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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2021
Davis Gov’t ‘decider if we sink or swim’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
T
he Davis administration’s actions will “be the decider as to whether this country sinks or swims” amid its ongoing COVIDrelated health, economic and fiscal crises, a governance reformer argued yesterday. Robert Myers, the Organisation for Responsible Governance’s (ORG) principal, told Tribune Business that the “poor governance and bad management” of successive former administrations meant The Bahamas cannot afford to
• ORG chief brands new/ raised taxes ‘futile’ • Urges: ‘Don’t wait for investors to come to you’ • Criticises former Gov’t on Dorian/COVID ‘misses’ look beyond the present government to reverse course. Arguing that new and/ or increased taxes were “futile” in the postCOVID environment, he added that a laser-like
focus on stimulating Bahamian and foreign direct investment (FDI) was “the only rising tide that stimulates all boats” and generates sufficient jobs, foreign currency inflows and government revenues
ROBERT MYERS to turn the economic and fiscal tide. Warning that further deficit and national debt slippage will be “the death of us”, Mr Myers added that increased investment
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Bank chief pushes back on imminent debt default By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A PROMINENT banker yesterday said there are no signs the international capital markets agree with a Caribbean economist that a Bahamian sovereign debt default is imminent. Gowon Bowe, Fidelity Bank (Bahamas) chief executive, told Tribune Business that The Bahamas’ ‘Ba3’ credit rating was still above the ‘C’ territory where most
defaults occur while the country’s bondholders were giving “no immediate sense of panic” or sign a sell-off is close. He pushed back after Marla Dukharan, the former Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) chief economist for the Caribbean, doubled down on her earlier prediction by restating in her monthly newsletter that a Bahamian sovereign debt restructuring and International Monetary Fund (IMF)
adjustment programme will occur within the next two years. “We expect a debt restructure and an IMF programme in the next year or two,” she said. “In June-July 2021, stay-overs (stopover visitors) reached 72 percent of corresponding 2019 levels. Government debt reached $10.356bn at end-June 2021, up 16 percent year-over-year.
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A GOVERNANCE reformer yesterday urged the Davis administration to keep politics out of its contract and promotion reviews, adding: “It’s so critical that’s looked at with the most objective eye”. And Matt Aubry, the Organisation for Responsible Governance’s (ORG) executive director, while not commenting directly on exCabinet minister, Jerome Fitzgerald’s, appointment as head of the Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit, said it was essential that the right appointment be made “to continue momentum” with its work. While the Prime Minister’s Office said Mr Fitzgerald’s appointment to that role, as well the post of
MATT AUBRY senior policy adviser, had not been finalised, Tribune Business obtained a photo showing Mr Fitzgerald posing alongside what appear to be member of the Delivery Unit.
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Gov’t opens up Sunday trading By NEIL HARTNELL and YOURI KEMP Tribune Business Reporters nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Davis administration last night further re-opened the Bahamian economy by abolishing the restriction that prevented construction and retail businesses from working on Sundays. Senator Michael Halkitis, minister of economic affairs, said in a statement that the Government was revoking further parts of
the COVID emergency orders “that are not undergirded by science and economic data”. He added: “This repeal now permits the construction industry and retail businesses to operate on Sunday. The repealed orders prevented the construction industry as well as retail businesses such as water depots, beauty salons and cinemas from operating on Sundays. “Such businesses will no longer face these restrictions but will have to
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Gov’t intervention sought on Atlantis COVID testing • PI resort’s unvaccinated staff to pay from October 1 • ‘COVID-free Bahamas’ only way tourism ‘can thrive’ • Union refers issue to Labour Dept over law violation By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
MARLA DUKHARAN
‘Keep politics out of contract review’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
ENTRANCE OF ALANTIS RESORT
THE hotel union last night said it has referred Atlantis’ plan to make all unvaccinated staff pay for weekly COVID-19 tests from tomorrow to the Department of Labour as it seeks the Government’s intervention. Darrin Woods, the Bahamas Hotel, Catering and Allied Workers Union (BHCAWU) head, told Tribune Business he maintained his belief that the Paradise Island mega resort and other employers cannot mandate that workers pay
because it would represent a violation of Bahamian law. Asserting that the newly-elected Davis administration “haven’t got time to fiddle their thumbs”, he reiterated that the Health and Safety at Work Act’s section nine forbids Bahamian employers from imposing any financial “levy” on staff to ensure they comply with this law’s stipulations. This was viewed by unionists as barring companies from requiring non-vaccinated staff to pay for COVID-19
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