Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Golding’s repetitive waltz

- Garfield Higgins is an educator, journalist and a senior advisor to the minister of education & youth. Send comments to the Jamaica Observer or higgins160@yahoo.com.

THE position of Opposition Leader is a ladder to either a transit camp to potential political glory, the top elected job in the country, or oblivion. Having watched and listened to Mark Golding’s, leader of His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition, presentati­on in the budget debate last Tuesday, I am doubly convinced that the peak of his political ambition will not advance beyond 1 West King’s House Road.

Golding’s presentati­on struck me as a sort of repetitive waltz, rather than a rational roadmap to a new direction for Jamaicans to achieve sustained growth and developmen­t.

The red flags obvious in his presentati­on should frighten all well-thinking Jamaicans. Indeed we are still paying for the grievous errors of the redistribu­tion of resources minus a prerequisi­te focus on the creation of wealth through increased production of good and services that ravaged this country in the 1970s, 90s, and early 2000s.

Golding’s two hours and 40-minute presentati­on, in summary, promised to resurrect that unusable past in all its glory. This is a harbinger, a dangerous one.

How, please?

Said Golding: “I will stand in defence of every Jamaican who is now languishin­g on a hospital bench or chair when they should be resting in a hospital bed, every Jamaican who has to be making hard choices every morning between having breakfast and giving the children lunch money to go to school, every student who is second-guessing the path they have chosen because they aren’t confident that when they complete their education they will be able to find a meaningful job to make a good quality of life for themselves.”

This sounds wonderful. I have absolutely no objections with Golding’s way of thinking here. In fact, I have adumbrated on numerous occasions in this space many of the egregious ills in our society and will continue to do so.

I will not be duped, however, into thinking that the simple utterance of often-repeated words and/or slogans expressing a wish or shouting abracadabr­a will positively cause miserable conditions affecting hundreds of Jamaicans to disappear. In ‘fairy-stale’ politics and economics, lollipops are free, people ride on unicorns in the sky, innate human nature is suspended, gravity does not exist, and elephants dangle over giant precipices on

the tip of a thread. In fantasy politics and fantasy economics, anything and everything is possible at the snap of a finger or the wave of a magic wand. We earthlings, however, live in a world that is the exact opposite of fantasy. Reality is our mortal ruler.

And because I believe in reality not fantasy, I, like most well-thinking Jamaicans, want to know how Golding’s promises will be operationa­lised and funded.

He spent the majority of his presentati­on last Tuesday rolling off dozens of promises. He promised to fix the ills of education. He promised to solve the crime problem. He promised to remedy the problems in health, commerce, agricultur­e, energy, the creative industries, sports, the environmen­t, and related sectors. As I watched and listened to Golding’s presentati­on, I kept hoping, and praying, for him to surprise me with the details of how he would deliver his promises. He, instead, delivered another promise.

Said Golding: “The Jamaican people need not worry; when the time is right our full plan will be revealed as to the positive new direction in which we will take Jamaica when the People’s National Party [PNP] forms the next Government.”

The PNP does not seem to get it that Jamaicans are no longer prepared to buy the proverbial “puss inna bag”. The country needs to know where the money will come from to fund its trailerloa­d of promises.

“Higgins, come now, it is way too early for the PNP to do that,” some will bellow. I disagree. As a matter of fact, with just about two and half years before the next general election, now is an opportune time to show the people of Jamaica the money. This nonsense about at the “right time” all will be revealed is the very kind of politics which has repeatedly set back this country time and time again.

I do not trust anyone who attempts to sell me goods and services but insists that I will only see them when “the time is right”. I believe Golding has not just a responsibi­lity, he has a duty to show us the money. If he cannot satisfy that basic standard his promises should dismissed as mere ‘samfie’.

It is unwise to suspend reality as regard a basic orientatio­n of socialist parties like the PNP. They are notorious for taxing and spending, and borrowing and spending, in order to satisfy the voracious animal called redistribu­tion of wealth, minus its creation, to which leftist politics is a slave.

The bad ole days, when the country held out the begging bowl to all and sundry, and every budget was sure to unleash new, higher and more painful taxes with a kind of predetermi­ned surety akin to how night follows day, have been silenced for the last seven years. Like thousands of other Jamaicans, I have no wish to see the resurrecti­on of the beast of more taxes which Golding’s promises will doubtless cause.

In his presentati­on last Tuesday, Golding mentioned the word productivi­ty only twice. I am suspicious that an awful story is in the making; one in which an orgy of spending and borrowing leads to the squanderin­g of our sacrifices of blood, sweat, and tears over the last 14 years.

LEST WE FORGET!

Three times in Golding’s presentati­on he said the PNP is responsibi­lity for rescuing Jamaica from the brink of economic disaster 14 years ago. No matter how many times he repeats this massive inaccuracy to himself and spews it into the public domain that will not change verifiable facts.

Some people, for reasons best known to them, shy away from admitting it, but there was a time when Jamaica was so indebted we were branded a pariah. Our chronic indebtedne­ss caused us to be relegated among countries regarded as mere mendicants. We were the laughing stock of the Caribbean and were legitimate­ly tagged with the ignominiou­s nomenclatu­re, ‘Poor Man of the Caribbean’.

Jamaica was referred to as an economic basket case and a model of underachie­vement by credible internatio­nal publicatio­ns. To make matters worse, Jamaica received a gut punch from the 2007/8 global economic crisis. This global tectonic shock exacerbate­d Jamaica’s fiscal situation. It became unsustaina­ble. The reality that the economy was on the brink of capsizing, and palpable national shame, however, helped to cause a sea change in how we structured and managed our national economic affairs.

Starting in 2010, the Bruce Golding-led Administra­tion, with Audley Shaw as the finance minister, began decisive actions, including two domestic debt exchanges, to put Jamaica’s debt trajectory on a more sustainabl­e path.

The Portia Simpson Millerled Administra­tion, with Dr Peter Phillips as the man in charge of the national purse, also deserves a tremendous amount of credit for continuing and strengthen­ing the tough economic reforms during 2011-2016.

I recall Dr Phillips revealing in an interview that he had to

 ?? (Photo: Garfield Robinson) ?? Opposition Leader Mark Golding greets supporters outside Parliament after making his presentati­on in the 2023/24 Budget Debate, Tuesday.
(Photo: Garfield Robinson) Opposition Leader Mark Golding greets supporters outside Parliament after making his presentati­on in the 2023/24 Budget Debate, Tuesday.
 ?? (Photo: Garfield Robinson) ?? Opposition Leader Mark Golding makes his presentati­on in the 2023/24 Budget Debate in Parliament, Tuesday. Beside him is Julian Robinson, the spokesman on finance.
(Photo: Garfield Robinson) Opposition Leader Mark Golding makes his presentati­on in the 2023/24 Budget Debate in Parliament, Tuesday. Beside him is Julian Robinson, the spokesman on finance.
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