07262022 BUSINESS

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business@tribunemedia.net

MONDAY, JULY 25, 2022

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‘Don’t take Kalik bottle’ to carbon trading fight By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Bahamas must “take a gun to a gunfight as opposed to a Kalik bottle” if it wants “to be ahead of the game” in developing carbon credits and their trading, a well-known banker is urging. Gowon Bowe, Fidelity Bank (Bahamas) chief executive, told a digital assets webinar that The Bahamas must take the lead in developing its own carbon trading platform and valuations if it believes there is “a significant depth” of natural resources that can be monetised into a multi-million dollar commodity. Arguing that this nation “cannot wait” for the global carbon industry to make the running, he added that The Bahamas needs to be “on an intellectual par” with rival

• Banker: ‘Be ahead of game’ if you’re convinced • Urges ‘don’t wait’ on trading platform’s creation • Bahamas must be on ‘intellectual par’ with rivals players if it is to “negotiate equitable pricing” for seagrass and mangrove assets responsible for trapping huge quantities of carbon dioxide circulating in the earth’s atmosphere. Responding after he was asked about potential links between digital assets and carbon credits, both sectors that the Davis administration has

targeted as priorities for economic development, Mr Bowe said that when it came to the latter The Bahamas needs those with the necessary environmental and financial knowledge to be the ones talking publicly about the potential and what needs to be done. “It’s important to highlight we need those with

the knowledge to speak, not those that get the microphone to put in front of themselves,” he added. Mr Bowe said The Bahamas needed a clear vision to act now, and develop a strategy for converting its environmental assets into a carbon-trapping commodity, if it truly believes this gives it a competitive advantage over the rest of the world. “If we build it, will they come?” he asked. “We cannot wait for the carbon

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GOWON BOWE

‘Patronising’ Medical Council move caused family break-up By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A SUPREME Court judge has slammed the Bahamas Medical Council’s “dismissive and patronising” approach to rejecting an expatriate doctor’s bid to be licensed as a radiology specialist - a decision that forced her family to split-up. Justice Loren Klein, in a July 22, 2022, verdict branded the regulatory body’s attitude towards Dr Gauri Shirodkar as “perplexing” as he overturned its rejection and ordered that her

registration application be reconsidered. A qualified medical doctor and radiologist, who had previously been licensed by the Council and employed by the Public Hospitals Authority (PHA) for almost a decade between December 2010 and December 2019 as a “radiology registrar”, Dr Shirodkar’s troubles began when she applied to be licensed as a specialist in June 2020 ahead of going into private practice in The Bahamas. “Her hopes were dashed in three terse lines in a

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Bahamas ‘can’t sit on laurels’ over digital assets regulation By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Securities Commission’s top executive has warned that The Bahamas “cannot sit on our laurels” as she disclosed that further reforms to tighten digital assets regulation will be unveiled “in the next few months”. Christina Rolle, its executive director, told a webinar debating the Government’s Digital Assets Policy white paper that stable coins, and how such investments are held by exchanges and custodians, will be a regulatory priority as it seeks

CHRISTINA ROLLE to build on the supervisory foundations laid by the Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act. Asserting that this law, passed in 2020, provides

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LinkedIn gives VAT alert to Bahamians By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net BAHAMIANS have been alerted that LinkedIn, the professional networking app, has become the latest digital economy app to impose 10 percent VAT with effect from July 21, 2022. The move has caused consternation among several local LinkedIn users, with one telling Tribune Business yesterday he will not be renewing his annual subscription given that it appears this payment, too, has now become VAT-able. Franklyn Robinson, chief executive of Aqua Development Company (Bahamas), questioned how VAT could be levied when he was not purchasing goods or services from or via LinkedIn, adding that the app was about social and career networking rather than transacting commerce. Asserting that this amounted to government overreach, and was akin to monitoring and interference in private citizens’ lawful activities, he told this newspaper: “What you’re doing online as a private

person, private citizen, how does that become a concern of the Bahamas government for them to taxing it? “I don’t understand that and don’t agree with that. I don’t remember seeing anything published in relation to that. It’s a social gathering. You’re reading articles from people saying what they’re doing in their career and business. It creates a network where you’re exchanging information. There’s no benefit other than socialising. For the Government to tax you for socialising..... LinkedIn’s message said 10 percent VAT will be imposed on “subscriptions and other paid service purchases” that it offers. Mr Robinson said: “They sent that out to me because my renewal is next month. That means I will not be renewing. It doesn’t make any sense to me. That’s probably about $39 that I will have to pay 10 percent VAT on for my renewal. “I don’t agree with that. There’s no transaction, no business being transacted. It’s not like you’re purchasing something coming to you. I don’t understand

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