Regional News Agri workers recommended as new free movement category in CARICOM
(Barbados Government Information Service) CARICOM Heads of Government have made a number of recommendations for consideration at the next Heads of Government conference, which they hope will make the business of living and working in the region much more viable for all.
This was disclosed by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley on Wednesday, as she made a statement at the conclusion of the caucus of Heads of Government, following the Ninth Prime Ministerial SubCommittee Meeting on the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) and the Sixth Special Meeting of the Council on Finance and Planning (COFAP) at Ilaro Court.
Also in attendance were Chairman of CARICOM, Prime Minister Andrew Holness of Jamaica; Chairman of COFAP, Prime Minister Gaston Browne of Antigua and Barbuda; and CARICOM Secretary General, Ambassador Irwin LaRocque.
She said: “Right now, there are ten categories [of workers] and we have agreed to recommend an eleventh category of agricultural workers, primarily because we recognise the importance of being able to obtain food security across the region, particularly in these difficult and turbulent times.
“And . . . after the realisation of what the climate can do and hurricanes can do and now we see earthquakes disrupt the whole production and distribution cycle, we are conscious and sensitive to the fact that we have to be able to move the region closer to a level of food security in ways that we were not perhaps as assiduous about doing in recent times.”
Mottley disclosed that the CSME sub-committee which she chaired, would also be recommending to the full conference of Heads of Government the establishment of a single jurisdiction, and a single registration for companies across the region.
She underscored that this was necessary “to boost investment and to reduce both the hurdles and the cost” that many Caribbean enterprises will face, as they seek to do business across multiple jurisdictions.
“We agreed on the principle of mutual recognition with respect to companies incorporated in one Member State [and] being recognised in other Members States and this, of course, will help significantly in reducing those hurdles and costs,” she added.
Mottley also disclosed that other recommendations to be reviewed at the next Heads of Government Conference would include the establishment of a Law Reform Centre, as a way to stem the shortage of legal draughtsmen in the region.
Against this background, she stressed that it was important for Member States to pool their resources, to have model laws, and to be able to reform laws in social and economic sectors in a way that would improve significantly the environment and landscape in which CARICOM citizens have to function.