Press release 20/2008
(25 January 2008)
Distinguished Delegates, It is
my honour to be afforded the opportunity to Chair
this the 25th Regular Session of the COTED.
I am reassured by the manner in which we worked
yesterday to complete the COTED/COHSOD Agenda. I
know that our concerted efforts today will result in
timely agreement on important items on the Agenda.
Our Region is now at a critical juncture in
defining our position in the global economic arena.
The world is changing rapidly. Gone is the comfort
level provided by preferential arrangements which
guaranteed established markets for our commodities.
We now have to make our way in an increasingly
hostile and competitive world which is conditioned
by relentless change. The prosperity of our peoples
will therefore be determined by our capacity to
embrace and respond to change.
The effectiveness of the CSM as a vehicle for
economic transformation is compromised if we do not
anchor all of our commitments with the force of law
on a timely basis.
As a region we still have a lot of work to do if
we are to complete the CARICOM agenda in a number of
areas including trade related issues, standards and
governance of the community, all of which will
underpin our regional integration efforts. CARICOM’S
deficit in this respect poses the threat of
compromising our ability to craft a coherent
response to these emerging conditions. We must face
these challenges boldly as we seek to strengthen our
negotiating positions and enhance the process of
governance in our region. Instead of seeing this
condition as an impediment we should view it as a
catalyst to fast tracking the integration process.
Our meeting today will also focus on Information
and Communications Technology (ICT) as a catalyst
for development. ICT is driving current global
economic activities and indeed is integral to our
very existence. Statistics prove that many
developing countries have grown leaps and bounds
with even modest infusions of ICT.
We must invest in ICT in our drive to increase
labour productivity in the region’s public and
private sectors. We must treat innovation as a
prerequisite to becoming competitive in the global
marketplace.
Our success in this regard, will be partly
measured by our ability to take advantage of these
developments through greater cooperation as we seek
to broaden our economic base by achieving a more
balanced mix of primary and manufactured goods and
services.
During the course of the meeting we have to
address a number of key issues related to the
functioning of the Single Market and the welfare of
our nationals. One such issue is addressed in the
agenda item, “Poverty and the Rising Cost of Living”
At a Special Meeting of Heads of Government convened
in Georgetown in December 2007, we agreed on the
need for the region to take immediate action to
contain the cost of living in CARICOM member states.
Ministers will consider the Report and
Recommendations of the Technical Team and determine
a regional response.
The response will require a balance between
protecting our nationals from the negative effects
of the high costs of living, which compromises the
physical well being of our people while ensuring the
viability of regional industries. The challenge is
to accomplish this while balancing the proverbial
books.
We have a lot to get through, so let us turn our
attention to the agenda at hand.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org