Wednesday, October 21, 2015
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
A former Chamber of Commerce president yesterday said Prime Minister Perry Christie “needs to go” because he is too old and has no innovative ideas to revive the economy, adding: “The numbers speak for themselves.”
Dionisio D’Aguilar, in a scathing assessment of the Government’s ability to resuscitate the economy, told Tribune Business it seemed incapable of both balancing the Budget by “spending less”, and growing the economy.
Warning that the current anemic growth levels would cause the Bahamas’ debt-to-GDP levels to continue to increase, the Superwash president said the Government’s only action to-date had been to raise taxes via Value-Added Tax (VAT).
Warning that this would depress, not increase, economic growth, Mr D’Aguilar said the Bahamas would find it impossible to “maintain the status quo” with all the economic indicators heading in the wrong direction.
“They need to spend less to bring the Budget into surplus, and the economy is not growing,” he told Tribune Business, identifying these two issues as the Christie administration’s greatest problems.
“If your economy is not growing, your debt-to-GDP ratio is going to continue to increase, and that’s worrying. If you can’t grow the economy and are not reducing your spending, you have to do something innovative to get the economy going.
“That’s the hard part. The Government does not know what to do to get the economy going except raise taxes, and that does not spur growth in GDP,” Mr D’Aguilar added.
“That behooves the question of why the Prime Minister, who’s 73 years-old, thinks he can come up with new ideas to grow the economy. He needs to go.
“It’s a tough job, I know that, but I think we have milked the economy, and current structure of the economy, as much as we can and it’s time to change the way we do business.”
Apart from improving the ‘ease of doing business’ and smoothing the investment approval process, Mr D’Aguilar said the Bahamas’ needed to “remove the Immigration roadblock, fight crime better” and fix a broken education system.
“Our people do not know how to innovate and grow the economy because they do not know how to read and write,” he told Tribune Business. “The poor education system is causing so many other problems - low GDP, higher crime. We can’t grow the economy with the workforce we have.”
Mr D’Aguilar said there was “too much crazy rhetoric” over the Baha Mar situation that had spooked foreign investors and scared them away.
“When people tell me I’m talking s*, I say look at the GDP numbers and explain why we’re not growing well despite the US turnaround,” he told Tribune Business.
“The numbers speak for themselves. The ease of doing business is down, crime is up, education is down, GDP is down, taxes are up, the national debt is up, and you can’t maintain the status quo.”
The Bahamas’ projected 1.2 per cent GDP growth rate for 2015 is well short of the 7 per cent that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) believes is needed to both absorb new workforce entrants, and cut the existing jobless rate by 50 per cent, between now and 2018.
And the Central Bank of the Bahamas, in its 2014 annual report, warned that the debt-to-GDP ratio had already breached the 70 per cent mark that is cited as a ‘danger threshold’, beyond which countries may lose sovereign control of their financial affairs.
Tribune Business also revealed last Friday how, despite an extra $182 million in VAT revenues for the first five months of 2015, the Bahamas’ total national debt jumped by 10 per cent in the year to end-June to hit a new $6.378 billion record.
The Central Bank’s quarterly review for the three months ended June 30, 2015, revealed that despite the narrowed fiscal deficit, this nation’s national debt continued to rise - by $58.6 million during the second quarter alone.
The data suggests that while VAT may have arrested the growth in the national debt, it has done nothing to stop it; at least in the new tax’s early stages.
This, as this newspaper predicted, has ignited further debate about how the Government should use the extra $300-$350 million it is earning annually from consumers and the private sector, and generate calls for more transparency on how tax monies are used.
Mr D’Aguilar told Tribune Business it was “no surprise” that the national debt had increased, because the Government had yet to restrain its spending and bring its finances “into balance”.
Even with VAT, the Government is still spending more than it is earning, resulting in continued fiscal deficits that are adding to the national debt.
While the projections are for the Bahamas to start producing a ‘primary surplus’ in the 2016-2017 fiscal year, and reduce the GFS deficit to just $31 million the following year, the national debt will still continue to rise. The Government also appears to be relying on increased economic growth to keep the debt-to-GDP ratio in check.
Mr D’Aguilar warned that the national debt would continue to increase until the Government “learns to live within its means” and spent less than it earned in revenues.
Comments
Sickened says...
Don't blame Perry, he's so out-of-it, he doesn't even know that he's in charge. His mind is long gone; his skull is hollow. Blame the PLP for letting this fool continue as leader.
Posted 21 October 2015, 3:43 p.m. Suggest removal
Honestman says...
Alas PGC and the PLP will pay no attention to sensible business leaders like D'Aguilar. They still have another 18 months or so to wheel and deal for the benefit of their family, friends and supporters. Meanwhile, the ever decreasing and marginalized sector of society (i.e. the working public) continues to be the fall guys. Next up is NHI, a concept the country can ill afford at this time but that won't stop the rush to try and force it through. I can't believe so many Bahamians cast their vote for these jokers at the last election. What's wrong with us?
Posted 21 October 2015, 4:35 p.m. Suggest removal
SP says...
**Proof that $600,000.00 went to the FNM Cabinet, but D’Aguilar can't seem to read that!**
Former FNM tourism minister absconded with $5,000,000.00 disappearing into his shell company, but D’Aguilar and the red shirts have no problem as long as its their own pirate.
Saunders beach was the recipient of two toilets costing $330,000.00, but the FNM are silent on that fiasco too.
Road infrastructure project was $100,000,000.00 over budget, But not ONE PEEP or concern out of the FNM....Imagine the tantrums from the FNM if the PLP had done the same!
PLP are no worse pirates than the FNM...They'er just more sloppy pillagers.
Posted 21 October 2015, 4:40 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
Exactly. Our only hope is DNA.
Posted 21 October 2015, 11:05 p.m. Suggest removal
sansoucireader says...
Um no.
Posted 22 October 2015, 7:06 a.m. Suggest removal
SP says...
**DNA is an option, however Branville's silence on corruption is highly suspicious, especially with all the blatant "mutual pillaging" apparent between the PLP and FNM.**
If DNA would focus on corruption, the whole country would unquestionably support them.
McCartneys silence on corruption could very well indicate that as a former Cabinet minister he too is compromised and unable to open his mouth regarding corruption.
If Bran' is compromised, he is of **NO USE TO US!**
Expecting the PLP and FNM **under anybody's leadership** to address corruption among themselves is totally ludicrous, impossible and will never happen.
Bahamas desperately needs a fresh start, with a whole new party, mandated firstly to investigate and root out 43 years of systemic corruption, committed to prosecuting ALL those found guilty, and returning any plundered wealth back to the peoples Treasury.
The country needs to clean house and set a new path in a totally different direction.
Posted 22 October 2015, 8:53 a.m. Suggest removal
birdiestrachan says...
Note D"Aguilar said you all can not read or write. some how he always manages to insult the Bahamian people. But you all seem to not even know when you all are insulted.
Posted 22 October 2015, 11:16 a.m. Suggest removal
Greentea says...
Not that this will matter to you- but if you have had to read job applications recently- you would understand what he is trying to say. I imagine he gets quite a bit of applications on his desk and would know what he is talking about at that level of the workforce.
Posted 22 October 2015, 12:19 p.m. Suggest removal
jackbnimble says...
I agree. I say just read Facebook. The daily blogs show why our nation has a "D" average.
Posted 22 October 2015, 12:41 p.m. Suggest removal
asiseeit says...
It is sad that the TRUTH is an insult to you. Maybe you need to get a clue as to how bad the situation really is and how poorly educated the people of The Bahamas really are. You PLP's really need to get a grip and start being honest with the dire situation The Bahamas realy is in. But we all know you people are only about power and money.
Posted 22 October 2015, 2:26 p.m. Suggest removal
Economist says...
birdie, you need to read an article in yesterday's Guardian. It speaks to the tow main thing holding back our economy "labour and cost of electricity".
I too have to deal with an ever increasing number of applicants who either can't read or can't think.
As we say "if you want to keep a secret from a Bahamian, put it in writing."
We would do much better if people would stop making excuses for people who are not doing their jobs. That includes a number of parents as well.
Posted 22 October 2015, 12:52 p.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
He needs to go because if he accidentally swallowed a straight nail, a few days later it would come out looking like a crooked screw!
Posted 22 October 2015, 3:38 p.m. Suggest removal
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