I extend a warm Antiguan and Barbudan welcome to all of
you.
A special word of welcome to representatives of
the United Kingdom Department for International
Development (DFID), the Spanish Agency for
International Cooperation for Development (AECID),
and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
which have willingly and generously provided
financial support for this Symposium. I am indeed
heartened by the level of support given and the
representation of these agencies here today. It
augurs well for the collaboration and cooperation
which we are forging.
Last July, I proposed, and got the endorsement of
my colleague Heads of Government to convene this
Regional Symposium on Services to develop a Regional
Policy and Strategy for the further development of
the Services Sector in the Community. The context
was the formation of the CARICOM Single Economy on
which we are working feverishly to establish by the
year 2015.
The global environment in which my proposal was
juxtaposed was a lot different then. At that time,
we were grappling with the shortages in food
production, the spiraling of food prices, the
attendant inflationary pressures on the rest of the
economy and the increased potential for social
unrest. The price of oil was also rising out of
control. I was then the Chairman of the Community,
and the Conference of the Heads of Government spared
no effort to deal with these difficulties.
No one, or to be more accurate, very few persons
saw a looming financial crisis.
Indeed, the leading international financial and
development institutions had predicted a growth of
3.3% in the world economy in 2008 and further growth
in 2009 of around 3.6%. These predictions were made
against strong and steady growth in the world
economy in 2006 and 2007 reported at 3.9% and 3.6%,
respectively.
The World Bank had even predicted that developing
countries would enjoy growth in excess of 6%, and
that the share of developing countries’ imports
would be more than half the growth in total imports.
Today we are operating in a drastically different
environment. Food prices have leveled off although
they have not dropped to the pre-2008 level; the
price of oil has fallen from a peak of US$155 per
barrel to below US$60.00; the global financial
market has severely weakened; and the world economy
is into recession. Remittances from developed
countries to developing countries have decelerated
and now seem to be diminishing. The outlook for 2009
is negative and that for 2010, although positive, is
highly uncertain. Governments around the world are
implementing stimulus packages of varying types,
both to weaken the recessing forces as well as to
ensure that the duration of the recession is very
short.
We here in the Caribbean are under severe
pressure. The crisis has negatively affected
important economic sectors in the Region. The most
severely affected are tourism and related services,
construction, the financial sector, the oil, alumina
and aluminum industries, and public administration.
Governments have been contending with falling
revenues as credit has become tight and our
financial sector has been placed under the threat of
collapse of major players.
In particular, the financial sector in Antigua
and Barbuda has been placed under stress due to the
collapse of a regional financial conglomerate and,
as one of our major offshore banks became the
subject of investigation by the Securities Exchange
Commission of the United States of America.
Mr. Chairman, I have stressed the above to
highlight the fact that CARICOM economies are very
vulnerable. We can practise the highest level of
Governance, enact and enforce the best regulatory
framework and continuously strive to maintain the
high standard of living for our people to which they
are accustomed. However, the current environment
clearly shows - indeed it reinforces the reality -
that our economies, our way of life, our social
services, and governance are not impervious to
external shocks over which we have no control.
What we have control over though, is our
opportunity to work together as a people to meet
these ever present challenges.
I say this based on our achievements to date.
In 1965, three of our Heads of Government met
here in Antigua and Barbuda and agreed on an
economic and social framework to advance their
peoples. That framework was CARIFTA and our national
hero Sir Vere Cornwall Bird Snr. was among the three
regional visionaries. By 1973 other Heads of
Government had joined the arrangement and this gave
birth to the Treaty of Chaguaramas which established
the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM).
In July 1989, the CARICOM Heads of Government,
meeting in Grand Anse, Grenada, confronted with the
twin phenomena of trade liberalization and increased
intensity of globalization, and recognizing the need
to remain competitive, decided to deepen the
regional integration movement into a Single Market
and Economy (CSME). The Heads at Grand Anse had the
vision of a CSME which would be a means of achieving
sustained economic development, fully aware of the
need for the free movement of skilled persons, the
primary importance of human resource development to
the modernization of the regional economy, and their
necessity in realizing the then new opportunities
arising in the services sector. It must be recalled
at that time, there was no free trade in services
and there was no free movement of service providers
and of skilled Community nationals.
This decision to create the CSME will ultimately
lead to the existence of one market of approximately
15 million persons whose annual total output will be
in excess of US$50 billion of which more than 70%
will be from Services. In addition, more than 66% of
the employed persons would be in the Services
Sector.
Twenty years after Grand Anse, we are again at
another important juncture in our regional
integration process, where we are giving focused
attention to the very important Services Sector, and
I am more than pleased as CARICOM’s Lead Head of
Government with responsibility for Services to be
Patron of this Symposium which seeks to:
(i) outline the vision for Services in the
CSME;
(ii) develop the outline and elements of the
Draft Strategic Plan for Services in the CSME;
and
(iii) develop a Plan of Action for the next
five years.
The agenda for the next three days seeks to:
(i) provide you the service providers with a
better understanding of the regional regime for
Services, the rights which you are entitled to,
as enshrined in the Revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas, and the work which is taking place
to facilitate trade in services;
(ii) establish the linkages among investment
in, production of, and trade in services;
(iii) facilitate detailed discussions on the
wide range of services with the expected output
of identifying the elements of the Draft
Strategic Plan for the sector; and
(iv) chart the way forward, given our current
economic circumstances, and taking into account
the medium- and long-term prospects.
This Symposium has its own challenges. These
include:
(i) catering for such a wide range of diverse
service sub-sectors, each of which has its own
unique and peculiar challenges and opportunities;
(ii) completing the tasks which have been set;
and
(iii) meeting the expectations of all
participants.
These are separate to the challenges associated
with the formation and operationalisation of the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy, which my
colleague Heads and I are confronting, and these
include:
(i) ensuring that all Community nationals,
including the man on the street, reap the intended
benefits;
(ii) opening up the regional market to the
service providers of third countries as we have done
with the recently concluded Economic Partnership
Agreement (EPA) between CARIFORUM States and the
Member States of the European Community; and
(iii) minimizing the adverse effects of the
current financial crisis on our peoples.
Ladies and Gentlemen, while agriculture and
manufacturing will remain important for the regional
economy, for many of our Member States, the Services
Sector is our future. Tourism and Financial Services
have been our traditional export services. But the
non-traditional sub-sectors provide new
opportunities for further services exports within
the Region and extra-regionally. We therefore have
to make the Services Sector work for us. As
Governments, we have the responsibility to provide
the enabling environment and other incentives for
the development of the Services Sector.
You, the private sector operators have to do the
rest to make it happen. You therefore have to
organize yourselves, particularly in the newer
areas, just as our traditional Sectors have or are
doing to their advantage. The current initiatives to
establish Coalitions of Services Industries have
resulted in eight such bodies to date and it is
urgent that the private sector in those Member
States still without National Coalitions complete
the process as soon as possible, and that includes
Antigua and Barbuda. National Services Coalitions
will provide support to their members to better
position them to increase their competitiveness and
enhance exports of services.
Similarly, the work being done to harmonize
domestic regulations for a number of Services
Sectors must be completed to give the necessary
support and confidence to service providers and
consumers alike.
I am convinced, given the wide range of skills
and the level of expertise gathered here today, that
we are more than capable of addressing these
challenges. I pledge my full support for this work
and I will return on Friday to personally receive
your recommendations during the final session of
your deliberations.
I wish you every success in your endeavours and I
pray God’s blessings on the proceedings.
Again, I say welcome.
I thank you.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org