Showing posts with label Govrsquot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Govrsquot. Show all posts

Sunday, October 19, 2014

JLP knocks Gov’t over Trini Muslim leader

Saturday, October 18, 2014 | 5:14 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica — The Opposition Jamaica Labour Party has accused the Government of having “a distorted sense of priorities” in criticising the recent deportation of Jamaat Al-Muslimeen leader Yasin Abu Bakr of Trinidad.

“We probably will never know the intelligence which guided the decision to return Yasin Abu Bakr to Trinidad without delay. Mr Abu Bakr must have been a very great threat to Jamaica‘s national security, greater than chikungunya and apparently much greater than Ebola,” said Leader of the Opposition Andrew Holness.

“Was Mr Abu Bakr so great a threat that the Government felt it more important to spend J$4 million to hire a private jet to get him out of the country immediately than to use that money for a far more clear and present danger?” he questioned.

Holness added that the money expended could easily augment Jamaica’s preparedness efforts to deal with the real and more important threat of Ebola, and that the Government doesn’t seem to have considered this alternative way to spend it.?

Abu Bakr was detained at the Norman Manley International Airport Wednesday afternoon and returned to Trinidad and Tobago on a private jet Thursday morning after he refused to fly economy class on a commercial flight.

Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserver

Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver


View the original article here



JLP knocks Gov’t over Trini Muslim leader

Monday, August 26, 2013

Phillips warns investors not to rely on gov’t paper

MINISTER of Finance and Planning, Dr Peter Phillips, has warned Jamaican investors against depending on high-yielding government paper to protect them from competition, under the new Extended Fund Facility (EFF) agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Dr Phillips’ caution was aimed primarily at financial institutions and other businesses depending on government paper over the years to remain profitable, as well as commercial traders thriving on the importation of foreign goods.“In many respects, having existed in an environment which over many, many years of high interest rates and a lot of protected sectors, protected from the winds of competition, are able to secure profits simply by holding government paper, many elements in the investor community have lost the knowledge, skill, talent, to really face the competition,” Dr Phillips said Thursday.“Bankers will have to return to the business of banking, rather than just simply purchasing (government) paper. Companies who had huge portfolios will have to learn, again, what it takes to take an idea from concept to production. That, in itself, will take time, but it is also, I suspect, going to cause some degree of apprehension,” he stated.“People who lived simply on the basis of buying things from outside and selling them in the domestic market, if they want to sustain their profit levels, are going to have to look at how they are going to have to stop being traders and become producers, in some way; because those are the things that the programme is intended to achieve, to incentivise production and, in a sense, disincentivise the support of production elsewhere,” he added.He said that while the objectives may not be achieved overnight, the country has to sustain its commitment to that path, “and not lose heart or be overwhelmed in the immediate, painful difficulties which we face”.Dr Phillips was speaking at a press briefing at his ministry, Heroes’ Circle, on Jamaica’s performance in the first quarterly test under the new Extended Fund Facility agreement with the IMF.He said that he believes investor confidence in the EFF agreement is rebuilding, and that this was evident from recently concluded discussions with the holders of Government of Jamaica bonds in both North America and Europe.“I can say we are seeing the slow but steady and significant rebuilding of this confidence, certainly in the international community,” he said.“There are many who did not believe that we would have concluded a programme and indeed they were pleasantly surprised,” the minister said.“I am satisfied with Jamaica’s fulfilment of the prior conditions, and I think we need to emphasise that they were not easily achieved. They were achieved with the sacrifice and contributions of stockholders from all sectors of the country,” he added.Phillips also said he believed that the successful conclusion of the first review under the new programme will add to the level of confidence, but that it would require “sustained implementation” over future quarters, in order to sustain the build-up in confidence.He said that it would also require a more comprehensive communications effort, internationally and domestically, to promote the rationale behind the programme and, at the same time, take advantage of what has already been completed.He pointed out that while the programme is being administered by the Government, it will require the full realisation of its objectives and the participation of the other stakeholders, mainly the investor community.PHILLIPS … we are seeing the slow but steady rebuilding of confidence

View the original article here



Phillips warns investors not to rely on gov’t paper