Joseph Issa Ponders: Could Jamaica’s Poverty, Inequality and Crime be Lasting Ills of IMF Austerity?

Despite the meagre growth experienced by Jamaica last year that is being attributed to its current relations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Businessman and former President of the St. Ann Chamber of Commerce Joe Issa, has said in an interview that the country’s rate of poverty, inequality and crime could be the result of 30 years of austerity measures under the IMF.

Joey 6

It’s not the first time that Issa is questioning the relationship between IMF’s neoliberal austerity policies and Jamaica’s high rates of poverty, inequality and crime, in recognition of which he said in an article titled, “IMF: Jamaica’s Achilles Heels”, that “if Prime Minister Holness has his way he will finish the never-ending story of Jamaica and the IMF. Close books!”

He lamented then, that “after some 15 agreements with the IMF spanning 30 years Jamaica has gotten worse there’s still, so much poverty, inequality and crime in the country the policies have not benefitted Jamaica,” a fact that has also been alluded to in a yahoo article which said “despite Jamaica having little choice but to go to the IMF, the policy prescription could not work for such a structurally dependent economy.”

It said in the context of the different policies of the JLP and PNP in the 1970s and 1980s, “both Manley and Seaga were caught between a rock and a hard place – between the needs of the people on the one hand and the pressure of liberal economics on the other.”

manley and seaga

Now, Issa and others have been joined by no less than IMF’s economists, who are questioning the faith which has been put into austerity and neoliberal doctrine, said an AFP article in the Observer.

They said neoliberalism, the market-guided economic doctrine which the IMF hails as boosting poverty and inequality has not only been overstated but can have its own lasting ill effects on developing countries.

Their views are said to “offer support to legions of critics in countries like Greece and Portugal that have endured tough IMF-designed “austerity” programmes to straighten out their finances.”

“The benefits of some policies that are an important part of the neoliberal agenda appear to have been somewhat overplayed.  Instead of delivering growth, some neoliberal policies have increased inequality, in turn jeopardising durable expansion,” they are quoted as saying in this month’s edition of IMF’s Finance & Development magazine.

IMF_s Finance & Development magazine

‘They argue that “the traditional approach to helping countries build their economies through tight government spending, privatisation, freer trade and open capital flows can have “prominent” costs regarding greater inequality.  Increased inequality, in turn, hurts the level and sustainability of growth.  Even if growth is the sole or main purpose of the neoliberal agenda, advocates of that agenda still need to pay attention to the distributional effects.”

Noting that “there is much to cheer in the neoliberal agenda”, they cited two critical doctrines as problems: removing all restrictions on capital movement and implementing budget austerity on governments with unsustainable deficits and debt.

Moreover, while acknowledging the significant benefits of incoming capital to a developing country, the three research economists say “freed of constraints, foreign capital can be short-term and capricious, causing great volatility in markets and raising the odds of a crash.” This is said to have happened to 20% of 150 cases since 1980, whereby emerging economies which experienced a sharp surge in capital inflows, ended with a financial crisis.

 

 

Joe Issa – Jamaica First to Break Human-Endurance Barrier Twice in One Year

National honour recipient Joe Issa has congratulated Ida Troupe who has reached the age of 117 years, becoming the second Jamaican to reach that milestone this year.

The Jamaica Observer who reported on Troupe’s 117th birthday celebration on Christmas Day carried a JIS photo showing her surrounded by Minister of Local Government and Community Development Desmond McKenzie, family members, relatives and friends at her home in West Kingston.

Minister of Local Government and Community Development Desmond McKenzie“Thanks to Ms Troupe the barrier has been broken yet again after Ms Moss-Brown did only recently. It is incredible that we have done it not once but twice, going beyond the 115-year limit for female and 114 years for a male.

“Even more amazing is that they reached the same milestone in the same year. This means that Jamaica had two living citizens age 117 years in 2017, a feat not likely to be repeated next year as, apart from Ms Troupe, I have not heard of any other person even close to that age.

“We must be the first country to achieve this, and I think there may be something in how they led their lives that could be instructive for today’s lifestyle,” said Issa, who promotes a healthy lifestyle through community sports.

Issa, who had earlier congratulated Violet Moss-Brown from Duanvale, Trelawny, for making it to the Guinness Book of World Records in July this year as the World’s Oldest Living Person and Oldest Living Woman at age 117, was this time expressing similar sentiments in respect of Ida Troupe, who is now awaiting confirmation by Guinness Book of Records.

He said in the recent article that “our current and future generations of young people must be raised with the knowledge and belief that they can live much longer and fruitful lives if they make the right choices for their health, and that means doing the right things right.”

Troupe, a retired vendor who was born on December 25, 1900, was said to be among the first group of individuals who moved into the 1963 housing development in Tivoli Gardens. She still resides in the community.

Acting on behalf of the government, McKenzie reportedly said he was elated to be honouring Troupe on her birthday, noting, “She has lived through so many events we only read about, including the 1907 earthquake, Hurricane Charlie of 1951, colonial government, and internal self-government.”

Olivia Grange 1
Olivia Grange

Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sports Olivia Grange was also said to be present at Troupe’s celebration.

 

Joe Issa – NWC Initiative To Contribute To Nation’s Stock Of Renewables

Founder of Cool Corporation and former President of St Ann Chamber of Commerce Joe Issa hails an initiative by the National Water Commission (NWC) that will see it applying renewable energy in its operations.

 

Mona Reservoir in Kingston 
A section of the Mona Reservoir in Kingston

 

Issa was commenting on news that the NWC was seeking to install a five-megawatt (MW) photovoltaic system at the Mona Reservoir in Kingston, to modernise its operations.

This was noted by President of the NWC, Mark Barnett, at a recent Jamaica Information Service (JIS) ‘Think Tank’.

President of the NWC, Mark Barnett
President of the NWC, Mark Barnett

The president said the move is aimed at improving the economic viability and operational efficiency of the company.

According to the Gleaner, a memorandum of understanding has been signed with the Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica (PCJ) to carry out the pilot, with plans to install 5MW systems in other NWC facilities if it proves successful. An advertisement is now said to be out inviting bids for the floating barge.

“We want to put up at least 10MW of renewables, which will impact not only the NWC but will fall in line with the sustainable development goals that have been established and to which the country is committed,” Barnett is reported as saying.

According to the report, the strategy being employed is to place solar panels on a floating barge, which will be used to harness energy from the sun to help reduce the company’s energy bill.

“The consultants to do the study should be submitting their bids this month. Moreover, that study, I presume, should take three to four months. So, once it is deemed to be viable, I am sure that procurement should start this calendar year,” Barnett reportedly said.

 

Celebrated Valedictorian Joseph Issa, Urges Greater Sensitisation To Entrepreneurship To Help Graduates.

As the country gears for higher economic growth and employment, celebrated valedictorian Joe Issa, who made his first investment in 1995 at the age of 30 with just US$3,000 and now heads a group of over 50 companies, has said that higher sensitisation of students to entrepreneurship could help them better monetise their education.

Roderick Gordon
Roderick Gordon

 

“As it is now, the country needs more entrepreneurs and the younger, the better, but I don’t see it coming without sensitising graduates to entrepreneurship, and the earlier they begin to entertain the thought of becoming an employer instead of an employee, the better they will be able to assess the technical and financial viability of their chosen business.

“The importance of being able to do so is that a bank proposal must be convincing and command an immediate positive response. It cannot be based on sentiments but stable observable favourable trends.

“Once pitched the project must leave no room for questions and no questions means a probable immediate yes, an outcome that is more likely the earlier students are sensitised to entrepreneurship.

“The importance of getting immediate yes is because the longer a bank takes to approve a loan the more reasons they will find not to give it,” said Issa, who has served on the board of directors of First Global bank, among other establishments.

Issa’s statements come amid concerns expressed at a recent Gleaner Editors’ Forum that “one of the things that are killing Jamaica is the inability of individuals who study, train and can’t get a job, and the complete disconnect on how to monetise their training”, according to the newspaper.

It cited Attorney-at-law Roderick Gordon, who chairs one of the companies that have the backing of First AngelsJa, making the statement in support of Chairman of First AngelsJa, Joseph M. Matalon, who had earlier said there was no shortage of investors in Jamaica for the right deals, but argued there be an “immaturity in the environmental ecosystem”.

“We do not get enough qualified deals. We do not get enough qualified people coming forward who have the attitude, experience, educational background, or the expertise to drive the growth of a new business,” Matalon told the Gleaner Editors’ Forum.

Gordon, who is said to get excited when the group offers support and the investment comes to fruition, reportedly said he likes “seeing the innovation come through, seeing people who are a lot more exposed.

“I have seen entrepreneurs who pitch more than once and the second pitch is vastly improved to the first. So they are learning the discipline. They are learning how to focus. They are learning what sounds good from what can make a profit. That makes me excited.”

 

New Study Finds over-3000-year-old Ancestry Intact, Not Wiped Out, As Holly Bible Suggests

Eucharistic Minister of the Roman Catholic Church Joe Issa is fascinated by a discovery that appears to disprove a passage in the Bible, stating that if it is true, it is one of the fascinating developments of the 21st century.

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“I am fascinated by such discoveries.  To think that DNA can be preserved for so long and help crack a 4,000-year-old case is beyond imagination.

“You often hear of people being charged with a severe crime many years after it was committed because of new DNA evidence.

“But going back 4,000 years to prove the bible wrong is really pushing the envelop,” Issa said, of a study which found that “the ancient Canaanites, who lived 3,000 – 4,000 years ago were not wiped out, as the Bible suggests, but went on to become modern-day Lebanese,” a revelation that attracted over 4,000 comments on The Telegraph article.

It cited a passage in Deuteronomy, in which God had ordered the Israelites to exterminate the Canaanites: “You shall not leave alive anything that breathes. However, you shall utterly destroy them so that they may not teach you to do according to all their detestable things which they have done for their gods.”

However, it seems they did not destroy them all, the research said. By comparing the DNA of the ancient and modern inhabitants, the scientists found over 90 percent of the ancestry of modern-day Lebanese derived from the Canaanites.

“The Bible reports the destruction of the Canaanite cities and the annihilation of its people; if true, the Canaanites could not have directly contributed genetically to present-day populations,” the article quoted researchers in the American Journal of Human Genetics as saying.

 

Canaanites
Details of the conflict between the Hebrews and the Canaanites are sketchy
Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images

 

Moreover, the widespread destruction of Canaanite cities between the Bronze and Iron Ages is not supported by any archaeological evidence found, citing, for example, cities on the Levant coast such as Sidon and Tyre which show the continuity of occupation until the present day.

“We show that present-day Lebanese derive most of their ancestry from a Canaanite-related population, which therefore implies substantial genetic continuity in the Levant since at least the Bronze Age,” the researchers were quoted as saying.

They compared five whole genomes, obtained from the base of skulls from ancient remains found in the area of Sidon, with those of 99 Lebanese living in the region today, before coming to their conclusion, the article reported.

“One of the most exciting parts of the research was to get DNA out of the specimens,” one of the researchers, Chris Tyler-Smith, was quoted as telling ABC.

The modern-day Lebanese are “likely to be direct descendants of the Canaanites, but they have in addition a small proportion of Eurasian ancestry that may have arrived via conquests by distant populations such as the Assyrians, Persians, or Macedonians,” Dr Marc Haber, of The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, was quoted as telling the Independent.