Why can't Jamaica grow? Lessons from Barbados
BY KEITH COLLISTER
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
A little under one month ago, the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI) held a joint seminar with the world- renowned Stanford Graduate School of Business. As the not-so-new Golding administration enters the second half of its term, and just in front of the third in a series of ever more difficult budgets, it seems an appropriate time to address the failure of Jamaica to achieve faster economic growth, without which the relief provided by the Jamaica Debt Exchange will be only a very temporary respite.
CAPRI had assembled an extremely high-powered panel to discuss the Brookings Institute paper by leading Jamaican academic Peter Blair Henry, now Dean of the Stern Business School, and his former Stanford colleague Conrad Miller.
Entitled "Institutions verses Policies : A Tale of Two Islands", the paper notes that both Barbados and Jamaica inherited the two institutional characteristics that the literature on growth identifies as critical to long run prosperity "strong constitutional protection of private property and English common law". However, despite a similar small-island economic base, they experienced "starkly different growth trajectories in the aftermath of independence. From 1960 to 2002, Barbados' gross domestic product, per capita grew roughly three times as fast as Jamaica's. Consequently, the income gap between Barbados and Jamaica is now almost five times larger than at the time of independence."
Article
THE REAL PROBLEM....it's not ECONOMICS OR ECONOMIC POLICY it's SOCIOPOLITICAL... aka poor to negative SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS.... regardless of the economic fixes applied ...that is what really limits Jamaica....so that's what has to have priority.
Jamaica has its solutions backwards...so is always moving in that direction...relative to our peers & neighbours
BY KEITH COLLISTER
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
A little under one month ago, the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI) held a joint seminar with the world- renowned Stanford Graduate School of Business. As the not-so-new Golding administration enters the second half of its term, and just in front of the third in a series of ever more difficult budgets, it seems an appropriate time to address the failure of Jamaica to achieve faster economic growth, without which the relief provided by the Jamaica Debt Exchange will be only a very temporary respite.
CAPRI had assembled an extremely high-powered panel to discuss the Brookings Institute paper by leading Jamaican academic Peter Blair Henry, now Dean of the Stern Business School, and his former Stanford colleague Conrad Miller.
Entitled "Institutions verses Policies : A Tale of Two Islands", the paper notes that both Barbados and Jamaica inherited the two institutional characteristics that the literature on growth identifies as critical to long run prosperity "strong constitutional protection of private property and English common law". However, despite a similar small-island economic base, they experienced "starkly different growth trajectories in the aftermath of independence. From 1960 to 2002, Barbados' gross domestic product, per capita grew roughly three times as fast as Jamaica's. Consequently, the income gap between Barbados and Jamaica is now almost five times larger than at the time of independence."
Article
THE REAL PROBLEM....it's not ECONOMICS OR ECONOMIC POLICY it's SOCIOPOLITICAL... aka poor to negative SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS.... regardless of the economic fixes applied ...that is what really limits Jamaica....so that's what has to have priority.
Jamaica has its solutions backwards...so is always moving in that direction...relative to our peers & neighbours
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