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Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Now is the time to invest in Jamaica, says island’s Commerce Minister

by

Peter Christopher
810 days ago
20230310
 Jamaica minister of Industry, Investment and Commerce Aubyn Hill, fourth from left, presents the certification from the Jamaica National Agency for Accreditation to T&T Bureau of Standards chairman Lawford Dupres, while Trade and Industry minister Paula Gopee-Scoon holds the other certification with T&T Bureau of Standards (TTBS) Executive Director Jose Trejo and TTBS Certification Division Manager Rodney Ramnath. Others in picture, from left,  Ministry of Trade and Industry Implementation Division Manager Gerard Maxwell, Jamaica National Agency for Accreditation CEO Sharonmae Shirley and Jamaican ambassador Arthur Williams, during the Jamaican Promotions corporation (Jampro) Trade mission at the HYATT Regency, yesterday.

Jamaica minister of Industry, Investment and Commerce Aubyn Hill, fourth from left, presents the certification from the Jamaica National Agency for Accreditation to T&T Bureau of Standards chairman Lawford Dupres, while Trade and Industry minister Paula Gopee-Scoon holds the other certification with T&T Bureau of Standards (TTBS) Executive Director Jose Trejo and TTBS Certification Division Manager Rodney Ramnath. Others in picture, from left, Ministry of Trade and Industry Implementation Division Manager Gerard Maxwell, Jamaica National Agency for Accreditation CEO Sharonmae Shirley and Jamaican ambassador Arthur Williams, during the Jamaican Promotions corporation (Jampro) Trade mission at the HYATT Regency, yesterday.

NICOLE DRAYTON

pe­ter.christo­pher@guardian.co.tt

Now is the time to in­vest in Ja­maica.

This was the pitch made by Ja­maica’s Min­is­ter of In­dus­try, In­vest­ment and Com­merce, Sen­a­tor Aubyn Hill to in­vestors from T&T at the Hy­att Re­gency yes­ter­day.

Hill was speak­ing at a trade mis­sion host­ed by the T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Ja­maica Pro­mo­tions Cor­po­ra­tion (JAM­PRO).

“This is the right time. Why is it the right time? We went through the hard­ships in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 and we’ve weath­ered the storm un­der Prime Min­is­ter An­drew Hol­ness and his Cab­i­net which I am very priv­i­leged to serve, we have done some things that have made Ja­maica quite out­stand­ing, said Hill, who stat­ed that Ja­maica had seen sig­nif­i­cant eco­nom­ic growth fol­low­ing the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic.

“We have done well and very well. Very well is com­par­a­tive, be­cause com­ing out of the pan­dem­ic, there is no oth­er coun­try in the Caribbean, in fact I dare say in the re­gion, in the hemi­sphere ex­cept for Guyana that has grown at the rate that Ja­maica has grown in the last year,” said Hill.

Hill said the coun­try had done a ma­jor turn­around fol­low­ing the hard­ships which led them to turn to the In­ter­na­tion­al Mon­e­tary Fund in 2013, three years af­ter a pre­vi­ous sub­scrip­tion to the fund went awry.

He point­ed out that un­der this pro­gramme, Ja­maica’s re­formed econ­o­my has be­come the poster child for IMF.

“We don’t want that ho­n­our again. I’ll tell you why we don’t want it, but it’s very rare that you have an out­go­ing head of the IMF prais­ing Ja­maica for be­ing a poster child and the in­com­ing (Kristali­na) Georgie­va say­ing it’s a poster child now we don’t want to be back there be­cause you have to be bad to be cred­it­ed for be­ing fixed. And you have to be work­ing ex­treme­ly hard com­ing from bad to be cred­it­ed by the new IMF head but we take it be­cause very few peo­ple can be in that po­si­tion be­cause they sink and then they nev­er come out,” said Hill.

Trade Min­is­ter Paula Gopee-Scoon ac­knowl­edged Ja­maica as a ma­jor trad­ing part­ner for this coun­try.

She said, “In 2022, Ja­maica was T&T’s third largest trad­ing part­ner in Cari­com and that’s en­er­gy and non-en­er­gy trade. In that same year, both coun­tries trad­ed just over $1.2 bil­lion worth of prod­ucts with each oth­er. T&T im­ports a wide range of prod­ucts from Ja­maica such as grape wine, iron con­tain­ers, flour, and con­densed milk more re­cent­ly”

She ex­plained that there were ar­eas how­ev­er where trade could be im­proved.

“There are ad­di­tion­al sec­tors that are open for busi­ness for in­vestors from Ja­maica and these are the sports and cre­ative sec­tors. And this is on both sides, in­vestors on both sides,” said Gopee-Scoon.

“Ser­vices is an­oth­er im­por­tant sec­tor that we are de­sirous of im­prov­ing trade with our part­ners in Ja­maica.  In that re­gard, the Min­istry of Trade and In­dus­try has part­nered with the T&T Coali­tion of Ser­vices In­dus­tries (TTC­SI) to de­vel­op a num­ber of ini­tia­tives and this is go­ing to help us ex­pand our trade in ser­vices,” she said.


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