Barbados’ good news keeps rolling in
By George Alleyne
Administrators of Barbados
entered 2020 in a happy New
Year mode following multiple
pieces of good financial news
in December with the latest
being an International Monetary
Fund’s further approval of the
way they are restructuring the
economy.
On the heels of a series of international
credit rating upgrades
earlier last month came news
that the IMF has again stated its
happiness with the way government
is managing an economic
recovery and transformation
programme.
IMF Deputy Managing Director,
Tao Zhang, stated, “Barbados
continues to make good progress
in implementing its comprehensive
homegrown economic
reform program. All quantitative
performance criteria, indicative
targets, and all structural benchmarks
for end-September 2019
were met.”
“The fiscal adjustment continues
as programmed with the
primary surplus targeted at six
percent of GDP for FY financial
year 2019/20 and subsequent
years. This target for end-September
2019 was met by a significant
margin, and the FY2019/20
budget provides a solid basis for
reaching the target for the next
fiscal year.”
With this statement, IMF
announced that it is freeing-up
for Barbados $48 million, which
is another tranche in a total $288
million special interest rate loan.
Since government and the
IMF signed the four-year agreement
in October, Barbados drew
down a total of $145 million
including the December portion
in tranches based on periodical
assessments of the island’s
performance under a Barbados
Economic Recovery and Transformation
Caribbean L 24 ife, January 24-30, 2020
(BERT) programme.
Earlier in the month, New
York-based international financial
rating agency, Standard and
Poor’s, raised Barbados’ credit
rating six notches from to ‘‘B-/B’
from ‘SD/SD’ (selective default)’.
And one week prior, Trinidadbased
regional financial rating
agency, CariCRIS, removed its
CariD (Default) Regional Scale
Foreign Currency Rating of the
government of Barbados and
assigned an upward rating of a
CariBB-, with a stable outlook.
These international credit rating
upgrades are the first the
island has had in 11 years, following
22 consecutive downgrades
that ended in 2018 when
government embarked on the
BERT programme and began
renegotiating with creditors for
new arrangements for payment
of outstanding debt.
Similar to the impact of greater
credit worthiness felt with the
halt in downgrades, the collaboration
programme with the IMF
has the Barbadian government
feeling much more secure in its
foreign reserves standing that
has moved from a perilously low
amount of $220 million in 2018
to $650 million.
Unlike structural reforms in
economies of other countries in
IMF agreements where there are
accusations that welfare of the
people is neglected, the Barbados
transformation programme
fully considers the wellbeing of
citizenry.
This IMF’s Zhang noted in
his statement, “adequate social
spending and an improved safety
net to protect the most vulnerable
members of society are
key priorities of the program.
Social spending is being protected,
preserving Barbados’ strong
social safety net and limiting
the impact of the stabilization
program on low-income households.”
A government advisor behind
debt renegotiations that led to
the halt in downgrades and continued
IMF approval, Professor
Avinash Persaud, said that with
the encouraging signs of an economic
turnaround, businesses
are again showing keep interest
in the island.
Professor Avinash Persaud. Photo by George Alleyne
PATIENTS’
CHOICE
RATED & AWARDED BY PATIENTS
SM