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Jul 09, 2017 News
The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Single Market and Economy (CSME) is the Community’s best response to the inevitable changes in its traditional markets in Europe, the prevalence of economic liberalization and the emergence of economic blocs, the outgoing CARICOM chairman, David Granger, said on Tuesday evening.
Speaking at the opening of the 38th Meeting of the conference of Heads of Government in Grenada, President Granger said the CSME is still the best vehicle to allow small states like those of CARICOM to compete in the global economy while promoting economic and social development.
CARICOM Heads of Governments, who began the first business session of their two-day meeting on Wednesday, were expected to examine the findings of a comprehensive review of the CSME.
Describing the deepening of economic integration by advancing a single market and economy, as the “most ambitious project attempted by the Community,” Granger said, “It must not become its most ambiguous.”
“The CSME, especially given the present uncertainties facing the region’s international relations, must be accelerated in order to create a single economic space,” he said.
“The Community, with a total land area of 462, 352 km2, is larger than Sweden and, if it were a single country, would be the 56th largest in the world. Size matters. The Community would be the 56th largest in the world. Size matters,” Granger noted.
Given the accumulative land, the labour, the talent and the capital the Community possesses, it could guarantee food security for its citizens, the Guyanese head of state suggested.
In this context, he bemoaned the Community’s annual food import bill, which he said exceeded US$4 billion.
Noting that such a situation was “a notorious indictment,” the outgoing chairman said non-tariff barriers continued to constrain trade in food.
“The need was urgent, therefore to re-examine how it can dismantle the non-tariff barriers to trade in agricultural products while generating employment for citizens,” he said.
Emphasising the critical importance of removing barriers to foster more efficient intra-regional trade, he said: “Small internal markets consign states to high dependence on external trade. Intraregional trade, therefore, is important.
“The Caribbean Common Market was established to ensure markets for regional production, inter alia. Intraregional trade provides a basis for increasing national production, augmenting investment and generating employment. The environment is an inescapable economic reality.”
As he reflected on his “semester” as chairman of the Community, Granger said current international realities provided ample opportunities for the Community to work together to protect vital interests at the levels of citizen, country and the community.
Expressing confidence in the future he said, “With such a clear vision and commitment, CARICOM can confront the future with confidence.”
The president of Guyana reminded his colleagues to keep citizens at the centre of the Community and to reject “the odious notion of ‘statelessness’.”
Providing a nexus between the rights of the citizen and the freedom of movement regime of the CSME, he said that the respect of the right of citizens obliged leaders to “dismantle restrictive immigration practices, which impede free movement.”
Referencing the original Treaty of Chaguaramas, he said the founding fathers envisioned the strengthening of “bonds among the people of the Caribbean to fulfill aspirations for… full employment and improved standards of work and living…”
He also recalled that the Charter of Civil Society of the Caribbean Community established the respect for every citizen’s fundamental human rights, including the right to life, liberty and security of the person.
Therefore, he stated, “The perverse notion of a ‘stateless’ person is anathema to the Community’s concept of human dignity. The Community must never cease condemning inhuman treatment meted out to Caribbean citizens in the Dominican Republic or anywhere else.”
The Guyanese head of state said: “The Caribbean, our home, must be secure. It must remain a ‘zone of peace’ through our unstinting solidarity in defence of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of member states.”
At the same time he said that security cooperation, under the CARICOM Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACs) and through international agreements such as the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative (CBSI), which have helped to keep citizens safe, was not sufficient in an age of international terror.
Underscoring the importance of advancing the Roadmap for a Single ICT Space, he said could help the region to “straddle the 3,200 km2 of sea space, which separates Nassau in the north from Paramaribo in the south, through information and communications technology.” (CMC)
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