By JULIAN RICHARDSON Observer staff reporter
Friday, December 12, 2008
Prime Minister Bruce Golding is expected to announce an economic stimulus plan to deal with the worsening global financial crisis during a televised address to the nation on Sunday.
Speaking at a Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica (PSOJ) luncheon Wednesday at the Hilton Kingston Hotel, Minister of Finance and the Public Service Audley Shaw said Golding's presentation would be made on the heels of a number of consultations with private sector associations.
"We have heard you. You have come to us as the PSOJ, the Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association, the Jamaica Manufacturers Association and the Small Business Association," said Shaw.
He added: "You have all approached us with specific proposals. We are not going to be able to do everything that you have asked for," he noted. "But we are going to respond by starting a process where we are going to have to put an emphasis on encouraging a return to production and productivity in this country."
Shaw also used the platform to stand by his earlier position that despite the ongoing global financial crisis, Jamaica's financial fundamentals remained strong.
He said that the significant slippage of the local currency in recent weeks, which has seen the Jamaican dollar devalue to trade at more than J$79 to US$1, was more due to speculation than to any fundamental problems in the economy.
"Now is not a time for us to lose faith and to lose confidence in the Jamaican economy," he said. "It's the other way around; it is a time when we should draw upon every reserve of faith and confidence as things could be much worse.
"Even as we are seeing a slippage in the exchange rate, the truth is that we are seeing it not because of a fundamental shortage of foreign exchange in the economy but because some have it and some who need it can't get it, and hence the pressure on the exchange rate," he said.
To support his assessment, the minister highlighted that Jamaica's Net International Reserves - US$1.8 billion - and private sector foreign exchange accounts - US$2.3 billion - is at the same level now as it was last year.
"In terms of those two indices alone you see that there should be no cause for lack of confidence or for any panic in the system whatsoever," Shaw explained.
International Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director Dominique Strauss-Khan, who spoke at the luncheon, defended the Bank of Jamaica's (BOJ's) recent intervention in the money market in which it hiked interest rates to curb pressure on the dollar.
The IMF boss said that while he understands that there will be concerns from the business sector, the central bank's measure was the best measure for Jamaica to protect its current account and reserves.
"We cannot just imagine that there will be just one kind of policy response - one size fits all - that can be applied all across the board to every country in the world," said Strauss-Khan.
"The spillover of the crisis has widened Jamaica's sovereign spread and put pressure on the currency and on the reserves," he continued.
"You have to protect your current account; you have to protect your reserves. You need to use all the tools that you have in your toolbox, including interest rates....so the question is not what would be the best for business; the question is what can we afford in the situation in which we are and where the pressure is so strong."
Strauss-Khan, who was in Jamaica on a one-day visit left the island Wednesday.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...Y_PLAN__B_.asp
Friday, December 12, 2008
Prime Minister Bruce Golding is expected to announce an economic stimulus plan to deal with the worsening global financial crisis during a televised address to the nation on Sunday.
Speaking at a Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica (PSOJ) luncheon Wednesday at the Hilton Kingston Hotel, Minister of Finance and the Public Service Audley Shaw said Golding's presentation would be made on the heels of a number of consultations with private sector associations.
"We have heard you. You have come to us as the PSOJ, the Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association, the Jamaica Manufacturers Association and the Small Business Association," said Shaw.
He added: "You have all approached us with specific proposals. We are not going to be able to do everything that you have asked for," he noted. "But we are going to respond by starting a process where we are going to have to put an emphasis on encouraging a return to production and productivity in this country."
Shaw also used the platform to stand by his earlier position that despite the ongoing global financial crisis, Jamaica's financial fundamentals remained strong.
He said that the significant slippage of the local currency in recent weeks, which has seen the Jamaican dollar devalue to trade at more than J$79 to US$1, was more due to speculation than to any fundamental problems in the economy.
"Now is not a time for us to lose faith and to lose confidence in the Jamaican economy," he said. "It's the other way around; it is a time when we should draw upon every reserve of faith and confidence as things could be much worse.
"Even as we are seeing a slippage in the exchange rate, the truth is that we are seeing it not because of a fundamental shortage of foreign exchange in the economy but because some have it and some who need it can't get it, and hence the pressure on the exchange rate," he said.
To support his assessment, the minister highlighted that Jamaica's Net International Reserves - US$1.8 billion - and private sector foreign exchange accounts - US$2.3 billion - is at the same level now as it was last year.
"In terms of those two indices alone you see that there should be no cause for lack of confidence or for any panic in the system whatsoever," Shaw explained.
International Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director Dominique Strauss-Khan, who spoke at the luncheon, defended the Bank of Jamaica's (BOJ's) recent intervention in the money market in which it hiked interest rates to curb pressure on the dollar.
The IMF boss said that while he understands that there will be concerns from the business sector, the central bank's measure was the best measure for Jamaica to protect its current account and reserves.
"We cannot just imagine that there will be just one kind of policy response - one size fits all - that can be applied all across the board to every country in the world," said Strauss-Khan.
"The spillover of the crisis has widened Jamaica's sovereign spread and put pressure on the currency and on the reserves," he continued.
"You have to protect your current account; you have to protect your reserves. You need to use all the tools that you have in your toolbox, including interest rates....so the question is not what would be the best for business; the question is what can we afford in the situation in which we are and where the pressure is so strong."
Strauss-Khan, who was in Jamaica on a one-day visit left the island Wednesday.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...Y_PLAN__B_.asp
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