KINGSTON, Jamaica - JUST before last week's 34th meeting of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Conference of Heads of Government in Port of Spain, we bemoaned in this space that CARICOM, some five years after the eruption of the global economic crisis, had still not formulated a regional response.
The rationale for a regional response is two-fold. First, joint action with the regional integration process can generate spread effects from the countries experiencing high growth rates to those which are stagnating. The regional strategy can complement and reinforce national stabilisation and stimulate higher rates of sustainable economic growth. This type of multiplier effect from growth poles to struggling economies will not happen by the market acting alone because the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) does not exist in a tangible operational mode. In these circumstances regional governments need to act collectively.
Related News
In keeping with the decision taken by Heads of Government at their 25th Regular Meeting in Grenada 4...
In keeping with the decision taken by Heads of Government at their 25th Regular Meeting in Grenada 4-7 July, the 18th meeting of the Bureau of the Conference of Heads of Government of the…
NATURAL DISASTER IMPACT MITIGATION: STRENGTHENING NATURAL DISASTER WARNING SYSTEMS ACROSS VULNERABLE...
The tremendous loss of life and destruction caused by the earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean region on 26 December 2004 have shocked the world at large and shattered the lives of many…
CARICOM Secretariat, IMPACS webinar focuses on ‘Youth as Agents for Change in Crime Prevention’
‘Youth as Agents for Change in Crime Prevention’ will be the focus of a webinar that the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat and the CARICOM Implementation Agency for Cr

