Laziness, inefficiency crippling growth – PM
PRIME MINISTER Andrew Holness yesterday blasted civil servants for their ingrained laziness and inefficiencies that continue to stifle economic growth, while fuelling corruption. To this end, he appealed for bipartisan support in tackling the long-overdue reform of the public sector.
Delivering the keynote address at the official groundbreaking ceremony for Foreshore Estate in Delacree Pen, off Spanish Town Road, the prime minister lamented that the project, which had been in the pipeline before he took office, had taken too long to get off the ground. The necessary approvals from local authorities and other agencies, he charged, were mired in unnecessary bureaucracy.
“There is a challenge with bureaucracy in our country. We have to get it right. We need the rules to ensure integrity, transparency, fairness and that there is no corruption in what we’re doing,” he declared. “But the rules themselves cannot become an obstacle, where people feel that the only way to get things done is to resort to a corrupt act.”
FLIP SIDE OF CORRUPTION
Inefficiency, the prime minister argued, is the flip side of corruption, and wherever there is inefficiency, there will be corruption, a situation that thrives in countries such as Jamaica.
“The purpose of the bureaucrat is not to stop things from happening. The purpose of the bureaucrat is to make sure that things happen speedily in the right way,” Holness stated. “But bureaucrats in developing countries have taken on a perspective that their job is to stop things from happening, there is no enterprise, no entrepreneurism in bureaucracy in Jamaica or, indeed, in most countries in the developing world,” the PM charged.
“It is as if because you are only getting paid to push paper and not getting paid for results, then results don’t matter. So this project is taking – from the time I laid eyes on it and said yes ... two years.”
This kind of delay, according
to Holness, has long been a turnoff for investors who feel that there is no premium of speed of process in Jamaica and
will, therefore, continue to take their money where they are more likely to get other incentives as well.
“Until we as Jamaicans confront this problem, then we will not grow. The Government is engaged in the transformation of the public sector,” said Holness.
“We are committed to doing it, because that is the only way that we are going to grow Jamaica,” the prime minister admitted.
He appealed to Dr Angela
Brown-Burke, member of parliament for St Andrew South West, for bipartisan support in resolving this bothersome issue, once and for all.
“I know that the honourable lady who is a representative of this constituency supports the point ... and will be my ardent supporter in Parliament when this matter is discussed,” He added.