Jamaica Gleaner

A Caribbean-Central America alliance for climate justice

- Sir Ronald Sanders GUEST COLUMNIST RICARDO MAKYN/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR

GOVERNMENT­S IN Central America are calling for “climate justice” after the devastatio­n of their countries by Eta and Iota as both tropical storms and hurricanes.

The Central American countries are echoing a call previously made by Caribbean government­s whose countries are repeatedly ravaged by hurricanes.

The response of the internatio­nal community to the plight of Central America has, so far, not been different to the way they respond to the Caribbean. Typically, that response is much public handwringi­ng, miniscule immediate contributi­ons, and then tough negotiatio­ns over conditions on which any meaningful concession­ary loans would be made to help affected countries recover.

If any of the countries are regarded as ‘high-income’ like Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, and St Kitts-Nevis, they will get no concession­al financing unless they are already in an IMF balance-of-payments support programme.

Yet the situation in Central America and neighbouri­ng Colombia is catastroph­ic. Thousands of people face a lack of drinking water, food, and basic supplies after Eta and Iota slammed the region, destroying homes, hospitals, and other critical infrastruc­ture and piling one disaster on top of another. Many have died, many are missing, tens of thousands are homeless. On top of the dreadful human suffering, the infrastruc­tural wreckage runs into hundreds of millions of dollars.

The demand for ‘climate justice’ by Caribbean government­s, and now Central American leaders, is for compensati­on for massive damage caused to their countries by climate change in whose creation and ballooning they are least to blame. The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean

notes that Central America’s total carbon dioxide emissions represents only 0.2 per cent of the global total. The Caribbean’s is even less.

Internatio­nal help, so far, for Central America indicates a slow response. The US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t announced $120,000 each to Honduras and Guatemala, and $100,000 to Nicaragua. The European Union (EU) did better, pledging $1.83 million to all Central American countries. But the sums are small given that the US and EU countries are among the largest contributo­rs to climate change. The silence of other big polluting nations is also alarming.

The Central American Bank for Economic Integratio­n authorised $1 million in non-reimbursab­le funds for Honduras and Nicaragua, but its resources are relatively small. It is to Internatio­nal Financial Institutio­ns

(IFIs), such as the IMF, the World Bank, and the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank that these countries will look for significan­t resources.

Like the Caribbean, the Central American countries are facing extraordin­ary costs to fight the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in circumstan­ces where their revenues are dwindling. The havoc wreaked by Eta and Iota adds to their burden of human suffering.

URGENT SUPPORT

This is why 13 CARICOM countries, (Haiti was the exception) joined the nations of Central America, Mexico, and Colombia in sponsoring a declaratio­n at the Organizati­on of American States (OAS), on November 18, calling for urgent support to the affected countries “through hemispheri­c and global cooperatio­n to address the most pressing needs for

recovery and reconstruc­tion”.

The sponsoring countries sought a ‘declaratio­n’ rather than a ‘resolution’, which would have been a much stronger instrument, binding on the organisati­on. But Central American and Caribbean countries knew well that some powerful states in the OAS would have pushed against such a binding resolution.

The government­s of these same powerful countries are among those who make policies for the IFIs that disqualify small and vulnerable states, such as Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, and St Kitts-Nevis, from access to concession­al financing because of the false criterion of ‘high per capita income’.

Making my contributi­on to the OAS’ meeting, I said the following:

“Those who make policy for the internatio­nal financial institutio­ns

and multilater­al developmen­t banks have to stop pretending that the economic and financial circumstan­ces that existed in January 2020 are still the same in November 2020. They are not. The world has altered, and significan­tly.

The reality is that while many countries – including my own - are denied access to concession­al financing and debt relief on the basis of the wrongful measuremen­t of high per capita income, that per capita income has been reduced by as much as 40% because unemployme­nt has more than tripled. The time has long come for policy makers to admit the reality of the changed situation and to amend the policies of financial institutio­ns to address it.

Similarly, while Paris Club members continue to demand debt repayment without debt restructur­ing, they, too, should face the reality that countries cannot pay what they do not have. Debt default is what will occur,, with little prospect of repayment unless a balance is struck now.

If these circumstan­ces continue to be ignored, or the usual placebos are administer­ed rather than the financing vaccines that exist and can be applied, this pandemic of economic disaster and human suffering will plague our hemisphere irreparabl­y and irreversib­ly for decades to come.”

HEIGHTEN ADVOCACY

Given the Caribbean’s increasing exposure to external shocks (hurricanes, pandemics, and recession in North America and Europe) the region must increase the volume and heighten the intensity of its advocacy on debt, which is a tightening noose around its neck.

In the present circumstan­ces, the nations of Central America are the Caribbean’s natural allies to make common cause on this issue in the internatio­nal community. CARICOM countries should initiate a strong diplomatic effort with Central America to build such an alliance.

As a first step, Central American and Caribbean countries should agree to follow the pattern of Barbados and Grenada to include a “hurricane clause” in their bonds, stipulatin­g an immediate, if temporary, debt moratorium if the country is struck by another natural disaster. Such a clause should also be part of all external debt. If Central American and Caribbean counties insist on it collective­ly and strongly, they have a chance to succeed.

The two sub-regions, representi­ng 20 nations, can turn the crises of this season of hurricanes, tropical storms, and COVID-19 to advantage. But they must act together.

Sir Ronald Sanders is Antigua and Barbuda’s ambassador to the United States and the Organizati­on of American States. He is also a senior fellow at the Institute of Commonweal­th Studies at the University of London and Massey College in the University of Toronto. Responses and previous commentari­es: www. sirronalds­anders.com

 ??  ?? Dwayne McKoy, a resident of Grants Crescent in Hampton Green, Spanish Town, wades through chest-high floodwater­s to the rear of his home, from which he operates a furniture workshop. McKoy said that flooding has been a long-standing issue in the Spanish Town community.
Dwayne McKoy, a resident of Grants Crescent in Hampton Green, Spanish Town, wades through chest-high floodwater­s to the rear of his home, from which he operates a furniture workshop. McKoy said that flooding has been a long-standing issue in the Spanish Town community.
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