FORMER PRIME Minister P.J. Patterson yesterday said the country's commercial banks should be blamed for the financial crisis of the 1990s.
Patterson, whose administration established the Financial Sector Adjustment Company (FINSAC) to deal with the meltdown, said mismanagement of the commercial banks were at the root of the financial crisis.
"When the commercial banks came to the Government to discuss intervention, it was the most painful decision any Cabinet has faced," Patterson said.
He was speaking at the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies 50-50 Forum Surveying the Past to Inform the Future, held at The Jamaica Pegasus last night.
According to Patterson, the financial-sector meltdown cost the country 40 per cent of GDP at the time and had it not been for that, the country would have experienced stronger economic growth.
"Had it not been for that, we would have gone clear on the path to economic growth," the former prime minister said. "We had to pay a considerable price."
In defending his government's decision to establish FINSAC, Patterson said: "If we had not taken the decision we did to protect the savings and insurance policies, the blood that would have flowed in Jamaica would make the Morant Bay Rebellion look like a picnic."
The governing Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) has blamed the meltdown of the 1990s on the economic policies of the Patterson administration.
"In the heart of the financial sector crisis, which destroyed so many thousands of businesses and peoples' lives, the then Government blamed the crisis on everything except themselves. They said it was mismanagement by the bankers ... ," Shaw said Wednesday as he criticised Patterson's administration for its management of the economy.
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...ead/lead1.html
Patterson, whose administration established the Financial Sector Adjustment Company (FINSAC) to deal with the meltdown, said mismanagement of the commercial banks were at the root of the financial crisis.
"When the commercial banks came to the Government to discuss intervention, it was the most painful decision any Cabinet has faced," Patterson said.
He was speaking at the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies 50-50 Forum Surveying the Past to Inform the Future, held at The Jamaica Pegasus last night.
According to Patterson, the financial-sector meltdown cost the country 40 per cent of GDP at the time and had it not been for that, the country would have experienced stronger economic growth.
"Had it not been for that, we would have gone clear on the path to economic growth," the former prime minister said. "We had to pay a considerable price."
In defending his government's decision to establish FINSAC, Patterson said: "If we had not taken the decision we did to protect the savings and insurance policies, the blood that would have flowed in Jamaica would make the Morant Bay Rebellion look like a picnic."
The governing Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) has blamed the meltdown of the 1990s on the economic policies of the Patterson administration.
"In the heart of the financial sector crisis, which destroyed so many thousands of businesses and peoples' lives, the then Government blamed the crisis on everything except themselves. They said it was mismanagement by the bankers ... ," Shaw said Wednesday as he criticised Patterson's administration for its management of the economy.
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...ead/lead1.html
Comment