1 / 23

LIFE AND DEBT: A debrief

LIFE AND DEBT: A debrief. HSB4U Maharaj 2014. Jamaica : A brief history. 1655: English occupied Jamaica and created agricultural- based economy (slave labour) to support industrial revolution in England 18th Century: sugar cane export flourished

azana
Download Presentation

LIFE AND DEBT: A debrief

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LIFE AND DEBT:A debrief HSB4U Maharaj 2014

  2. Jamaica: A briefhistory • 1655: English occupied Jamaica and created agricultural-basedeconomy (slave labour) to support industrialrevolution in England • 18th Century: sugar cane export flourished • 1807: abolition of slave trade= no more sugar cane exports, followed by seriousdrought • 1865: social, economicprogressfrom English including new technologies (irrigation) restarted the cash croppingindustry

  3. 1920: sugar cane increase; increase in land size • 19th century: rise in banana trade, 1890= banana replacedsugar cane as major export • Great Depression (1930s): demand for economicdevelopmentfrom British rule= 1 million pounds/ yr for 20 yrs on development • BUT… fundswere not implemented to deal withJamaica’sstructural problems

  4. AfterindependancefromBritain—Jamaicaincuredalot of debt to help structure their new emergingeconomy– itwas VERY weak • Reality hit--- high import marketfrom the colonial years, old habits die hard– if youre-vert to a agricultural economy = movingbackward • MichealManleydecidedthatprogresswas key and wasmentored by Britain to use the IMF to build CREDIT • Emerging Issues: indebtednessto international lenders, especially the IMF= structural adjustmentpolicies and forced free trade • The weakness of the Jamaican dollar= due to a series of devaluationsimposed by the IMF

  5. What’s the deal with the imf? • The IMF isonlyconcernedwith short-termborrowing to meetimmediateneeds of a country- the effectismore $ in the pockets of 1st world nations (U.S., Great Britain, etc.) because of highinterest rates • The World Bank wasestablished to help rebuild countries after WWII (i.e. England)- Jamaicaunder British rule • 1962: Jamaican Independence after 300+ yrs

  6. Post- independence: whatdidthismean? • Post independence, countries likeJamaicaquicklyrealizedtheyhadfinancial troubles becauselack of economicstrength= theyneededtime to buildtheireconomy! • 1973: hike in oilprices= a large $$ impact • Jamaicaisoil importer- went to privatebanks for loans • IMF: try to cutback spending

  7. Pressure from the imf • Manley: feltpressured to approach IMF becauseJamaicaunable to pay for imports • Wantedrepayment plan compatible for long-termdevelopment • IMF:developmentisJamaica’sproblem • IMF: loaned $$ short termwith high interest rates, imposedheavyconditions and restrictions

  8. IMF’s conditions • 1. Budget cut-backs • 2. Devaluations in currency ($$) • 3. Interest rates undertheir control • 4. Free trade • 5. Privitization = vicious cycle, because thereis no money allocated for development of Jamaicaneconomy

  9. Imports and exports • IMF restrictedspending to healthcare & education • Initially, IMF: decreaseimports, increaseexports • Imports: whatcomes INTO the country • Exports: whatgoes OUT of the country • Jamaicaisdependent on imports fromother countries: oil, medicine, books, food, etc. • Debtreaches$7 billion

  10. crops • Jamaicancrops are rotting, because U.S. crops are cheaper to buy in Jamaica (CRAZY!) • IMF put pressure to open up to imports: previous measuresprevented imports, ensuringJamaicanfarmers theirownmarket (toosmall to be self-supporting)

  11. Produce (think: honeydew melons) • Jamaicanproduceis more expensive ($$) becauseitisnot mechanized- “Can a machine compete with a machete?” • Produce doesn’t meet standards • “Free trade flows in one direction: toward the U.S.A.”

  12. Dairyindustry • Dairyindustryhad been growing in Jamaica • 1992: government took out loan of $50 million from Inter-American Development Bank to support dairy industry • Condition: had to abandon local subsidies (additional financial support to farmers, i.e. tax cuts), and abandon restrictions on imported milk products

  13. Abandon restrictions on imports= U.S.A. startedimportingpowderedmilk • Powderedmilk: cheap (affordable), does not spoil (for longer transportation), easierstorage • Result:Jamaicanfarmers went out of business= could no longer keep up with imports of powderedmilk; cut back on business dramatically

  14. Banana industry: The LOME agreement • Jamaicaproduces90, 000 tonnes of bananas- exported to UK (former colony) • Europeanswhohad colonies in the pastwanted to givethem extra help • The Lome Agreement is an agreement of African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) countries with the European Union, which gave former colonies extra help in trade= guaranteed market, tariff free

  15. Is the Lomeagreement fair? • U.S. (on behalf of Chiquita) went to the WTO and charged that this preferential treatment of certain countries was against WTO rules of free trade • Chiquita, Dole, and Del Monte (U.S. owned) control 95% of world banana market= most grown in Latin America under repressive and exploitive regimes; very low wages (sometimes $1/day).  

  16. In Honduras, Chiquita banana workers went on strike; they were forced back to work at gunpoint: there are no unions to protect workers!! • Under these conditions, the multinationals can bring their produce to market more cheaply. • Banks won’t invest in Jamaican bananas because the market is too risky

  17. Free trade zone • In the free trade zones, workers paid less than what American workers would be paid.   • Kingston Free Trade Zone (FTZ), encircled with fencing and barbed wire, rows of factories, assembly of garments • FTZ not part of Jamaica= not subject to things like income tax, duties, not subject to any other Jamaican laws. • Don't meet the quotas= don't get paid for the work you did.  $30/week wages.  • On the job, one can't talk or go to the bathroom freely.  Workers have to pay many taxes (where is the $$ going?!)

  18. ForeigncompanieswerepromisedthatJamaicanworkerswould not form unions • Chineseworkersimported= tension betweenJamaicanworkers and Chineseworkers- WHY? Chinesegettingpaid in US $$! • FTZs are counterproductive- factoriesnowmoving to Mexico= cheaper labour, loss of 18,000 jobs • How isJamaicagoing to repayloanstheytook out to open the FTZ?

  19. Whatwas the IMF’sresponse? • Director of IMF says: key to growth is to attract foreign investment (private investors) • Manley says that private foreign investors won't provide money for some of the things the country needs: infrastructure, education, healthcare, food self-sufficiency= they are only interested in making a profit

  20. How canjamaica change imfpolicy? • Votes in IMF are proportional to the size of the country in the world economy, so U.S. has 17.5% of the vote, then Japan and Germany. • Old word thinking of territory= wealth/importance • To change an IMF policy, need 80% of the vote (can't be done without the support of U.S. and W. Europe).  • Does Jamaica really have a “say” in changing policies? How is this ironic?

  21. Mcdonaldization • McDonald’s couldbepurchasingJamaicanproducts- instead, theyimportthem (Why?) • McDonald’s usingcheaperimportedbeef • American ranchers use an anabolic steroid Stilbestrolthat isn't sold in Jamaica, enabling them to produce more meat more quickly (and therefore, more cheaply)= “Cancer-causing agent”

  22. Slavery? • In slavery, the master would take the best part of the food. •  Similarly, today in America, only the best parts of the chicken are sold (the back, neck, feet, etc.), are dumped into Third World countries.   • Dark meat from U.S. being sold into Jamaica at 20 cents/lb., even though it costs 50 cents/lb. to produce, simply because it can't be sold in the U.S= Jamaican chicken farmers are suffering

  23. Social Justice?! • Exploitation • Sub-standard conditions • Free market destroys local subsistance economy (cash economy vs. Bartar) • Westernization more desirablethan ‘stagnation’ but atwhatcost!?

More Related