the
institutional scaffolding that will support a
prosperous and ‘extraordinary’ regional union - a
unified Caribbean Community based on the principles
of strong economic growth, innovation, balanced
trade, social and human growth and full, holistic
development. We have made admirable strides, but
there is still a long and difficult road ahead. We
must be prepared to stay the course.
Thank you.