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No plans now to cut public sector - Golding

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  • No plans now to cut public sector - Golding

    Prime Minister Bruce Golding on Wednesday sought to assure the public that there were no immediate plans to cut the size of the public sector, but that the civil service wage bill had to be contained in order to attain some of the country's fiscal targets.

    He said the Government was about to enter discussions with the Jamaica Confederation of Trade Unions for the establishment of the third public sector memorandum of understanding. He warned that the Government would not be in a position to honour unrealistic salary demands.

    The Jamaica Teachers' Association has already submitted a claim for a 100 per cent increase over two years, but the prime minister dismissed such a demand as unrealistic given the current economic climate.

    "I suspect that is just an opening shot," Golding said. "I don't think that anybody could ever expect that in our situation."

    Revised fiscal targets

    The prime minister, who was speaking during a post-Cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House, pointed to a two per cent inflation rate in December alone.

    It is expected that the inflation rate for the current fiscal year will be about 13 per cent.

    The prime minister said the Government had revised some of its fiscal targets because of external and domestic shocks like poor weather conditions.

    He said the fiscal deficit, for example, had been increased from four-and-a-half per cent to five-and-a-half per cent for this administrative year. This means the Government will have to borrow about $6 billion more than was originally projected this fiscal year to fund the budget. Golding said that over the next five years, debt to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio should be reduced to about 95 per cent. In other words, the total public debt as a percentage of GDP, which is the combined value of goods and services, will drop by about 40 percentage points.

    PM expects growth

    At the same time, the prime minister said he was expecting the Jamaican economy to start growing at no less than three per cent of GDP a year.

    He said the Government was in discussions with investors for the establishment of several large projects, which would help to drive the economy and create jobs.

    The prime minister said Cabinet had agreed to the resumption of the partnership-for-progress initiative as a means of promoting investment to attain the growth targets.

    Golding also announced that the recommendations from the November 2007 Montego Bay Summit involving private sector groups would be implemented.

    On Tuesday, Golding is to meet with the members of a special monitoring committee, comprising Government and private sector representatives, which has been established to oversee the implementation of the recommendations.
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

  • #2
    Come now Mr. PM ... stop the foot dragging. Every study has shown that the public sector is too large. DEAL WITH IT!
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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    • #3
      The reduction of the workforce should only proceed to increase efficiency. The first place fi start is to get rid of people who are not productive, like the strategy at the JUTC.
      Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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