Economist Dr Indera Sagewan has said that the Economic Commission For Latin America and the Caribbean’s (ECLAC) forecast of low economic growth for T&T should be a wake-up call for the country.
“T&T needs to take stock of what the presentation is saying. Certainly, we need to refocus in terms of our development agenda. For a very, very long time, we have been talking about the areas in services but somehow we can’t seem to get off the starting line. It is as if something just keeps holding us back,” Sagewan said.
She added that the issue of innovation has to be driven by industry and admitted that T&T has fallen in this area as many do not find jobs after they graduate.
On Thursday in Chile, Alicia Bárcena, the executive secretary at ECLAC, presented the commission’s latest regional report on the economies of Latin America and the Caribbean.
ECLAC’s office in Port-of-Spain also carried the presentation live and invited local economists to give their views.
ECLAC projected that 2019 will end with T&T’s economy growing by 0.4 per cent and it forecasted that in 2020, T&T’s economy will grow by 1.5 per cent.
Dr Anthony Gonsalves who also spoke at the presentation shared Sagewan’s views on the economy.
“We have difficulties in improving the ease of doing business. I saw Jamaica come with fewer resources and in no time they were able to climb on much higher than T&T on the index. The last T&T Government invested a lot with the Single Electronic Windows (SEW) yet, at the end of the day, we are not seeing the results. We hear that the cost of getting a building permit is too high,” Gonsalves said.
He added that he has been informed it is impossible to improve the ease of doing business in the country without improving the public sector.
Gonsalves said if this is true then the country has a lot of work to do and it will take more than five years to change the efficiency of how business is conducted in the country.
Dr Dillon Alleyne, ECLAC’s deputy director, who spoke during the presentation, used T&T’s banking sector to highlight how inefficient and uncompetitive banking is in the Caribbean.
“We have a highly uncompetitive banking system. It is now controlled by four or five banks. One is a price leader and I would not call the name and the others follow. Every year they report vast amounts of profits. There is no incentive for innovation. The commercial banks are not the vehicle for developmental finance,” Alleyne said.
Alleyne said he banked with a certain bank in Jamaica and when he came to T&T to take up his post he brought letters of good character and other relevant documents.
“I thought the branch here would recognise it, but they said they do not do business with Jamaica. They are all part of a single parent company in Canada but they do not talk to each other in the Caribbean. So I come to a society where I know nobody, nobody could give me letters of recommendation, but they want it.
“I brought it from Jamaica where I had banked for 20 years. They said they are not interested. Why do you think that is so? There is no incentive to pursue another deposit from me. They are doing well,” Alleyne said.
When asked what will be the factors that help transform T&T’s economy, he pointed to Jamaica’s example.
“With Jamaica, it was the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the fact that they had gone to the brink and they did not like what they saw. I don’t know what T&T needs. How is T&T going to get the institutions together to get this going? Is there an urgency for it?” he said.
Economist Dr Vanus James who spoke at the ECLAC launch criticised T&T and other Caribbean countries for not being innovative enough.
“When you look at the evolution of the global economy over the decades and the Industrial Revolution, the underlying driver of growth is growth with the capacity to innovate. Why is China catching up to the West? Why is India catching up to China and the West? What explains Japan’s growth? It is the capacity to innovate,” James said.
Unlike these Asian countries he spoke about, James said T&T and other Caribbean countries are “floundering” at the bottom of any index of innovation.
“We are not doing anywhere near enough as Caribbean countries to add innovation to our trade. We are lagging behind with matters like the evolution of our intra industry trade,” James said.
He added that in ECLAC’s last report they had predicted 1.9 per cent GDP growth for T&T in 2019 and the latest projection is 0.4 per cent.
James suggested that ECLAC look at their forecasting model.
“You may want to scrutinise the forecast capacity of this model that you are using,” James said.
Michael Hendrickson, ECLAC’s economics affairs officer said one of the things that baffles him is the challenges that Tobago’s tourism is facing.
“Why is tourism doing so well in St Kitts and Nevis?
“Why is Tobago not doing better? I think it has to do with undying prior investment and vision in terms of diversifying the markets ensuring that you have airlift and so on,” Hendrickson said.
He said Tobago authorities must do more to learn from the example of other successful Caribbean tourism-dominated economies.
James said regional governments must change their philosophy to allow grassroots people to have input into the governance model.
“They are preoccupied with locking out people who are not from the same party and all that. Until we confront that head on in the region, we are not going to get growth rates that are robust,” Hendrickson said.
According to the report, the region is exhibiting an economic deceleration that is widespread and synchronised among countries and sectors, topping off six consecutive years of low growth.
In its Preliminary Overview of the Economies of Latin America and the Caribbean 2019, the United Nations regional organisation indicates that the deceleration in domestic demand is being accompanied by low external aggregate demand and more fragile international financial markets. This context is compounded by growing social demands and pressure to reduce inequality and increase social inclusion.
For 2020, ECLAC’s projections indicate that Caribbean nations will continue leading regional growth (with a subregional average of 5.6 per cent), led by Guyana (85.6 per cent, due to oil production starting in 2020), Antigua and Barbuda (6.5 per cent), Dominica (4.9 per cent) and the Dominican Republic (4.7 per cent). On the low end of the spectrum, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Argentina will have more moderate economic contraction rates (with -14 per cent, -1.4 per cent and -1.3 per cent, respectively).
Meanwhile, Central America will expand 2.6 per cent and South America 1.2 per cent.