|
It
is common knowledge that I am perfectly happy to come
to Jamaica merely to engage in light pursuits. You
will therefore appreciate how special it feels to
be here to be part of an occasion which holds the
promise of making such a significant difference to
the future of our region and the lives of its people.
I
have today, on behalf of the Government and people
of Barbados signed the declaration marking the coming
in to being of the CARICOM Single Market, very conscious
of the extraordinary legacy of which I am proud to
be a part. A Barbadian National Hero was the only
Prime Minister of the West Indies Federation.
Another
of our National Heroes, and a Prime Minister of Barbados,
was at the founding of both CARIFTA and CARICOM, and
was in every respect and moreso than any other Caribbean
citizen the architect of economic integration as we
have come to know it in the Caribbean.
I regard it as being among my most important contributions
as Prime Minister of Barbados to have led our nation
to end centuries of colonial history and dependence
by ending our relationship with the British Privy
Council, and accepting the jurisdiction of the Caribbean
Court of Justice in all of its aspects.
It
is in this spirit that this evening I solemnly pledge
Barbados' complete support to making the Caribbean
Single Market and Economy successful.
I
do so, conscious of the extraordinary obligation that
rests upon us to make Caribbean unity an effective
instrument by which to achieve Caribbean progress.
If
we were to succeed, as we must, in making the 15 nations
of CARICOM one Single Market and Economy, the stark
reality is that such a regional economy would still
be the smallest and most vulnerable economic bloc
in a globalised world.
Ours is therefore the region in today's world where
integration is most sorely needed as the indispensable
foundation on which to rest national and regional
endeavours in pursuit of equitable and sustainable
development.
We
have tried all the others — various relationships
and configurations with metropolitan powers, self-determination
and national independence.
It
is time to now give Caribbean unity a chance.
I
have signed this Declaration this evening as the Prime
Minister with the lead responsibilities for the creation
of the CSME driven by no sentimentality, but by the
pragmatic expectations of what we can now achieve
for our people.
The rights that Caribbean nationals will now, for
the first time, enjoy to establish enterprise wherever
they wish in their region and will release entrepreneurial
energy that has been bottled up for far too long in
the Caribbean.
Our
regional society is the product of the ordeal of migrant
labour. The conditions under which the Caribbean labour
forced has been required over time to relate to our
regional economy — beginning with slavery —
have been the shabbiest part of our tortured economic
history.
Economic
integration in today's Caribbean would be a sterile
and meaningless exercise were it not to have, at its
very centre, a new dispensation, involving new rules
for labour mobility, that affords the ordinary man
and the ordinary woman the prospect of improving their
circumstances by having a new and improved relationship
with a new regional economy.
As Barbadian families in the past have owed their
very livelihood to the opportunity that was afforded
us to access what Guyana had to offer, I trust that
Guyanese families will be able today to improve their
lot by having a share in what we have in Barbados.
Our
Caribbean Single Market and Economy also offers our
producers the opportunities to slip the boundaries
of small markets. It can also widen our options to
create more competitive enterprises by enabling them
to have access, without restrictions, to regional
pools of capital and skills.
I could go on.
I
however rather prefer to say that the benefits we
seek from the CSME will not be achieved without sustained
commitment and courage.
We
must never forget that the Political Federation of
the West Indies floundered not so much because of
political or constitutional issues, but largely because
of irreconcilable economic and financial differences.
Let us therefore as we set out on this new endeavour
in Caribbean Unity acknowledge that respective nations
in our region come to this moment with widely differing
capabilities to participate in, and to benefit from
the economic integration that has been designed.
The
immediate challenge before us is to put the mechanisms
in place to ensure that a Caribbean Single Market
and Economy does not become a permanent coalition
of unequals, but that its benefits are shared by all.
The member States of the Caribbean have also evolved
as economic systems distinctly separated from each
other, but closely and effectively integrated into
the economics of the advanced, metropolitan economics.
It
would be illusory and disingenuous not to accept that
our regional economy even with the advent of the CSME,
will still be responsive in many respects, largely
to extra regional demand.
We must however, make the CSME matter by enabling
it to add value to Caribbean development by accomplishing
things in those areas where our traditional relationships
have failed us — achieving food security on
a regional basis, inserting a regional economy into
the global economy in circumstances where it would
be virtually impossible to do so successfully on an
individual basis to mention but a few areas.
I
wish again, on this matter to emphasise that the CSME
represents the most effective means by which the individual
economies of our region can be successfully integrated
into the evolving global economic system on terms
that will enable us to minimize the costs and dislocation
that ensue from that integration, while maximizing
the potential benefits. However, the onerous demands
of the various negotiating theaters we now find ourselves
in require nothing but the most sophisticated and
dedicated levels of cooperation on our part. The Caribbean
Community cannot succeed in today's world if it speaks
in a weak and ineffectual voice with uncertain sound.
We should also not expect that our external partners
will sit patiently in our waiting rooms while we sort
out our
internal affairs. The external challenges facing the
Caribbean community in a shrinking and uncertain world,
and the questions we must resolve about our own shape
and structure are inseparably linked.
This
gives a special urgency to this enterprise to create
the CSME in the shortest practical time.
Prime
Minister Patterson, you must allow me this last opportunity
in your presence, on Jamaican soil, in your capacity
as Prime Minister of Jamaica to salute the contribution
you have made to Caribbean unity and development.
The
thirty (30) years you have devoted to the service
of Caribbean integration dealing with some of its
most demanding matters, have not to date been exceeded
by any Caribbean citizen, and it is hardly likely
to be exceeded by that of any citizen of the future.
It is the fact that such monumental efforts can come
from a citizen of the Caribbean that gives us the
confidence to believe that we can make the CSME work.
Your
friends in Barbados salute you, and wish you every
blessing in your retirement.
Colleagues,
Ladies and Gentlemen, As Prime Minister with lead
responsibility for the implementation of the CARICOM
Single Market and Economy, this is for me a proud
yet sobering moment. I am forced to reflect on where
we have come from, full in the knowledge that none
of us was there when this all began. I am equally
aware of where this region must go, again cognizant
of the fact that none of us might be there when the
Caribbean Community reaches it desired destination.
The task for us is to do what we can here. and now
to ensure a safe and successful onward journey.
Let
us, therefore, to the task.
|