Wednesday 6 February 2013

Governor of ECCB calls for realistic assessment – of region’s political, social and economic structures

By Linda Straker

Honourable Sir K Dwight Venner, Governor of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, wants leaders and policy makers in the OECS to honestly, objectively, and realistically assess the sub-region current situation and the structure and functions of the political, social and economic systems under which they
operate.

“If they are not functioning to deliver what we expect them to, we will need to deliberately make the necessary adjustments to ensure that the practical steps are taken to achieve the successful resolution of our problems. It is only in this way that we can generate the hope for a brighter future among our people,” he said when he presented the 2012 Economic Review Report of the 2012 Eastern Caribbean Currency Union.

Sir Dwight Venner
Residents in Antigua joined counterparts across the region
to listen to ECCB Governor Sir K Dwight Venner present
the yearly economic review.
In an address which was simultaneously broadcast throughout the OECS on various radio and television stations, he said that countries of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union have endured four years of negative economic growth as a result of the impact of the global economic and financial crisis, which has affected all facets of our economic and financial systems.

“As we enter the year 2013, it has become clear that we have reached a tipping point which will require our sustained and collective efforts to get our economies on the path to growth and development,” he said.

Using the theme: “Realism and Hope” for his report, he told the thousands listening: “The reality is that we are constrained by factors, both external and domestic, some of which are within our capacity to deal with and some of which are not.  For example, one reality which stares us in the face is the resources, both human and natural, that we have at our disposal to drive our economies.”

Speaking about the external factors that affect the growth of the region, the governor said that the Caribbean, of which the ECCU is an integral part, has lost its competitiveness in many areas. “To put it bluntly, we are being left behind in a very competitive world in which countries, both advanced and
developing, are having to make significant adjustments to remain competitive,” he said, while pointing out that the sub region has had its trade preferences for major agricultural export commodities removed or substantially reduced; has seen its share of the global tourism market decline; and has not undertaken the fundamental adjustments that other countries have made.

Elaborating further he said that preliminary data indicates that economic activity in the ECCU contracted for a fourth consecutive year in 2012, although the pace of contraction slowed relative to the average for the previous three years.

“Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is estimated to have declined by 0.1 per cent, compared with an average contraction in the previous three years (2009-2011) of 2.2 per cent. This out-turns reflected lower output in key sectors such as construction, transport, storage and communications, and sluggish growth in the tourism industry. Value added by the construction sector contracted by 5.6 per cent, following an average decline of 13.3 per cent in the previous three years,” he said.

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