Introduction
As Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community I wish to express my appreciation to
the North East regional Caribbean Students Conference for inviting me to deliver the
keynote address at the last such Conference of this Century. I consider it not only an
honour but my duty to be here. The title of my address this evening was chosen to concur
with the theme of your Conference - Regional Integration - a subject to which I have
devoted most of my professional life.
I must immediately dispel any impression that I am of the view that CARICOM is the only
regional mechanism which is contributing to making the region whole. The University of the
West Indies, the Caribbean Development Bank and Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, the
Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, BWIA, LIAT, and the West Indies Cricket Team all
advance the process of integration in myriad ways. Tonight, however, we are looking at
CARICOM's role.
The Caribbean has been described, correctly in my view, as one of the most balkanized
regions in the world, being made up of geographic and social fragments historically
moulded by imperial linkages, fragments which are in turn divided into a number of small
states. Making the Caribbean whole therefore requires building bridges both among states
and between the various fragments, by designing wider and stronger instruments of
cooperation among them.
I would like to distinguish between the concepts of integration
and cooperation. Integration occurs when countries adopt policies and mechanisms to enable
them to pursue objectives as one unit. Cooperation is the process whereby individual
countries agree to pursue similar goals or policies toward achieving a common objective.
Integration thus requires cooperation, but cooperation does not necessarily imply
integration, making this distinction very important. Despite the fact that making the
Caribbean whole may seem no more than an ideal, working to move ever closer to that ideal
is of inestimable value to the region. Europe embarked on the road to integration some 42
years ago, charged with a mandate for ever closer union. Given its position today, CARICOM
at 25 is still a youth by comparison.
A Brief History of Caribbean Integration
Regional integration generally dates back to 1947, with the First Conference on the
Closer Association of the British West Indian Colonies in Jamaica. Some notable figures in
modern Caribbean history gathered in Montego Bay to examine the prospects for regional
union. From that forum a sense of solidarity and a vision of a joint future emerged, which
laid a foundation for the region s initial commitment to integration.
This was the start of a process that saw, under the guiding hand of colonial Britain,
the establishment of the West Indies Federation in 1958. After the Federation's demise in
1962, a Caribbean initiative spawned another attempt - the Caribbean Free Trade Area
(CARIFTA) - with the signing of the Dickenson Bay Agreement in 1965 by Antigua &
Barbuda, Barbados, and Guyana. However, this agreement only came into effect in 1968, with
the joining of Trinidad & Tobago, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts, Nevis & Anguilla,
St. Lucia and St. Vincent & the Grenadines. Jamaica and Montserrat came on board later
in that year, followed by Belize in 1971.
In 1973, five years after CARIFTA came into
existence, the leaders of Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago signed the
Treaty of Chaguaramas establishing the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM).
All of the CARIFTA countries became members, and were joined by the Bahamas in 1983.
CARICOM and Beyond
The Treaty of Chaguaramas contains provisions for CARICOM membership of any other
territory in the region in addition to the original signatories. Under this inclusive
arrangement, the British colony of Montserrat was a founding CARICOM member, and the
dependent territories of the Virgin Islands, the Turks & Caicos Islands, and Anguilla
gained associate membership. It has enabled the Community to extend beyond its Anglophone
roots to embrace Dutch-speaking Suriname and (pending finalization of negotiations)
presently to admit French-speaking Haiti, to encompass fourteen sovereign states and one
dependent territory.
But despite its large number of members CARICOM is still small, with a population of
only 6 million (14 million including Haiti). This circumstance precipitated two key
initiatives to broaden CARICOM s political and economic alliances. First, the Caribbean
Forum of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (CARIFORUM), which marshals the independent
countries in CARICOM together with the Dominican Republic to interface with the European
Union (E.U.) under the Lome Convention.
Second, the Association of Caribbean States (ACS),
established in 1994 in Cartagena, Colombia. The ACS is a mechanism for consultation,
cooperation and action, bringing together all the countries of the Caribbean Basin (the
sovereign states of Central America, CARICOM, Cuba, and Colombia, Mexico and Venezuela) 25
sovereign states and a number of dependencies, with a population of some 200 million. Its
purpose is to identify and promote the implementation of policies and programs with the
objectives of:
- harnessing, utilizing and developing the Region's collective
capabilities for sustained cultural, economic, social, scientific and technological
advancement - developing the potential of the Caribbean Sea
- promoting opportunities for cooperation and concerted action on
trade and investment issues and
- establishing, consolidating, and augmenting cooperative and
institutional arrangements that are responsive to the region s various cultural
identities, development needs and normative systems.
A further objective of common linkage
is the creation of trade, investment and economic cooperation arrangements with other
countries of the Caribbean Basin, including Central America. To that end CARICOM has
signed agreements with Venezuela and Colombia, and is now in the final stages of
negotiation with the Dominican Republic. It also established the CARICOM-Cuba Joint
Commission for cooperation on trade, transport, culture, and biotechnology, and met in
Honduras with the countries of Central America in 1992 to initiate the building of a
process of cooperation.
So far I have sketched the linkages among countries of the Caribbean Basin from a
CARICOM-centric point of view, with the notable exception of the United States. The main
vehicle for regular U.S.-CARICOM dialogue is the agreement Partnership for Prosperity and
Security in the Caribbean, signed in Barbados in May 1997. This instrument emerged from a
CARICOM initiative to forge a common position in response to unilateral action by the U.S.
on sensitive issues such as the illicit traffic in drugs and firearms, maritime
interdiction of the drug trade (the so-called Shiprider Agreements), U.S. deportation of
criminals to the Caribbean, and U.S. policy toward the E.U. Banana Regime under which
Caribbean bananas are marketed in Europe.
The agreement comprises two elements. First, the Bridgetown Declaration of Principles
in which the leaders pledged to strengthen their cooperation in responding to the
challenges of the coming millennium in a spirit of partnership and mutual respect, and
second, the Plan of Action with two broad sections - Trade, Development, Finance and
Environment; and Justice and Security. This structure has established a mechanism for
regular dialogue, primarily annual meetings between the U.S. Secretary of State and
Caribbean Foreign Ministers.
But despite the Principles recognition of the inextricable
link between economic development and justice and security, the United States primary
interest has been and continues to be the agreements security provisions. Significantly
diminishing the value of the agreement to CARICOM is the failure of the U.S. to honour its
main economic commitment to extend the provisions of the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI a
U.S. non-negotiated trade mechanism conferring preferential access for many CARICOM and
Central American products to the U.S. market since 1984) to Caribbean exports that do not
currently receive favourable treatment. This failure is particularly costly because Mexico
is afforded such treatment under NAFTA, resulting in a diversion of U.S. trade and
investment flows away from Caribbean countries.
Finally, the U.S. position on the marketing of Caribbean bananas is not only contrary
to its commitment, but has severely embittered the CARICOM countries, leading to the
recent decision by the Heads of Government to review the agreement. Further, U.S. action
on this matter recently threatened to spark an international trade war. All of this for an
export not produced by the United States, and for which CARICOM accounts for no more than
2% of the world market, but which is very significant for a number of CARICOM economies,
accounting in 1995 for more than 40% of total exports, 30% of employment, and 10% of GDP
in Dominica, St. Lucia and St. Vincent & the Grenadines!
To the extent that the United States saw the meeting of May 1997, not as a meeting
between the Caribbean and the U.S., but, as President Clinton said, a meeting among
Caribbean nations including the U.S., it is a great pity that the record of implementation
of this agreement has not lived up to its potential in contributing to making the
Caribbean whole.
The Deepening of CARICOM
As a process, making the Caribbean whole is more than the creation of agreements with a
common membership, or even increasing linkages among nations. It is as much about
strengthening the arrangements to which the countries are parties. The deepening of
relationships within CARICOM is thus as vital as the widening of its membership and
outreach.
CARICOM's main thrust has historically been trade-centred. But being a group of small,
open, developing economies, intra-CARICOM trade has always been modest never rising above
20% of total CARICOM exports and 12% of total CARICOM imports. The bulk of CARICOM trade
has been and continues to be with the U.S., which is responsible for 45% of CARICOM
imports and just under 40% of exports.
The EU (to which most of the traditional exports of
sugar, bananas, rum and rice are exported under the Lome Convention) has been the second
largest export market, with intra-CARICOM exports running a close third. A significant
part of CARICOM s trade with the U.S. falls under the Caribbean Basin Initiative. However
goods not covered by the CBI mainly garments, petroleum, and petroleum products weigh
heavily in the Region's total exports, and have enabled the U.S. to maintain a substantial
trade surplus with Caribbean nations.
CARICOM therefore needs integration mechanisms that extend beyond the essentially
commodity trade-based agreements now in place. In the economic sphere, existing measures
must be broadened to include trade in services, and their focus deepened to facilitate the
actual enhancement of productive activities within the region.
Closer integration calls
for the fashioning of arrangements which significantly influence macroeconomic and
industrial policy of member states to ensure coordination in areas such as the movement of
skilled labour and capital, companies legislation and the right of Caribbean nationals to
establish businesses in any CARICOM state, monetary and fiscal policies and management,
and the harmonization of policies relating to network sectors such as telecommunications
and air and maritime transportation. These in turn create demand for complementary
arrangements outside of the economic sphere, encompassing cooperation in functional areas
such as environment and civil society, and in the political arena of foreign policy
coordination among member states. It is to these issues I now turn.
A Single Market and Economy
In recognition of the economic requirements of integration, the Heads of Government
embarked on the ambitious task of upgrading CARICOM to a Community including a Single
Market and Economy. This objective is expected to be substantially realized by the year
2000, by subjecting the Treaty of Chaguaramas to broad and radical revision through the
following series of Protocols:
I. Institutional framework for governance of the Caribbean Community,
establishing a governance structure that is headed by the Conference of Heads of
Government as the supreme decision-making authority, supported by a Management Council and
four specialized Ministerial Councils responsible for trade and economic development,
finance and planning, human and social development and foreign and community relations.
Complementing these are three subsidiary technical bodies dealing with legal affairs,
budgetary matters, and the laying of the foundation for the next stage in CARICOM's
evolution, economic and monetary union. In addition, the Secretariat plays an integral
role to the entire structure by providing the main technical and administrative support.
Driving the functions of each part of the structure are the following principles of
governance: unanimity at the level of Heads of Government, qualified majority elsewhere,
cooperation among Community Organs and bodies, and provisions governing associate and
observer status for countries and related organizations.
II. Free movement of capital, the provision of services, and the
right of establishment. Also pursuant to the 1995 decision of the Heads of Government to
waive work-permit requirements for university graduates, media workers, sportsmen, and
artistes, skilled labour has the limited right to move and work freely throughout the
Community.
III. Industrial policy, to promote the productive employment of
resources and increase international competitiveness of the industrial production of the
Community.
IV. Trade policy, to enhance previous CARICOM provisions regarding
the movement of goods, rules of origin to determine eligibility for Community treatment,
the development of a common policy with respect to third states, and the role of tariff
policy in an era of open regionalism.
V. Agricultural policy, to transform this traditional sector by
increasing its efficiency and diversification, addressing the requirements of
international competitiveness, environmental sustainability, contribution to the Region's
food security, and the creation of forward linkages in food markets for the region s
tourism sector, and raw material for agro-industrial and other sectors.
VI. Air and sea transportation policies, to facilitate the intra-CARICOM mobility of
people and foster market integration through more efficient transport of goods and raw
materials, to overcome geographic separation, and political, economic and social
fragmentation.
VII. Equity, to ensure fair distribution of the costs and benefits of the process of
regional integration, by ensuring that less-developed partners, regions, and sectors that
are disadvantaged by the opening of borders and removal of barriers are provided for. This
element is critical to sustaining the process of integration.
VIII. Dispute resolution, whose centrepiece is the soon to be established Caribbean
Court of Justice designed to be the Community's final Court of Appeal, and also to have
original jurisdiction in the interpretation and application of the Treaty of Chaguaramas.
IX. Competition policy, to deal with the issues of restrictive business practices and
consumer protection that will become increasingly important with the increasing openness
of the Community as a Single Market and Economy.
Development of Regional Capital Markets
The Caribbean economy can neither develop nor be made whole by relying solely on the
investment of others. This was recognized in the 1989 Grand Anse Declaration, where
CARICOM Heads of Governments initiated measures to provide opportunities to draw on the
savings of people within the Caribbean and in the diaspora to stimulate indigenous
development. This endeavour has made significant progress in two areas.
First, the stock
exchanges of Jamaica, Barbados, and Trinidad & Tobago were linked in 1993 and began
cross-listing and cross-trading the securities of companies listed as public in all
CARICOM member states. Cooperation among the three exchanges has continued with the
technical support of NASDAQ, so that by the end of 1999 they should be fully automated,
linked for real time trading, and have a central depository.
Additionally, an exchange is
being established in The Bahamas and initiatives are at different stages in Belize, the
East Caribbean currency area and Guyana to create national or sub-regional units to link
with the regional system. The Dominican Republic stock exchange has also been
participating in meetings of the CARICOM Capital Market Committee.
Second, CARICOM Heads of Government entered into an agreement in 1993 with the ICWI
Group of Jamaica to spearhead the creation of a private Caribbean investment fund. To
date, the fund has mobilized in excess of U.S. $25M of a target of $150M, which it intends
to achieve by September 1999. ICWI's effort has been brought to fruition by three young
Jamaicans who returned to the Region from Wall Street and London.
The Environment and the Caribbean Sea
This area of functional cooperation is motivated by the fact that Caribbean nations
naturally share the important common linkage of the Caribbean Sea. This defining feature
of our Region is a fragile ecosystem that is highly vulnerable to pollution from the
myriad economic activities on densely populated coastlands, and heavy use for
transportation, especially the passage of hazardous materials (especially the movement
between Europe and Asia of nuclear waste) and the more than 50% of the world's cruise
fleet through the Region's waters.
The U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea has expanded the exclusive economic zones
(EEZs) of Caribbean countries. This has meant an increase in both the size of the marine
area that nations are bound to protect, and the overlap of territorial waters most of
whose boundaries have not yet been negotiated, broadening the scope of CARICOM nations
responsibilities at the same time as increasing the need for cooperation among their
governments.
To address this circumstance the CARICOM Heads of Government launched an
initiative to have the Caribbean Sea internationally recognized as a special area in the
context of sustainable development. And because management of the Caribbean Sea must be a
Caribbean-wide rather than CARICOM-wide challenge, CARICOM is seeking the support for this
initiative from the Heads of Government of the ACS, having already secured the support of
the Dominican Republic and Central American Ministers of Foreign Affairs. Promoting the
need to sustainably manage and develop the Caribbean Sea is a key area in which Caribbean
experts in the diaspora can assist their region.
Social Dimensions of Caribbean Development
CARICOM has already made an indelible mark on the quality of life in the Region,
through the creation and maintenance of regional institutions in areas such as education,
health, the role of women in development, labour, sport, and the youth. From the Caribbean
Examinations Council (CXC) to the Caribbean Festival of Creative Arts (CARIFESTA),
CARICOM's social and cultural dimension has made a signal contribution to making the
Caribbean whole. And that extends also to the quality of political life set forth in the
1997 CARICOM Charter of Civil Society, which sets the normative standards for relations
between governed and the governing within the Community.
By making the relationship
between every CARICOM Government and every Community national extend beyond their country
of citizenship to the entire Community, these arrangements set a common normative standard
and provide common facilities for all Members of the Community. In so doing, they help not
only to make the Caribbean whole, but wholesome as well.
Foreign Policy Coordination
The third pillar on which CARICOM's strength is predicated is the coordination of the
foreign policies of its independent Member States. As a collection of small sovereign
states, individual and separate foreign and external economic policy is much more likely
to divide rather than to integrate the Region.
A key objective of CARICOM has therefore
been to approach its external political and economic negotiations e.g. the Free Trade Area
of the Americas (FTAA) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) as a single, coordinated
unit. For example, to ensure effective coordination in the field of external economic
negotiations, CARICOM has established a dedicated institution the regional negotiating
machinery (RNM) to undertake regional and multilateral trade negotiations on its behalf.
The subscription of the Dominican Republic and Cuba to the RNM demonstrates the
contribution of this approach to unifying the Caribbean.
Concluding Observations
The process of making the Caribbean whole is not easy given the Region's history,
geography, cultural diversity, economic weakness, and individual and overall small size.
Moreover, in light of the myriad and powerful influences to which the individual countries
are subjected, uniting them will be no simple task. But even though conceiving of this
achievement is difficult, it is not impossible. Other countries and their people have
faced equally daunting tasks in their history and have succeeded. Are the Caribbean people
any less capable?
In March at Saramacca, Suriname, CARICOM Heads of Government, assisted by a significant
regional youth participation, began discussions on The Caribbean Community in the Next
Decade as part of the Community's 25th anniversary celebrations. From this meeting three
important points emerged. It was widely accepted that the CARICOM s process of governance
does not adequately serve the Community s needs, and requires the ceding of some degree of
sovereignty to a central executive authority that is responsible for driving the entire
Community forward. Additionally, it was agreed that the Caribbean in the new millennium
should combine technological versatility with its cultural and ethnic diversity to secure
its place in the hemisphere and the new global village.
Finally, there were calls for the Community to improve the efficiency of is
functioning, through more selective prioritization of its activities.
But even if CARICOM as an institution were to limit the scope of its current
contributions to the various dimensions of regional life, spearheading the process of
making the Caribbean whole would still be a herculean task. And this would still be the
case even if all the Caribbean territories, including Cuba and the Dominican Republic were
to become members of CARICOM, and the Single Market was to come into effect complete with
the Caribbean Court of Justice. There are two crucial reasons for this.
One is that making
the Caribbean whole is a process that requires a much wider participation than is now
conceived of within that design. The other is that CARICOM and other institutions that
make this process happen are in critical need of resources human, financial, and
technological to undertake their tasks. These serve to highlight the role and contribution
which those in the diaspora can and must play if we are to be successful in making the
Caribbean whole.
Finally, I hold the view that even a fully supported and effective CARICOM can only
achieve the objective of making the Caribbean truly whole in the sense that I have
elaborated here tonight, if there exists a certain context and socio-political
environment. On an earlier occasion when asked my views on what we of the Caribbean must
do to face up to the 21st century - now a mere matter of days away - I took example from
the Great One and laid down the following Ten Commandments of Caribbean development. I
close by repeating them tonight, as they provide the environment that CARICOM would need
to make the Caribbean whole.
I. Most importantly, stimulate the people of the
region to become involved on an ongoing basis in matters affecting their lives be it at
the community, national, or regional level. Specifically, sensitize people to the
necessity of thinking and acting as one region, as the best and perhaps the only way to
achieve our aspirations. We can only do this by instilling a sense of pride in our many
achievements as one people.
II. Within the context of the various regional institutions,
develop a shared vision of the future direction for the Caribbean among the Region's
leadership. This process should be transparent and pursued within an environment of broad
consultation and public accountability.
III. Adopt clear policies to shift economic activity away from
primary commodities toward a more balanced mix of goods and services, with the objective
of increased international competitiveness and participation in trade.
IV. Incorporate into domestic and regional policies the social
dimensions of development, by using criteria not just the rubric of economic growth but
also job creation, poverty reduction, participation of women, conservation of the
environment, and the meaningful involvement of youth.
V. Strengthen regional cooperation and continue to build
strategic international alliances, as a means to develop production, increase trade, and
pursue external negotiations with major countries, economic blocs, and international
financial institutions.
VI. Strengthen our human resources, by according greater
priority to our universities and other institutions of learning and research, firmly
grounding our educational policy in regionalism, linguistic versatility, computer
literacy, and mastery of new technologies.
VII. Develop a regional infrastructure of production and marketing
through deeper integration to promote freer movement of all factors of production, the
formation of regional companies, and the creation of strategic business alliances.
VIII. Strengthen the information and telecommunications
infrastructure to increase the efficiency of production and stimulate the creation of new
service industries.
IX. Dismantle barriers to entrepreneurship by promoting broad
participation in business and enabling people to benefit directly from the fruits of
successful endeavour in the context of market-driven economic development.
X. Embrace the spirit of regional commitment to ever
closer political, economic, and cultural cooperation.
As young people with an interest in the Caribbean's future, the Region looks forward
with high expectations to your contribution to making the Caribbean whole.
I thank you.