"Jamaica on the brink of becoming a failed state" - says UWI Professor
1:37 pm, Mon July 22, 2013
Professor Brian Meeks
Professor Brian Meeks, Director of the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social & Economic Studies says Jamaica is on the brink of becoming a failed state and needs to recover some degree of maneuverability if it is not to be left completely at the mercy of nation states.
Meeks who was one of five presenters at the People’s National Party’s (PNP), 75th anniversary symposium on the weekend, used the Tivoli Gardens/Dudus event and the long intense negotiations to secure a deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as examples of how tenuous Jamaica's sovereignty is.
He argued that the country's lack of economic growth, results not so much from policies, as it does from politics.
“We don’t take down the flag on August the 6th and s and say we are a failed state, it happens gradually, like a frog in hot water until you don’t realize it and instead of the frog swimming around it is dead in the water. Unless we begin to think very clearly about these things, we are going to arrive at a state where we are a dead frog floating around in the water of the failed Jamaican state."
He said for too long the two major political parties have placed the exigencies of winning elections over reaching a consensus on a common policy with a life span of say fifty years.
The theme of the symposium was "Towards a Brighter Future...Facing the Challenges".
1:37 pm, Mon July 22, 2013
Professor Brian Meeks
Professor Brian Meeks, Director of the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social & Economic Studies says Jamaica is on the brink of becoming a failed state and needs to recover some degree of maneuverability if it is not to be left completely at the mercy of nation states.
Meeks who was one of five presenters at the People’s National Party’s (PNP), 75th anniversary symposium on the weekend, used the Tivoli Gardens/Dudus event and the long intense negotiations to secure a deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as examples of how tenuous Jamaica's sovereignty is.
He argued that the country's lack of economic growth, results not so much from policies, as it does from politics.
“We don’t take down the flag on August the 6th and s and say we are a failed state, it happens gradually, like a frog in hot water until you don’t realize it and instead of the frog swimming around it is dead in the water. Unless we begin to think very clearly about these things, we are going to arrive at a state where we are a dead frog floating around in the water of the failed Jamaican state."
He said for too long the two major political parties have placed the exigencies of winning elections over reaching a consensus on a common policy with a life span of say fifty years.
The theme of the symposium was "Towards a Brighter Future...Facing the Challenges".
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