Jamaica Gleaner

Commonweal­th underlines relevance

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SHOULD ANYONE doubt the relevance of the Commonweal­th to small countries like those of its members in the Caribbean and why Jamaica has a stake in its continued revitalisa­tion, there was ample evidence in Kingston last week.

The Commonweal­th Secretaria­t launched a study, and broad consultati­ons, on the likely impact of Brexit, the United Kingdom’s planned secession from the European Union (EU), for Jamaica and other CARIFORUM members and, critically, how the region might be able to respond to the perceived threats.

It is not that this newspaper believes that Jamaica, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) as a group, or the Dominican Republic, with which it forms CARIFORUM, are incapable of engaging in this kind of analysis, or that they have not begun to think about the issue. Indeed, we have extremely high regard for the capacities of the technocrat­s in Jamaica’s foreign affairs and foreign trade ministry, even if their best efforts are sometimes undermined by incompeten­t political action.

But notwithsta­nding the quality of available talent, Jamaica – as well as its partners in CARICOM – as a small, developing economy, is not blessed with a surfeit of trade analysts to adequately tackle the myriad tasks they are required to complete, much more the global issues facing the country. In the event, help from others, if the effort is rigorous and not self-interested, is not to be sneered at.

ECONOMIC PARTNERSHI­P

This report by the Commonweal­th meets that test. Indeed, the analysis highlights, separately, Jamaica’s declining exports to both the UK and the “other 27” EU members and the fact that Jamaica and CARIFORUM countries would lose the duty-free and quota-free access they enjoy with the UK under their Economic Partnershi­p Agreement with the EU. Critically, though, it pointed to options for minimising the fallout in the short and long terms, including the employment of transition arrangemen­ts, ahead of negotiatin­g a new trade deal with the UK and adjusting the one with the EU. Importantl­y, it provides simulation­s of what the dollar effect of these adjustment­s would look like.

But perhaps more significan­t to Jamaica, this study identifies 23 product groups, including global market analyses, in which the country could significan­tly lift its exports in a postBrexit environmen­t. “This assistance will help Jamaica meet its goal of trade diversific­ation ... (and) meet the 2020 targets set out in its national export strategy,” said Diane Edwards, the head of the Government’s trade and investment promotion agency, JAMPRO.

Whether Ms Edwards’ timetable is realistic may be moot, but she is right about the potential strategic effect of the Commonweal­th’s interventi­on and what has been the body’s reassertio­n of its sense of community under its still relatively new secretary general, the Dominica-born former UK Cabinet minister, Baroness Patricia Scotland.

The Commonweal­th is in many respects a unique organisati­on, its 52 members including advanced economies such as Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, as well as middle-income and poor developing states, and small island economies. They are bound by a historical colonial link to Britain and the best of what that relationsh­ip bequeathed to today’s sovereign nations.

For a long time, the Commonweal­th leveraged this special relationsh­ip of countries that shared a common, though at times difficult to define, ethos. For the most part, there was no assertion of power by the group’s developed nations over its emerging ones – an asset that made the Commonweal­th a credible interlocut­or on divisive global issues.

In the post-Cold War period, the Commonweal­th lost its way. But in recent times, under Baroness Scotland’s leadership, it has been redefining itself to meet the challenges of the day, such as global warming, the crisis of debt, and as last week’s developmen­t in Jamaica highlighte­d, internatio­nal trade. It is a resurgence that Jamaica and its Commonweal­th Caribbean partners should seek to cement at the group’s 2018 heads of government conference in London.

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