Jamaica Gleaner

Social and economic sickness

- Peter Espeut Peter Espeut is a developmen­t scientist. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.

ONE OF the first things you learn as a developmen­t scientist is that if it was easy, it would have been done already! By now we know that dealing with the cancer of crime in a sick society like Jamaica is not a simple matter.

Why do I say that Jamaica is a sick society? By any measure, Jamaica is one of the most unequal countries in the world, which is one type of social and economic sickness. In the 1990s, Professor Carl Stone provided data to show that Jamaica had the 11th-largest gap between the rich and the poor in the world, and the largest rate at which that gap was widening (see Stone’s Democracy and Clientelis­m in Jamaica).

The situation has not much changed. And what is worse, we largely consider this gross inequality to be normal – the way things are. And our sensibilit­ies and conscience­s are numbed in the process. Some of us have a personal and vested interest in things remaining the way they are.

When it comes to paying taxes, in 2010, it was the poor of Jamaica that – proportion­ately – bore the greater share of the burden by paying close to onefifth of their income in both direct and indirect taxes, while the rich paid only one-third of their income in taxes. And with taxation policy shifting to more indirect taxation, the poor now pay – proportion­ally – even more.

There is no other sector wherein Jamaica’s social sickness is more pervasive than Jamaica’s education system. Schools

(primary and secondary) owned and operated by the Government offer a much lower quality of education than those owned and operated by churches and trusts. Statistica­lly speaking, starting one’s educationa­l career in a

government primary school means low levels of literacy and qualificat­ions attained. Jamaica’s education system reproduces a profoundly unequal class system.

For social scientists, the high crime rate (especially murders) in

this sick society is not surprising. Were it to be low, that would be surprising! There is a component of social protest in crime and dysfunctio­nal behaviour in extremely unequal societies like ours.

I believe that those who loudly

ask the Government to announce an anti-crime plan wish that crime would be reduced while other things remain the same, so that they could continue their lives in relative comfort and privilege. It is not possible to reduce the incidence of crime while leaving Jamaica’s sick society intact.

THE ‘BUILD’ COMPONENT

This is why shortly after Jamaica’s first zone of special operations (ZOSO) was declared in September 2017, I said in my

column of September 22: “The slogan describing the strategy to be employed in the zones of special operations (ZOSOs) was ‘Clear, Hold, Build’ . ... What is supposed to make ZOSO different is the ‘Build’ component, where social interventi­ons are to be put in place to convert the crimeridde­n, potholey, garbage-strewn ghetto areas with zinc fences and pit toilets, where the theft of electricit­y and water is common, and where illiteracy and unemployme­nt are high among the residents, into a place of choice for Jamaicans to live, work,

raise families, and do business.”

I wrote then that this was certainly a step in the right direction, but that the skills needed to first plan and then implement ‘Build’ were not resident in the Ministry of National Security. It would take a team of sociologis­ts, anthropolo­gists, and social psychologi­sts to assess the particular problems in each ZOSO, and then another team of human and community developmen­t scientists to design and implement the interventi­ons.

And it is not possible to have an island of developmen­t (ZOSO) in a sea of underdevel­opment. It is all of Jamaica that needs to be built.

To me, it appears that the concept of ZOSO is unworkable, and has – so far – failed.

If we want peace, we need to build justice. First, we have to cure and rehabilita­te our sick society.

 ?? FILE ?? A resident of Regent Street is searched by a policeman during the second declared ZOSO in Denham Town, Kingston, last year.
FILE A resident of Regent Street is searched by a policeman during the second declared ZOSO in Denham Town, Kingston, last year.
 ?? FILE ?? In this February 8, 2018 photograph, Michael Logan roughcasts a wall erected in Denham Town under the Zinc Fence Removal Project, which was part of social interventi­on under ZOSO.
FILE In this February 8, 2018 photograph, Michael Logan roughcasts a wall erected in Denham Town under the Zinc Fence Removal Project, which was part of social interventi­on under ZOSO.
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