This Conference is most timely and its theme is
appropriately expressive of the daunting prospects
facing the Caribbean as it confronts several
challenges and prepares for the epic Fifth Summit of
the Americas to be held in Port-of-Spain Trinidad
and Tobago, among others. The Summit is being
planned and implemented as a CARICOM hosted event in
Trinidad and Tobago.
The Summit of the Americas process coordinated by
the Government of Trinidad & Tobago in Port-of-Spain
has made every effort to broaden the debate to
include the Private Sector, Civil Society and Youth.
The discussions at this Conference focus on topics
that form an integral part of the agenda of the
Summit of the Americas and therefore provide a good
opportunity for this esteemed forum to lend its
highly respected voice to the debate on critical
issues of relevance to the Caribbean and the
Hemisphere.
In this regard, the pleasure is mine to bring you
greetings and to address you on behalf of H.E Edwin
Carrington, Secretary-General of the Caribbean
Community who is unable to be here due to a very
demanding schedule that goes beyond the boundaries
of our discussions today.
But the boundaries of our discussions at this
Conference are fathomless in scope and depth, given
the enormity of the challenges embodied in the
theme, Caught in the Global Hurricane: Debating the
Caribbean Development Challenges in an Uncertain
World. I have therefore chosen to construct the
boundaries of my presentation to establish, albeit
briefly, the elements of the global hurricane, to
identify a few of the major development challenges
and then to provide a range of responses or coping
mechanisms for the Caribbean Community which is
currently moving towards the implementation of the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) by 2015,
recognising the variable geometry of integration
that is configured to accommodate sub-regional
groupings like the OECS and other networks for trade
and functional cooperation.
Elements of the Global Hurricane
The dimensions of this global hurricane on which
I will focus are three-fold: the economic and
financial meltdown, climate change and crime and
security.
It is quite clear that the current global
economic and financial crisis may be likened to a
global hurricane whose tidal waves portend serious
damage to the Caribbean unless urgent countervailing
actions for mitigation and adaptation are
undertaken. It has already shaken the edifices of
the strongest economies in the World, resulted in
the collapse of a range of enterprises in the US,
Europe, many of the emerging economies and also
developing ones, more so due to the pervasive
philosophies of liberalism and neoliberalism that
have guided the organization and management of
international business and finance, including
structures of governance within international and
multilateral agencies.
These arrangements have no doubt established
principles and rules for regulating the new global
environment. At the same time, it has stimulated the
tensions and conflicts among countries and regions,
due to the inequities and inequalities in
application, implication and impact. The playing
field is certainly not level.
Besides the financial crisis, I could think of no
better or more salient illustration of issues that
impact simultaneously and negatively on poverty,
social relations, environmental degradation and
economic development than those identified with
climate change, natural disasters and crime and
security, linked to illegal drugs, firearms and
terrorism. They help us to focus on the causes and
effects of the emerging and escalating crises (sic
global hurricanes).
Over the last Century, records have shown
anomalous warnings of global atmospheric
temperatures which have been paralleled by the
growth of anthrogenic green house gases (GHG) and
emissions. The Human Development Report (2007)
identified 2o carbon dioxide (CO2)
as the threshold for climate change. It also
explained why we have less than a decade to change
course and start living within a sustainable carbon
budget identified at 14.5 gigatonnes of carbon
dioxide (CO2) per annum for the remainder
of the 21st Century. Emissions are currently running
at twice this level. If these trends continue, they
will set in motion processes that can lead to
temperature increases of 5o CO2
or above by the end of this Century – roughly
similar to temperature changes since the last ice
age 10,000 years ago1.
It is also important to underscore that as
greenhouse gases build up in the atmosphere, so will
temperatures and sea levels. The Postdam Institute
in Germany has reported that sea levels have risen
by an average of 1.8 mm per year since 1961, rising
to 3.1 mm per year since 1993. This is a cause for
great concern for the Caribbean, given that the
Region is identified as one of the most
disaster-prone Regions in the world. The frequency
of natural disasters in the Region and the
significant costs, both in terms of the loss of life
and economic wealth, indicate that every effort
should be made to establish a mechanism to support
the development of a climate change adaptation and
disaster risk reduction mechanism to address the
special circumstances in the Caribbean.
The global economic crisis is directly and
indirectly connected to the concerns of crime, drugs
and terrorism, as illicit trafficking, transnational
crime and terrorism involve activities that are
festered by those who make fortunes by preying on
the their fellow human beings, by greed and
callousness and by amoral acts that themselves cause
misfortune. Just as the US Government put together a
massive 700 Billion “toxic assets relief programme”
(TARP) to help stabilize its financial system and
unfreeze credit markets, so too must a similar
massive and collective assault on drugs and crime be
put in place in our hemisphere to stem the further
escalation and erosion of our security.
Just as the financial meltdown, which experts now
admit was simmering since December 2007, quickly
sparked into an economic recession and rapidly
spread around the world producing systemic shocks to
globalization, so is it possible that the smoldering
cinders of drugs and crime could fan the flames of
ruin and destruction of humanity around the globe,
of which the Mumbai killings in late December 2008
and the terrorist attempts involving Sri Lankan
cricketers in Pakistan, are the latest outrage since
9/11.
So what are the Challenges and responses to these
three elements of the global hurricane?
Strategies for Dealing with the Global
Financial Crisis
Already the effects of the global financial
crisis are being felt in the productive and
financial sectors2
in the Caribbean. There are reportedly drastic fall
offs in tourist arrivals and room occupancy rates,
by as much as two-thirds in some locations. These
have implications also for tourist-related
entertainment industries and complementary services
like airline and taxi transportation, as well as the
construction industry. Consequently, hotel owners in
The Bahamas, for example, laid off 1200 workers in
the last 6 months of 2008 and 300 so far in the
first two months of 2009.
In the non-food commodities sector, for example,
declining global demand and a related fall in
petroleum and petrochemical products have forced
Trinidad and Tobago producers of ammonia, methanol
and urea to shut down operations and bring forward
maintenance work. In addition, the state-owned oil
producer, Petrotrin, reported a loss of US$36
million in 2008, after recording a US$366 million
profit in 2007. In this context, the Government has
announced a downsizing in planned expenditure by
US$900 million as a result of the fall in crude oil
prices below the US$70 threshold price on which
government projections were made.
In Jamaica, all expansion projects in the
Bauxite/alumna industry have been halted as foreign
investment from both Alcoa and Rusal (USA
conglomerates) have dried up. Interestingly,
President Chavez of Venezuela is expected to take
similar action. The Jamaican-Brazilian sugar
divestment project has fallen apart as Brazilian
purchasers have been unable to find a source of
funding in the USA to close the deal.
In Guyana, the timber and woodworking industries
have also reported a slow down.
The Caribbean Community has not been passive in
its approach to the crisis. As early as November
2008 when the Bureau of CARICOM Heads of Government
met in Antigua and Barbuda, Member States were urged
to take prudential measures in the areas of foreign
exchange reserves, deposit insurance, capitalization
ratio, local assets ratio, cross-border supervision
and supervision of non-banks such as insurance
companies.
It was understood at that time that Member States
may need to seek multilateral assistance to engage
in counter- cyclical policies that may include
changing the composition of bank lending toward more
productive and export related activities,
streamlining contingency planning with respect to
the financial and non-financial sectors and
undertake public investment that facilitate
production of tradable goods, but which would at the
same time aid the most vulnerable groups in the
population. This framework for action is most
reasonable as a theoretical construct. Yet the tide
had already turned as manifested in the collapse of
two of the major financial conglomerates – CLICO and
Stanford Associates - in the Region.
In practice, the Bureau recognized the need for
Member States to take concerted action in supporting
the proposals of “certain like-minded countries and
institutions for systemic changes in the global and
financial architecture” related to enhanced
democratization, regulation, resource mobilization
and disbursement. With respect to disbursement, it
was argued that IMF resources related to the special
drawing rights should be enlarged and that greater
emphasis should be placed on approaches for emerging
adjustment requirements and less on deflationary and
other stifling conditionalities and quota
contributions. The current quota-based approach
results in grossly inadequate fund capacity to lend
to small countries like those in the Caribbean.
In addition, the Bureau urged the developed
countries to adopt the following outstanding
prerequisites for assisting countries like those in
the Caribbean to sustain viability in the face of
global adversity:
• First, to realize the goal of aid commitment of
0.7% of GDP;
• Second, to reverse the practice of graduating
out of the concessionary borrowing category,
developing countries like those in the Caribbean
based on mere per capita criteria; and
• Third, to orient the international framework
for managing debt overhang at the international
level, thereby accommodating economies that are
susceptible to external shocks of the “global
hurricanes” that especially affect small vulnerable
economies, classified as highly indebted middle
income countries.
Regional Climate Change: Advocating for
Migration and Adaptation
With regard to climate change, it is clear that
pursuing mitigation, adaptation and resource
mobilization strategies is essential and requires a
regional approach if the Community is to succeed in
the maze of climate change negotiating theatres and
agendas. For this purpose, the Caribbean Community
Climate Change Centre was established as an
implementation agency for the Region’s strategic
framework, and more recently the CARICOM Task Force
on Climate Change and Development was inaugurated to
define and address the Region’s Climate Change
Agenda for the negotiations leading up to the 2012
Post-Kyoto Climate Change Architecture, as well as
to provide support and representation for the
Community with respect to critical sectors affected
by climate change.
The Task Force has placed emphasis on Adaptation,
Mitigation and Information and Communication. In
this regard, it has established close ties with the
Alliance for Small Island States ably chaired by
Grenada and which is currently preparing for further
negotiations in the next sessions of the Ad Hoc
Working Group on Further Commitments for Annex I
Parties under the Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP) and the Ad
Hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action
under the Convention in Bonn at this present time.
Our negotiators will address two issues, namely:
• What should be the global target for greenhouse
emissions reductions post-2012;
• Who should bear the burden for these
reductions?
It must be recognized that energy and climate
change policies are intricately linked to mitigation
strategies which provide opportunities to diversify
our energy portfolio, with respect to electricity
generation at the national and regional levels. The
deployment of renewable energy technologies such as
wind, solar, geothermal and hydro-electric power and
other sectors such as transport, provide a good
opportunity for the Caribbean, through the research
and development capability of its Universities, to
take the lead with the support of the private sector3.
In addressing the high-level segment of COP-14 in
Poznan, in December 2008, United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, stated that while the
world faces dual crises, namely the global financial
crisis and climate change, investing in green
technologies was one means of solving both problems
at the same time. This view is being echoed by the
new US Administration which has made renewable
energy a centrepiece of its economic recovery
package.
A New Regional Architecture for Crime and
Security
Turning to crime and security, the Caribbean
Region, in particular the Caribbean Community, is
taking the necessary steps to avert the escalating
crises, but does not always achieve an appropriate
level of success.
The Caribbean Region exhibits among the highest
crime rates per capita in the World. The level of
crime in some Caribbean countries, chief among which
are Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and Trinidad and
Tobago, is startling. Despite these challenges,
concerted efforts are being made to combat the
ill-effects of drugs and crime. The collective
response which preceded 9/11, but which was
consolidated because of it, is fully illustrated in
the establishment of the Task Force on Crime and
Security in 2000, and the evolution of thinking that
has now engrained security as the fourth pillar of
the Community alongside economic trade, foreign
policy relations and functional cooperation.
The design of a new architecture for crime and
security in 2005, resulting in the
institutionalization of the Council for National
Security and Law Enforcement (CONSLE), the Security
Policy Advisory Committee (SEPAC) and the
Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS);
these, together with a Regional Security System now
headquartered in Saint Lucia, provide a consolidated
network that allows the Region to think and act
collectively. While there are challenges mainly
related to the lack of resources and facilities, the
results of acting collectively are undeniably
positive.
One outstanding example is the security systems
put in place for Cricket World Cup 2007 which
ushered in a safe and secure zone for the thousands
of visitors and dignitaries to the Caribbean over an
eight-week period. The legacy of Cricket World Cup
included the joint regional communications center,
the advanced passenger information system and the
regional intelligence fusion center, all pillars of
a viable security mechanism, will no doubt be dealt
with in greater detail in the panel dedicated to
this subject at this Conference.
What, however, must be highlighted, are the
efforts being made to give effect to its crime and
security strategy by devising legislation and
treaties to deal with border security, maritime
regulations and a justice protection system. In the
final analysis, effective implementation of these
systems is subverted by external forces and
circumstances beyond the control of the Region. The
Caribbean is sandwiched between the largest
producers of cocaine to the South and the largest
consumer country to the North.
How, for example, does the Region cope with the
onslaught of returning deportees who have honed
their criminal skills in the metropolis, often with
little or no ties to the Caribbean to which they are
returned? How does the Region build capacity when
such a large proportion of our skilled labour force
migrate to the US, Canada and Europe? How does the
Region invest in the required infrastructure to
combat crime when 75 percent of our tourists,
according to UNECLAC, come from economies that are
in recession?
It is clear that the policies to deal adequately
with crime and security must be multidimensional in
scope and must be reinforced by a spirit of
international cooperation. After all, crime and
security is an international problem requiring
international solutions. What the West Indian
Commission wrote in 1992 is still valid today. It
called on us “to be active in promoting a system of
international security that no longer holds the
Region hostage to the vulnerability of smallness or
jeopardizes its development through the need for
major military expenditure4.
It was a call for a Pan-Caribbean approach to
establish comprehensive strategic partnerships with
extra-regional forces as a deliberate regional
security strategy.
The Primacy of Foreign Policy5
What emerges out of the sketch of elements
identified with the global hurricane is that it
is really global. Consequently, the Caribbean
Community is correct in advocating for a global
solution.
The financial crisis, for example, which emerged
in the third quarter of last year affecting the
banking system, is now a global economic crisis
affecting jobs and livelihoods. The Washington
Summit in November 2007 agreed on a 47-point action
plan. The London Summit scheduled for April 2nd will
bring together leaders of the World’s major
economies. This demonstration of collective
commitment and international cooperation and
coordination is essential, if recovery is to be
achieved.
But the London Summit will only be meaningful if
it comes up with a plan to significantly impact on
developing countries and on the MDGs, and if it
adapts a package of measures to address the need of
the poorest and most vulnerable countries. How
poised and prepared is the Community to influence
this process?
The interests of CARICOM are tied to the
Community’s major objectives:
- Ensuring the improved welfare of its
citizens through the adoption of social and
economic policies that enhance and sustain its
development.
- Preserving its territorial integrity and
security in the face of transnational threats
and ensuring public security at a time of rising
crime.
- Continued stability.
- Exploring new options for Trade and
Diplomacy
The major threats to the Community as we
have seen result from:
- transnational crime – illicit trafficking in
drugs, small arms, persons/money laundering;
- rising domestic crime;
- the negative effects of climate change and
natural disasters; and
- vulnerability to external economic shocks
and inimical policies of external partners.
These are fully recognized in the Fifth Summit of
America process which clearly addresses the spirit
of any regional and hemispheric agenda designed to
respond to challenges from global crises. Its
outcome document is intended to speak to the need
for securing our citizen’s future by promoting human
prosperity, energy security and environmental
sustainability.
At the same time, the international system is
changing profoundly and rapidly. As the emerging
nations rise, a dramatic shift in power is underway,
most recently symbolized by the convening of the
G20, and not as was traditionally the case with the
G7 and the Bretton Woods Institutions, to confer on
the deepening financial and economic crisis. Though
this power shift is essentially economic in nature,
it does hold political, diplomatic and other
consequences.
The hemispheric system is also undergoing its own
deep changes as Brazil increasingly emerges in a
strategic leadership role despite competition from
the ideologically-tinged diplomacy of Venezuela.
Notwithstanding this rivalry, regionalization is
deepening with the establishment of institutions
such as UNASUR that strengthens convergence among
the Latin American countries. The Caribbean
Community itself is being drawn into this
regionalization dynamic as illustrated by the recent
Latin America and Caribbean Integration and
Development Summit convened by Brazil, and the
continued dynamism of the Rio Group which now
embraces all the Latin, Central American and
Caribbean countries with the recent admittance of
Cuba.
Non-traditional external actors - China, Russia
and Iran - are also increasingly making their
presence felt in the US’s immediate sphere of
influence. The political and economic implications
of the potential for transformation of a post-Fidel
Castro Cuba and of the possibility of a thaw in
US-Cuba relations also need to be assessed.
Despite the above geo-political changes, and the
end of the unipolar period of the US on the global
stage, the United States remains the single global
power with unrivalled leadership and decision-making
ability. The new US administration has already made
clear its intention to pay closer attention to Latin
America and the Caribbean. Consequently, the
promotion and protection of its interests will
continue to be a dominant factor in shaping the
geopolitics in our Region and in the wider
hemisphere.
CARICOM has put in place some mechanisms that can
work. It has identified countercyclical and other
mitigating policies announced by Caribbean
Governments over the last few months. It has
established a new crime and security architecture
and has identified a climate change strategy. It has
recognized that in all this, a collaborative policy
is imperative.
The main resources that CARICOM enjoys in
advancing its interests are diplomatic in nature -
the Community’s traditional position of taking the
moral high ground on regional and international
issues, the skillful use of brainpower, leveraging
its friendly links with external partners and
advocacy. These must all be factored into the
lifeline for riding the crests of the tidal wave to
mitigate and overcome the global hurricane.
__________________________________________________________
|
1 |
UN Human
Development Report 2007 |
|
2 |
A
detailed analysis has been undertaken by the
Directorate of Trade and Economic
Integration, Caribbean Community
Secretariat, February 2009 |
|
3 |
Caribbean
Community Climate Change Centre. Draft
paper on Caribbean Community Climate Change
Strategy, October 2008 |
|
4 |
West
Indies Commission. Time for Action,
1990, p278 |
|
5 |
Drawn
from a paper by the Directorate of Foreign
and Community Relations, Caribbean Community
Secretariat, CARICOM-US Relations : A
proposed Strategic Approach, January
2009 |
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org