| Theme: 30 years of Progress:
The COMPETITIVENESS CHALLENGE TO THE CARIBBEAN
COMMUNITY
Salutations
In an age of instant gratification and built-in
redundancy, the celebration of a thirty-year
anniversary, even in a marriage, is becoming very
rare. So it is with great pleasure that I extend
hearty congratulations to Caribbean-Central American
Action (CCAA) on achieving this milestone with the
Miami Conference on the Caribbean Basin.
It is no idle boast when your website states that
the Annual Miami Conference on the Caribbean Basin
is the premier gathering of its kind that brings
together senior public and private sector leaders
and representatives of civil society from the
Hemisphere. As Secretary-General of the Caribbean
Community and before that as Secretary-General of
the group of African Caribbean and Pacific States,
it has been my privilege to benefit from many a
discourse over the years at this conference. It is
truly serving its purpose as a forum for addressing
many of the challenges which confront our Region and
for seeking mutually beneficial solutions.
I recall the earlier days of Caribbean Latin
American Action (CLAA) and the advocacy with respect
to the Caribbean Basin Initiative in particular the
work towards the building of partnerships among the
Basin Countries. Mr Chairman, I recall in particular
the initiatives taken to encourage the Twin Plant
programme under the Puerto Rico 936 arrangements
which sought to bring new investment to the
countries in the Basin. My good friend Tito Colorado
who played a major role in that initiative will
always be remembered.
Tonight, I feel particularly honoured to have
been chosen along side the distinguished Secretary
General of the Organisation of the American States
whose statement earlier this evening afforded me
such insightful hemispheric perspectives, to be one
of the keynote speakers at the opening dinner of
this prestigious event. I am also happy that the
theme of my address is – The Competitiveness
Challenge – as this goes to the very heart
of the most ambitious undertaking that Member States
of the Caribbean Community have ever attempted – the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy.
Our Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is just about
the same age as CCAA – perhaps a mere three years
older, we can therefore compare and jointly benefit
from our common experience over the last thirty
years. Indeed thirty is not just the age of maturity
and also a good time for reflection and evaluation
but is also always a good time to look forwards
towards the future and to strategise on how best to
meet the challenges with which one is confronted.
Thirty years ago none of us could have envisaged
the speed at which the world has since changed. Who
would have predicted the fall of the Berlin Wall and
the torrent of change which that event unleashed and
which continue to envelop us to this day? Who would
have foreseen the events of September 11th 2001 and
the profound changes which have since occurred in
the global political, economic and security
landscape?
Challenges to the Caribbean Economies
Ladies and gentlemen, since the inaugural Miami
Conference 30 years ago, the economies of the Member
States of the Caribbean Community have as a group,
generally experienced a number of challenges.
Firstly the rate of economic growth has decelerated
from an estimated 4.3 per cent in the 1970s, through
2.1 per cent in the eighties and 1.7 per cent in the
nineties. Early indications are that there has been
a continued downward trend in the early years of
this decade with Trinidad and Tobago being the main
exception.
The picture is not much brighter as regards Human
Development if one were to judge by the United
Nations Development Programme’s Human Development
Index. This barometer also shows that despite
relatively high per capita incomes, sluggish
economic growth, persistent unemployment, high
indebtedness and entrenched pockets of poverty have
resulted in a relative decline in the ranking of
Caribbean Community countries over the thirty years.
While this Index may be affected by changes in
methodology of calculation, using data from the 1999
and 2006 Human Development Reports, Saint Lucia is
the only Caribbean country whose ranking has
improved.
In the market place, the figures are not much
better. The CARICOM's share of merchandise trade in
the North American market for example has declined
from 0.71 per cent in 1985 to 0.27 per cent in 2000
i.e by more than 50%, mirroring an even more
pronounced pattern with Europe. This reflects in
large measure the effects of the erosion of
preferential access to these markets in particular
for bananas and sugar in the European market. The
expiry of the WTO waiver for the Caribbean Basin
Initiative and the difficulty faced in obtaining its
renewal poses new challenges for the Region in the
market of the United States. I will return to this
later.
The relative share of services in Caribbean
economies is increasing but our global share of
tourism, the traditional service sector, declined
from 0.91 per cent in 1990 to 0.69 per cent in 2002
despite positive efforts to diversify the tourism
product. In addition some of our sunrise service
sectors such as financial services and internet
gambling have come under threat by recent action in
the international community.
As regards this key sector of tourism, more
challenges seem on the way with the recently enacted
Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative. While fully
recognising the right of the United States and of
any other country, to take measures to secure its
borders against threats to its security, we do not
understand what appears to be the inequity in its
application to cruise ship passengers as against
those who visit the Region by air as well as the
added disadvantage to Caribbean countries of the
time allowed to put the passport-related measure in
place.
We would have hoped that the same time frame
applicable to cruise ship passengers and land based
returning tourists would have been granted to those
returning by air, thereby ensuring that a level
playing field would apply to all destination
countries. Tourism is a significant component of our
regional economy. A study by the World Travel and
Tourism Council estimates that the Caribbean could
lose as much as US$2.6 billion and188,000 jobs
because of the new rules.
To compound these difficulties the region’s share
of Overseas Development Assistance and Foreign
Direct Investment have been declining in the face of
new priorities for the donor community including
support for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as
on terror.
In the International arena it has now become more
difficult for small and vulnerable countries such as
ours to get our voices heard and to have our
interests addressed. Gone are the days when thoughts
and ideas of the new international economic order
with elements of special and differential treatment
for developing countries found a priority place on
the international agenda. No more so today. The
small countries of the Caribbean must face squarely,
now more than ever, the fact that their future
development rest on the measures which they take
individually and collectively to address these many
challenges.
The task before the region therefore is to take
full advantage of the existing opportunities and
various others being created in the context of
globalisation. The single most important step to
this end is to enhance our competitiveness. This is
the only way in which the region can realistically
expect to provide 15 million people spread over 15
countries in CARICOM with an enhance quality of life
and work. This task requires the full participation
of all - government and people, private sector,
labour and the civil society – we need all hand on
board as we embark on this journey in the twenty
first century. This objective underlies our
participation in these deliberations by the CCAA
given its own similar raison d’etre.
Towards the Single Market and Economy
Since the end of the 1980s, the leaders of the
Caribbean Community recognised then need for
fundamental structural change if the Community were
to achieve this goal. Subsequent international
developments were to reinforce this realisation . A
recent World Bank report on the Caribbean was most
appropriately entitled "A Time to Choose." Our
Region has chosen. Our choice is to establish the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy.
This choice was a visionary decision taken as it
was seventeen years ago, when the CARICOM Heads of
Government met at their Tenth regular meeting at
Grand Anse, Grenada, in 1989. They determined then
that a Single Market and Economy would provide our
small states with the capacity to take their place
in the global community. In doing so they stressed
the need "to work expeditiously together to
deepen the integration process and to strengthen the
Caribbean Community in all of its dimensions to
respond to the challenges and opportunities
presented by the global economy." This commitment
led to the process of revising the Treaty of
Chaguaramas which created the Caribbean Community
(CARICOM) and seeks to transform the fifteen
individual separate small economies into a single
regional and hopefully more competitive economy.
The first historic step in implementation of the
new Treaty towards the bringing into being of the
Single Market and Economy took place with the
creation of the Single market on 1 January 2006.
This resulted in addition in the free movement of
goods, which had been in place since the days of the
Caribbean Free Trade Area (CARIFTA) in 1968, in the
free movement among the participating Member States
of labour, of services of capital and for the right
of establishment. In other words not only would
goods produced in the Community continue to enjoy
free and unlimited access to the markets of Member
States but in addition the very factors of
production i.e the labour, capital etc. which
produced the goods would likewise enjoy free
movement among Member States. With regard to labour,
the market is being liberalised in phases and is now
open to university graduates, media workers,
sportspersons, artistes, and musicians, and recently
to nurses and teachers who are not university
graduates.
Of particular relevance to our discussions here
are the provisions relating to the free movement of
capital, the right to provide services and the right
of establishment including. The Single Market
Provisions in the Revised Treaty not only entitles
the entrepreneur to move his capital but also his
skilled labour necessary to establish and operate
his enterprise in any part of the Community he so
wishes. In doing so he has the right to obtain
access – not necessarily ownership - to land and
buildings necessary for the effective establishment
such as is necessary, for the operations of his
enterprise.
Equally those categories of skilled community
nationals entitled to free movement to settle and
work in any Member State are also entitled to be
accompanied by their and dependents. To facilitate
this process CARICOM has already adopted an
instrument to ensure the transferability of social
security benefits. The full entitlement of this
accompanying category is yet to be codified in a
protocol.
These measures are intended inter alia: to
encourage and stimulate the reorganisation of
businesses including the re-engineering of business
models to expand from servicing domestic markets
into regional markets and eventually globally. The
harmonisation of rules and procedures for the
enlarging of markets are expected to increase the
operating efficiencies of businesses as is the
greater free access to factors of production, and
the freedom of location of business. Together these
arrangements also serve to create conditions of
certainty and predictability for investors regional
seeking to do business within the Single Market.
That certainty and predictability for Regional
enterprises is reinforced by the provisions of the
Treaty which prohibits discrimination on grounds of
nationality only and entitles them to a treatment no
less favourable than that granted to third country
enterprises. All these arrangements are underpinned
by the legal certainty provided by the Caribbean
Court of Justice.
ALL THESE MEASURES WILL REQUIRE IMPLEMENTATION
AT THE NATIONAL LEVEL IN THE LETTER AND SPIRIT IF
THE BENEFITS ARE TO BE REALISED.
The Single Economy
Some of the challenges which the Region need to
address in improving international competitiveness
relate to deficiencies in the investment climate,
the predominance of small uncompetitive firms, the
absence of research and innovation, the inability to
produce goods of high standards and the shortage of
highly trained and skilled manpower. These are some
of the issues which we seek to address as we develop
the Single Economy. The Single Economy seeks to
provide by 2008, the framework for further
restructuring of the Region’s economies to help to
deal with many of these issues. In that process even
more so than in the movement to the Single Market,
the private sector has a decisive role.
A bird's eye view of the process of constructing
the Single Economy beyond that already described in
the Single Market would give you the following areas
of coordinated policies:
1. Monetary policy cooperation including
exchange rate policies
2. Financial policy harmonization including
interest rate policy,
3. Capital market integration, including the
imminent creation of a truly regional stock
exchange mechanism. Six of our Member States
have already achieved harmonisation in these
three areas.
4. Investment and incentives policy
harmonization, including a CARICOM Investment
Code. The effect is to make the Caribbean a
single investment location rather than one with
many different jurisdictions.
5. Fiscal policy coordination and
harmonization of which an Intra-CARICOM Double
Taxation Agreement already exists and work is
proceeding with respect to a corporate tax code
and, also, an indirect tax regime.
6. Sectoral policy harmonization with respect
to industry, energy, agriculture and transport.
A transport policy is crucial to the development
and survival of the CSME given the absence of
contiguous borders among Member States, save
between Guyana and Suriname, as well as the need
for effective linkage with the rest of the
world.
7. The creation of Pan Caribbean Firms to
overcome the constraints of small size and
limited scale of enterprises.
8. A Development Fund (similar to that of the
European Social Cohesion Fund).
The Development Fund
The Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas (Article 158)
states that:
“There is hereby established a Development
Fund, for the purposes of providing technical or
financial assistance to disadvantaged countries
regions and sectors.”
The CARICOM Development Fund is expected to inter
alia:
• Foster and support economic transformation and
enhance competitiveness in the global economy for
its beneficiaries.
• Compensate for the adverse effects of trade
distortion and international dislocation arising
from the inter CARICOM Integration Process and
• To promote cohesion and counter polarization
thereby preventing as Prime Minister Arthur of
Barbados, the lead Head of Government with
responsibility for this aspect of the Community’s
development and from whom you will hear more later
this week so eloquently describes it "A permanent
coalition of un-equals."
For the financing of the Fund, CARICOM Heads of
Government in July 2006, committed themselves to
initially raising US$250M, of which US$120M would be
provided by Member States with the remaining US$130M
to be raised from the CARICOM’s development partners
including the private sector. The Fund would offer
loans, grants and interest subsidy. The Fund is
required by Heads of Government to be operational by
mid-2007. To complement the Fund a Regional
Development Agency is to be established to provide
technical assistance to its beneficiaries.
Standards
Critical to improved competitiveness is
standards. The CARICOM Regional Organisation for
Standards and Quality (CROSQ) and the Caribbean
Agricultural Health and Safety Agency (CAHSA) are
tasked to promote and develop production standards
and to facilitate international competitiveness. In
the bringing together of large, medium and small
enterprises one needs to avoid the abuse of dominant
positions. For this reason the community in the
process of establishing a Competition Commission
which will also serve to ensure consumer protection.
Private Sector
Our structures recognise the important role
played by the private sector in the development of
CARICOM to date and that which is anticipated for
the future. In this context the private sector is
already taking steps to play this role. Under the
leadership of the Caribbean Association of Industry
and Commerce (CAIC) it has already established a
broad-based Caribbean Business Council to interact
and work with the governance of the Community
particularly in the establishment of the CARICOM
Single Economy.
Security
A secure environment is vital to underpin the
process of CARICOM economic restructuring – Single
Market as well as the Single Economy. While time
would not allow us this evening to deal with the
security architecture being constructed by the
Community nor with the 2007 Cricket World Cup for
which it will be critically important, suffice it to
say that the structures being put in place to
respond to the security threats faced by the region
will also serve to provide a more secure base for
greater investment, higher productivity and
competitiveness of the Region's economy.
The external environment
The above is a brief overview of the main
elements of the CSME –its internal market and
production structure. The competitiveness of the
regional economy is however, not only a function of
the internal restructuring but also of the external
environment it encounters and to which it must
relate. Critical in that external environment are
the market access for its goods and services as well
as for attracting investment and skills.
The mechanisms embedded in the Single Economy for
attracting investments have been referred to
earlier. As regard attracting skills, an important
emphasis must be placed on slowing down the
out-migration of skilled nationals. This can only be
achieved however if adequate and attractive
conditions are provided at home and special policies
are adopted to encourage the return of many in the
diaspora.
Indeed, former Prime Minister of Jamaica made
this observation in the CARICOM 30th Anniversary
lecture in 2003 at the Medgar Evans Collage in New
York, I myself am of the opinion that in addition,
regional governments may wish to consider seeking
some contribution from the beneficiary governments .
Indeed none other than the President of the United
States, on the occasion of proclaiming June 2006 as
Caribbean American Heritage month observed that “
for centuries Caribbean Americans have enriched our
Society and added to the strength of America.”
This is without prejudice to the valued role
played by our diaspora in our national and regional
development, however, their US$1.6 billion in
remittances to the Caribbean annually while no
pittance, compensate for the loss of their skills.
As regards external markets, the role of the CSME
in facilitating the region’s collective approach to
trade relations with third countries is vital.
CARICOM Member States already work collectively to
seek new and improved market opportunities and to
negotiate trade rules in the World Trade
Organisation; and to collectively defend our
economic interests in the global market place.
A unique feature of the CSME is that due to the
existence of a number of bilateral trade
arrangements, production in CARICOM could in
addition to free access to the markets of all
CARICOM Member States, also have similar access to
the markets of Venezuela, Colombia, Costa Rica,
Dominican Republic and Cuba among others, provided
such products are on the free entry lists in the
bilateral arrangements with all these countries.
This surely must be a significant added attraction
to investors both Community and foreign.
Specifically with regards the United States of
America, we are currently concerned at the delay in
the passage in the World Trade Organisation of the
waiver for the extension of the benefits of the
Caribbean Basin Initiative . This situation holds
great dangers for CARICOM trade with the United
States, the region’s largest trading partner. But
even as we await this waiver we recognize the need
to put the region’s trading relationship with the
United States on a more secure footing. We are
mulling over this question right now.
As part of the groundwork to that end, the
CARICOM and the United States are in discussions for
the holding in June 2007 of a Conference on the
Caribbean in Washington. It is envisaged that this
Conference will bring the region’s issues to the
forefront of the minds of key decision makers in
Washington. We note the recent change in the
composition of the Congress and we hope to have the
opportunity to discuss with key Committee Members
the important issues which not only affect our
United States CARICOM relations but also how these
impact on the future CARICOM development especially
in relation to our trade and economic security –
central matters in our CSME.
We hope that the Conference on the Caribbean
which has the support at the highest levels in
CARICOM and the United States ,will also bring
together the private sector to show case what the
region has to offer as a market place for trade and
investment. We also hope that this Conference will
inspire our Diaspora to come together and to work
towards contributing further to the development our
Region through advocacy and where possible through
building partnerships and networks with businesses
in the region to assist in improving our
competitiveness.
In summary therefore, our Caribbean Community has
structured what we believe to be a dynamic, flexible
arrangement which facilitates the conduct of
business in such a way as to allow our domestic
entrepreneurs ample opportunity to participate in
the global economy. It also allows enough space for
investors from outside the market area to seize and
take advantage of opportunities within the market
space. It provides access to the Region’s best
talents as well as access to specialised training
and technology transfer and capacity building skills
in various sectors and increased opportunity in
social and capital formation based on research and
innovation. It provides for national and foreign
players.
Ladies and gentlemen, the challenge to sustained
Caribbean development remains as formidable as ever.
However, we are not lying down in the face of those
challenges. The Caribbean is putting its house in
order even as it reaches out to strengthen its ties
with its traditional partners and to develop
stronger links with the new ones such as our Central
American partners in the CCAA. With a little help
from our friends, I am confident that the CSME will
create the kind of competitive environment that will
ensure a viable and prosperous society taking its
rightful place in the hemispheric and global arenas.
I wish you all happy holidays and thank you for
your attention.
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