Thursday, December 15, 2022
By JADE RUSSELL
jrussell@tribunemedia.net
A financial expert urged residents to take a “pause” and not to go broke this Christmas season while shopping.
Gowon Bowe, Fidelity Bank Bahamas’ CEO, explained that people should manage their money cautiously as, he said, “Christmas doesn't stop the world from turning.”
“Persons must be reminded that after Christmas, there's still going to be utility payments, there's still going to be housing payments, whether that'd be rent or mortgage. There's still going to be the need for school fees and still going to be the need for putting food on the table,” he said when contacted by The Tribune.
“So, if truly the people you celebrate Christmas with do have love for you, then I don't think there will be any lesser view of you. If you take the view that you will only spend within your means. If that means just a card or a smaller trinket in comparison to the larger gifts then ultimately so be it,” Mr Bowe said.
Mr Bowe said that people should take a pause when shopping during the holiday season to consider what is affordable for them rather than putting themselves in a hole of debt.
“I think individuals have to pause and first ask the question: What is affordable to them? And more importantly, who are those persons who they feel that some tangible gift is necessary versus some less tangible effort.
“But certainly, for our Bahamian society, given our enjoyment in terms of the celebration and the actual exchange of tangible gifts means that we need to start thinking about Christmas as soon as one Christmas is over meaning in the January timeframe.”
He added that budgeting ahead of Christmas can aid in saving efforts in the long run as he hoped people would take the necessary steps.
“Like anything else of significance and importance in our lifetime that we need to focus our attention on, what is a reasonable expenditure? And that is a percentage of what our income is, and how early do we need to start saving, whether that be on a weekly or monthly basis to set aside the monies that we would wish to have in the festive season commencing in November leading into December,” Mr Bowe said.
During the interview, Mr Bowe pointed out that the economy still has not recovered from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In June, Prime Minister Phillip Davis said the country’s unemployment rate is now below 20 percent, a major decrease from that of the pandemic, which he estimated at around 45 percent.
However, many Bahamians are still unemployed or have taken on lower income jobs just to make ends meet. In October, Labour Director Robert Farquharson said the Labour on the Blocks 2.0 Job Fair had over 1,500 attendees who were seeking employment.
Mr Bowe stressed that people should not overextend themselves financially this Christmas, as 2023 will be uncertain.
“Let’s make sure that we have a period of buoyancy that is longer than the last 12 months. Let's have a couple of years under our belt. So ideally, they would have had an opportunity to build savings and move away from the need to borrow. But more importantly, they will at least have some stability in their income and not take a real significant risk in putting themselves at no reserves, when 2023 still has a significant uncertainty yet to be determined,” he said.
Comments
bahamianson says...
Lololololololololo l , seriously? Watch out for the hole down the road. BAHAMIAN: why is in here so dark?
Posted 15 December 2022, 10:02 a.m. Suggest removal
birdiestrachan says...
I use to go broke for Christmas then catch hell in January Thank God I learned it makes no sense
Posted 15 December 2022, 11:12 a.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
Wow! What a cautionary message to come from the CEO of a bank that a few years ago transformed itself from a lower-profit mortgage lending institution to a higher-profit consumer lending institution.
We can only assume Mr. Bowe sees very little opportunity for his bank to grow its book of consumer loans and, instead, is very much concerned about potential significant losses on the horizon for his bank's existing consumer loan portfolio. I guess the big question is: Is Mr. Bowe going to cut his bank's near-term profit forecast yet again?
And if Fidelity Bank is feeling pain, one can only begin to imagine the great pain that Commonwealth Bank must be feeling.
Posted 15 December 2022, 11:57 a.m. Suggest removal
DonAnthony says...
Mr. Bowe is in the wrong vocation, he seems terribly conflicted. Constantly discouraging customers from availing themselves of the very services and economic lifeblood of the company of which he is CEO. He would find better fulfillment in a pulpit from which to moralize from each Sunday than running an establishment that offers consumer loans.
Posted 15 December 2022, 1:11 p.m. Suggest removal
ExposedU2C says...
He certainly does a lot of pontificating.
Posted 15 December 2022, 1:40 p.m. Suggest removal
birdiestrachan says...
Mr Bowe is a great man intellectual sound a good man of the Bahamian soil may the Good lord bless us with more men like him
Posted 15 December 2022, 4:22 p.m. Suggest removal
sheeprunner12 says...
This man who is filthy rich is advising the poor commoners to not indulge and go broke.
This is so wicked .......
Posted 15 December 2022, 5:49 p.m. Suggest removal
Bonefishpete says...
Well to be fair there's 1500 people who are 100 million richer this Christmas. Yes Santa is real.
Posted 16 December 2022, 3:11 a.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
Rumour has it the Wicked Witch of The West bought a new witch's broom for Xmas that she plans to use to sweep all of her SBF/FTX connections and ill-gotten financial gains under the rug with the help of the corrupt Davis led PLP government.
Posted 20 December 2022, 11:03 a.m. Suggest removal
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