Lead the change – Renew private sector for a renewed Jamaica

Except for a handful of institutions and a few individuals, Jamaica’s civil-society and private-sector leadership has, for too long, been accommodating of incompetent management of the country’s affairs.

If our nation is to be rescued from its long and worsening economic and social crises, that will have to change. Private-sector institutions and leaders must find their voice, assert their influence and demand an environment that is conducive to growth and prosperity. Civic leadership must help liberate Government from its entrapments by outmoded economic policies which are supposedly good for the poor, but which really keep Jamaica in poverty.

This will require the willingness of business/civic leaders to identify weak political leadership, bad public-sector management, and to offer the private sector’s skill, insights and support to an often well-meaning, but mostly inefficient bureaucracy.

Corruption unacceptable

Politicians and bureaucrats, in this regard, must be told that corruption is just not acceptable in any form, and that our untrust-worthy police force and creaky justice systems have to be fixed. They must know, too, that civil society, broadly, but more specifically the private sector, will not tolerate the relationship, residual or otherwise, between political parties and community enforcers, which perpetuates garrison politics.

At the same time, the private sector must insist on a rebalanced economic environment. Undue tilt needs shifting in favour of margin gatherers to an even keel where real sectors, with a capacity to create jobs, can find a sustainable space.

Flexibility in fiscal reform

Economic reform must also include greater flexibility on the part of firms to reorganise, including making positions redundant, without risking staff’s existence, which is now often the case.

Existing laws require companies to meet the high cost of severance, especially when stressed firms can least afford to pay.

It is sort of like the private sector flip side to the near, if not absolute, security of tenure enjoyed by civil servants.

The private sector is not without history of leading change. It certainly has the leverage to demand it.

In the 1970s, a period of deep ideological schism, many Jamai-cans feared for their democratic freedoms. The late Carlton Alexander, CEO of Grace-Kennedy, and others, spoke out forcefully. In the process, they created the Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica as an effective counterbalance to government policy. They helped win the ideological battle of the day.

With appropriate mobilisation and support, a similar victory is possible over today’s decidedly different, and perhaps even more profound, problems.

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2 Responses to “Lead the change – Renew private sector for a renewed Jamaica”

  1. Wayne Jones says:

    Dear Editor

    Indeed corruption is unacceptable. If we do not stop this scourge we are doomed. However, in every change process and reform exercise if honesty and truth are not characteristics of the process then failure is guaranteed.

    It is time that we “Call to Action” those who make corruption happen. In every corrupt activity there is a giver and a taker. In other words every such transaction begins with an offer and ends with an acceptance. It takes two to make it happen.

    Let us call out those importers and brokers who go the ports of entry armed with stacks of cash to bribe the customs officers to release their shipments without the collection of duties and taxes. Let us call out the passengers who arrive at the ports with cash in their passports to bribe the immigration officer to “back date” their books. Let us call out the attorneys who send their bearers with cash to the Titles Office to bribe a staff there to expedite their transactions. Let us call out the developer who tries to bribe the Parish Council staff to get their building plans approved illegally.

    Let us call out the journalist who publishes a story for a “fee” Let us call out the disc jockey who runs the payola system.

    Let us call out the thousands of so called professionals who do not pay taxes but expect services from government.

    Let us call out the attorneys and realtors who take prospective homeowners money and don’t buy the houses while they “rinse” the money.

    Until civil society including the private sector recognize that corruption is not a sectoral problem but a societal one, we are only going to be talking but doing little else.

  2. Dutty G says:

    You have touched on some very good areas brethren, but the laws of supply and demand have negated the intended flare from your nicely formulated and well penned piece. You see Wayne, in order for the desired results to be realized, more than 90% of our population would have to be transformed. I’m not sure where you’re currently residing, but Jamaicans in a whole are notorious for giving 6 for 9, and in the same token, we all expect to acquire a Mercedes for the price of a deportee. So, until we’re able to omit selfishness from our daily activities, the issues that you have pointed out, will continue to infinity. One love!

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francine Posted by: francine December 8, 2009 at 8:16 am