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Sunday, April 6, 2025

Barbados welcomes T&T investment

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623 days ago
20230723
Trinidad and Tobago Coalition of Services Industries (TTCSI) CEO Vashti Guyadeen, left,  with Minister of Trade and Industry Paula Gopee-Scoon, TTCSI  President Mark Edghill and  Ministry of Trade and Industry Permanent Secretary Ayleen Alleyne-Ovid at the launch of the National Services Exporters in September 2022.

Trinidad and Tobago Coalition of Services Industries (TTCSI) CEO Vashti Guyadeen, left, with Minister of Trade and Industry Paula Gopee-Scoon, TTCSI President Mark Edghill and Ministry of Trade and Industry Permanent Secretary Ayleen Alleyne-Ovid at the launch of the National Services Exporters in September 2022.

MINISTRY OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY

CEO of the Bar­ba­dos Pri­vate Sec­tor As­so­ci­a­tion, Anne Reid, is invit­ing T&T’s in­vestors and busi­ness peo­ple to do busi­ness in Bar­ba­dos.

She said on May 1, Bar­ba­dos had an of­fi­cial launch of the “De­c­la­ra­tion of Mis­sions Bar­ba­dos” and it was the re­sult of stake­hold­er con­sul­ta­tion to trans­form Bar­ba­dos in­to a sus­tain­able, eco­nom­i­cal­ly pros­per­ous so­ci­ety and they are at the stage of de­ter­min­ing how these mis­sions will be ex­e­cut­ed

“This is to align with Prime Min­is­ter’s Mia Mot­t­ley’s ex­pressed goal to ce­ment Bar­ba­dos as a glob­al busi­ness hub. By 2030, Bar­ba­dos aims to be­come a clean, beau­ti­ful large ocean state cham­pi­oning sus­tain­able de­vel­op­ment, lo­cal­ly and glob­al­ly.

“Al­so, by 2023, a 50 per cent re­duc­tion in crime be­cause as we know the chal­lenges of crime in terms of do­ing busi­ness and at­tract­ing in­vestors to the ju­ris­dic­tion. Al­so, by 2030 to em­pow­er and en­fran­chise all Bar­ba­dos’ work­ers and fam­i­lies cre­at­ing op­por­tu­ni­ties for own­er­ship and wealth cre­ation to en­able Bar­ba­di­ans to take care of them­selves and each oth­er,” she said.

Reid spoke last Tues­day in a we­bi­nar that is part of the T&T Coali­tion of Ser­vices In­dus­tries (TTC­SI) Do­ing Busi­ness With the World Se­ries.

T&T busi­ness peo­ple who were part of the we­bi­nar raised dif­fer­ent ques­tions rang­ing from what prod­ucts do Bar­ba­dos’ busi­ness­es have to of­fer to how do T&T in­vestors open busi­ness­es there.

Dur­ing her pre­sen­ta­tion, Reid gave ad­vice on how to reg­is­ter a busi­ness in Bar­ba­dos, how for­eign­ers should set up a bank ac­count, cus­toms pro­ce­dures and oth­er de­tails in­vestors should know when do­ing busi­ness there.

“This is some­thing for you to ap­pre­ci­ate so that when you come in­to the is­land of Bar­ba­dos to do busi­ness, you are not nec­es­sar­i­ly floun­der­ing in high seas alone but there is the sup­port that you can have as you char­ter your way through the maze of do­ing busi­ness on a day-to-day ba­sis.”

T&T, Bar­ba­dos trade

Pres­i­dent of the TTC­SI, Mark Edghill who al­so gave re­marks at the busi­ness we­bi­nar point­ed out that Bar­ba­dos is now T&T’s biggest trad­ing part­ner.

“At present, T&T can be con­sid­ered Bar­ba­dos’ largest trad­ing part­ner. Ac­cord­ing to da­ta from Coun­try-Re­ports-dot-org, 22.5 per cent of goods ex­port­ed by Bar­ba­dos come to T&T; while 39 per cent of goods im­port­ed in­to Bar­ba­dos come from T&T. The Unit­ed Na­tions COM­TRADE data­base es­ti­mates that in 2022, Bar­ba­dos’ ex­ports to T&T were US$32.94 mil­lion. In 2021, Bar­ba­dos im­ports from T&T were val­ued at US$103.77 mil­lion, with the li­on’s share of those im­ports com­ing from the en­er­gy sec­tor.”

He re­ferred to the re­cent­ly held Cari­com meet­ing in Port-of-Spain where state­ments were made on the free move­ment of peo­ple across mem­ber states to live and to work.

In the fi­nal Com­mu­niqué from the Sum­mit, is­sued on Ju­ly 5, Cari­com Heads of State agreed the fol­low­ing:

“The ini­tia­tives com­pris­ing the macro­eco­nom­ic pol­i­cy co-or­di­na­tion agen­da for the 13-Mem­ber State CSME (the Caribbean Sin­gle Mar­ket and Econ­o­my), in­clud­ing the op­er­a­tional­is­ing of the re­gion­al cap­i­tal mar­ket, must be tabled for adop­tion by Mem­ber States by Ju­ly 2024.

“To work to­wards the free move­ment of all Cari­com na­tion­als with­in the Com­mu­ni­ty by 31 March 2024, ac­knowl­edg­ing that there are cer­tain ba­sic guar­an­tees that should be af­ford­ed to all Cari­com na­tion­als ex­er­cis­ing their right to freely move and re­main in­def­i­nite­ly in an­oth­er Mem­ber State of the Com­mu­ni­ty.”

“What could the full im­ple­men­ta­tion and ex­pan­sion of the CSME mean for en­tre­pre­neurs and firms op­er­at­ing in the ser­vices sec­tor? I be­lieve those op­por­tu­ni­ties will be ex­plored dur­ing our ses­sion to­day, as we learn more about Do­ing Busi­ness with Bar­ba­dos. It is a time­ly dis­cus­sion giv­en that the Prime Min­is­ter of Bar­ba­dos is Cari­com’s Lead for im­ple­men­ta­tion of the CSME,” Edghill said.


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