Jamaica's retreat from nationalism
Sunday, May 06, 2007
The Farquharson Institute of Public Affairs expresses deep concern about the deteriorating sense of national pride and the evident admission by the country's leadership that we are increasingly unable to operate as a fully independent country.
It is now 70 years since we first declared for self-government, and 45 years since we took on responsibility for governing our own affairs. Now we are deeply in debt, generally demoralised and abjectly pleading for outside assistance and guidance in most of the vital areas of our existence. The country has been gradually retreating from the ideals of self-reliance, and our government appears to be frustrating this objective by borrowing, begging and using the proceeds to import goods and services that we should be providing for ourselves.
In days long before the declaration of independence, W G McFarlane, one of the pioneers of the Jamaican self-government movement, described Nationalism as "the creative spirit of national unity and declared that no people can be a nation of any importance without this highly developed consciousness". The Institute shares this view and urges a regeneration of the spirit that first inspired the call for independence. The challenge is not overwhelming because, even before 1960, Norman Manley made reference to the fact that, ".time was when this colony had it in its power to lead all if the lesser colonies of the empire on the march to self-government, for early were our cries, great our opportunities and plenty were the hands ready to essay the task."
The Institute takes note of the successful policy of Jamaicanisation, which began in the Jamaica Labour Party's administration of the 1960s. It brought about Jamaican ownership and control of banks, insurance companies and commercial and industrial entities. Today it should be cause for alarm that this programme is now in reverse and the trend indicates a retreat from national responsibility. The commanding heights are under siege and even the former Workers Bank, built by the workers and peasants who put their faith and funds in the old Government Savings Bank, is now in the hands of foreigners.
After 45 years of self-government, Jamaica is unable by itself to control, operate and provide such essential services as electricity and telecommunications. We are heavily dependent on foreigners to control crime, to advise on the repairing of a defective justice system, to operate our 48-year-old airline and to regulate the collection of taxes.
We have even reached the stage where our Minister of Finance is obliged to side-step our sovereignty to declare that he cannot share vital information with the Jamaican people and Parliament because of restrictions by Security and Exchange Commission regulations laid down by the United States!
Major sectors of industry, including mining and cement production are now in foreign hands; and so are many financial institutions such as banking and insurance.
Even national heritage sites such as the Rockfort Mineral Baths and the Cockpit Country are controlled or under threat of control by outside interests. Our major airport at Montego Bay is run by imported management and personnel.
The country continues to be more dependent instead of more independent in the production of food; and despite having arable land, good rainfall, rivers and an army of idle hands, we are not only unable to feed ourselves, but have also fallen short where we were once able to fill export quotas for traditional products.
This diminishing state of self-reliance extends to the field of sports, where we implicitly admit an inability to coach football and cricket teams. While there is expanding activity in the field of construction, we are playing less of a leadership role in managing large projects such as hotels, road building and stadiums, including one at Sligoville, Jamaica's historically important first free village after slavery. These developments are offering crumbs to our workers and relegating them to roles of service rather than creative and productive activity.
Today we import senior police officers and take it all for granted. Yet in 1954 when it was learnt that an advertisement had been placed in the English newspapers for an assistant commissioner of police, Chief Minister Bustamante was outraged. He strongly criticised the action and declared, "I strongly object to others coming here to get jobs which can be filled by capable Jamaicans.
If they do not want to promote men in the Force there are many men in the Jamaica Battalion who are able and willing to fill those jobs." That was over 50 years ago; and if as a colony we did not have the qualifications then, there is certainly no good excuse for such a deficiency after 45 years of independence.
The Institute is further concerned that in many of the areas where we have full Jamaican control, the out-turn has been heavy losses, inefficiency and corruption.
The current national budget shows billions and billions of dollars of losses and recurring losses incurred under state management of agencies including NROCC, Sugar Corporation, Urban Transport, and Air Jamaica, not to mention the costly over-runs on building programmes.
The national indebtedness means that nearly two-thirds of the budget has to be used for debt servicing; and yet we persist with projects in which wanton waste is draining away the lifeblood of the nation. In these dire circumstances our political representatives tell us they intend to increase their number, their salaries and also build a bigger House in which to debate.
The Institute calls for a concentrated effort to revive that sense of nationalism which is essential to the development of a proud and truly independent people. We have lost that virtue and it can only be regained by an improved education system and a conscious and deliberate drive for cultural refinement and reinforcement.
The great nationalist Norman Manley, when he observed the earlier signs of decay, emphasised the need to properly nurture and educate the young.
He may have foreseen the present debacle when he asked the teachers of his day: "Have we ever in Jamaica inculcated in the children in our schools a spirit which believes that the Jamaican is a fine person? That he is a laudable person? That the Jamaican has a great future before him? That the Jamaican must give up these indolent habits of thought; his looking across the water and regarding that he has done all that is expected of him if he's a good citizen of the empire, without troubling to remember that his first duty is to be a good citizen of his own country?"
Norman Manley had looked to the education system as a vital element in the shaping of the future. Before independence he addressed teachers optimistically: "Let it not be said that the teachers of this country have allowed a breach to develop between themselves and those who pass through their hands. Their sense of relationship to the future, their responsibility and participation in the future of this country, is your responsibility. It is a breach which has not yet been created and it is the one place where we can find a unity that can be held on to as one of the ruling forces for progress of this country."
Sunday, May 06, 2007
The Farquharson Institute of Public Affairs expresses deep concern about the deteriorating sense of national pride and the evident admission by the country's leadership that we are increasingly unable to operate as a fully independent country.
It is now 70 years since we first declared for self-government, and 45 years since we took on responsibility for governing our own affairs. Now we are deeply in debt, generally demoralised and abjectly pleading for outside assistance and guidance in most of the vital areas of our existence. The country has been gradually retreating from the ideals of self-reliance, and our government appears to be frustrating this objective by borrowing, begging and using the proceeds to import goods and services that we should be providing for ourselves.
In days long before the declaration of independence, W G McFarlane, one of the pioneers of the Jamaican self-government movement, described Nationalism as "the creative spirit of national unity and declared that no people can be a nation of any importance without this highly developed consciousness". The Institute shares this view and urges a regeneration of the spirit that first inspired the call for independence. The challenge is not overwhelming because, even before 1960, Norman Manley made reference to the fact that, ".time was when this colony had it in its power to lead all if the lesser colonies of the empire on the march to self-government, for early were our cries, great our opportunities and plenty were the hands ready to essay the task."
The Institute takes note of the successful policy of Jamaicanisation, which began in the Jamaica Labour Party's administration of the 1960s. It brought about Jamaican ownership and control of banks, insurance companies and commercial and industrial entities. Today it should be cause for alarm that this programme is now in reverse and the trend indicates a retreat from national responsibility. The commanding heights are under siege and even the former Workers Bank, built by the workers and peasants who put their faith and funds in the old Government Savings Bank, is now in the hands of foreigners.
After 45 years of self-government, Jamaica is unable by itself to control, operate and provide such essential services as electricity and telecommunications. We are heavily dependent on foreigners to control crime, to advise on the repairing of a defective justice system, to operate our 48-year-old airline and to regulate the collection of taxes.
We have even reached the stage where our Minister of Finance is obliged to side-step our sovereignty to declare that he cannot share vital information with the Jamaican people and Parliament because of restrictions by Security and Exchange Commission regulations laid down by the United States!
Major sectors of industry, including mining and cement production are now in foreign hands; and so are many financial institutions such as banking and insurance.
Even national heritage sites such as the Rockfort Mineral Baths and the Cockpit Country are controlled or under threat of control by outside interests. Our major airport at Montego Bay is run by imported management and personnel.
The country continues to be more dependent instead of more independent in the production of food; and despite having arable land, good rainfall, rivers and an army of idle hands, we are not only unable to feed ourselves, but have also fallen short where we were once able to fill export quotas for traditional products.
This diminishing state of self-reliance extends to the field of sports, where we implicitly admit an inability to coach football and cricket teams. While there is expanding activity in the field of construction, we are playing less of a leadership role in managing large projects such as hotels, road building and stadiums, including one at Sligoville, Jamaica's historically important first free village after slavery. These developments are offering crumbs to our workers and relegating them to roles of service rather than creative and productive activity.
Today we import senior police officers and take it all for granted. Yet in 1954 when it was learnt that an advertisement had been placed in the English newspapers for an assistant commissioner of police, Chief Minister Bustamante was outraged. He strongly criticised the action and declared, "I strongly object to others coming here to get jobs which can be filled by capable Jamaicans.
If they do not want to promote men in the Force there are many men in the Jamaica Battalion who are able and willing to fill those jobs." That was over 50 years ago; and if as a colony we did not have the qualifications then, there is certainly no good excuse for such a deficiency after 45 years of independence.
The Institute is further concerned that in many of the areas where we have full Jamaican control, the out-turn has been heavy losses, inefficiency and corruption.
The current national budget shows billions and billions of dollars of losses and recurring losses incurred under state management of agencies including NROCC, Sugar Corporation, Urban Transport, and Air Jamaica, not to mention the costly over-runs on building programmes.
The national indebtedness means that nearly two-thirds of the budget has to be used for debt servicing; and yet we persist with projects in which wanton waste is draining away the lifeblood of the nation. In these dire circumstances our political representatives tell us they intend to increase their number, their salaries and also build a bigger House in which to debate.
The Institute calls for a concentrated effort to revive that sense of nationalism which is essential to the development of a proud and truly independent people. We have lost that virtue and it can only be regained by an improved education system and a conscious and deliberate drive for cultural refinement and reinforcement.
The great nationalist Norman Manley, when he observed the earlier signs of decay, emphasised the need to properly nurture and educate the young.
He may have foreseen the present debacle when he asked the teachers of his day: "Have we ever in Jamaica inculcated in the children in our schools a spirit which believes that the Jamaican is a fine person? That he is a laudable person? That the Jamaican has a great future before him? That the Jamaican must give up these indolent habits of thought; his looking across the water and regarding that he has done all that is expected of him if he's a good citizen of the empire, without troubling to remember that his first duty is to be a good citizen of his own country?"
Norman Manley had looked to the education system as a vital element in the shaping of the future. Before independence he addressed teachers optimistically: "Let it not be said that the teachers of this country have allowed a breach to develop between themselves and those who pass through their hands. Their sense of relationship to the future, their responsibility and participation in the future of this country, is your responsibility. It is a breach which has not yet been created and it is the one place where we can find a unity that can be held on to as one of the ruling forces for progress of this country."
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