Jamaica Gleaner

BOJ TAX RAP

Billion-dollar gains profiteeri­ng off the backs of poor, says Golding

- Romario Scott/Gleaner Writer

PICKING APART one of the central highlights of Finance Minister Dr Nigel Clarke’s Budget presentati­on, Opposition Leader Mark Golding cast a Bank of Jamaica (BOJ) dividend of $33 billion as the fruit of an effective tax that has oppressed the poor.

The dividend is being paid out of the profits made by the BOJ in 2018, 2019, and 2020.

The $33 billion is expected to be paid over to the Government in the first week of April and will be used to help fund the $60-billion Social and Economic Recovery and Vaccine Programme for Jamaica.

Golding, in his maiden presentati­on in that position, said more than half, or $17.9 billion, of the dividend, came from foreignexc­hange trading and from net gains on the BOJ’s holdings of foreign-currency assets.

Golding said while Clarke told the country that only about 20 per cent of the central bank’s profits over the three years came from realised foreign exchange gains, he did not disclose that more than 30 per cent was linked to unrealised foreign exchange gains.

“The BOJ has a very substantia­l

long position in foreign currency, and as the Jamaican currency devaluates in value over the threeyear period, the Bank of Jamaica made massive foreign currency gains from this long position.

“So, in essence, the Bank of Jamaica has profited from the volatility and devaluatio­n of the Jamaican currency over the three years. This is the same devaluatio­n which has made life harder for the Jamaican people,”Golding argued in his Budget presentati­on on Tuesday.

He said the devaluatio­n effectivel­y operates as tax on the purchasing power of the Jamaican people.

“This devaluatio­n disproport­ionately hurts lowincome people. In using the $17.9 billion of foreign exchange gains from the Bank of Jamaica to fund its Budget, the Government is essentiall­y treating the devaluatio­n as a form of tax,” Golding asserted.

“It is a regressive indirect form of taxation paid in particular by lesswell-off Jamaicans,” he added.

Golding said the prices of basic food items have increased substantia­lly over the period, in large part because of devaluatio­n.

“The minister has boasted that this is the result of good policy; that would suggest it was a deliberate strategy. It has further impoverish­ed Jamaicans who can least afford it and that is the bitterest form of non-prosperity anyone can imagine,” the opposition leader declared.

As he unpacked a basket in Parliament, Golding stated that $10,000 that was given to the unemployed under the COVID Allocation of Resources for Employees programme was unable to purchase sufficient food for survival.

But the government members ambushed Golding on what they hinted was a long list of food items.

“But a nuff that man! Keep going ...,”one of the government members of parliament shouted across the aisle, as Golding appeared startled at the thunderous pounding of benches opposite him.

But in a quick counter, Clarke stated that the Jamaican dollar depreciate­d against the greenback by an average of nine per cent year over year between January 2012 and February 2016, but there was no BOJ dividend.

“By comparison, the average annual depreciati­on of the Jamaican dollar against the United States dollar over the given year period March 2016 to March 2021 has been 3.8 per cent despite being in the worst economic crisis in history.

“If Mr Golding’s logic is correct, where was the BOJ dividend then?” Clarke said in response to a Gleaner social media post on Tuesday.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Opposition Leader Mark Golding displays what he says is a basket of food depleted by rising prices. He was making his maiden Budget Debate presentati­on as opposition leader.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Opposition Leader Mark Golding displays what he says is a basket of food depleted by rising prices. He was making his maiden Budget Debate presentati­on as opposition leader.
 ?? IAN ALLEN/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Prime Minister Andrew Holness (foreground) leads the banging of desks on the government benches while jeering Opposition Leader Mark Golding during his Budget Debate presentati­on on Tuesday.
IAN ALLEN/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER Prime Minister Andrew Holness (foreground) leads the banging of desks on the government benches while jeering Opposition Leader Mark Golding during his Budget Debate presentati­on on Tuesday.

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