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Has PLP not learnt from Great Recession?

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Jason Hayward was on the front line during protests against Pathways to Status, but Dwayne Robinson suggests the minister responsible for immigration in the present administration is merely repackaging the same policy under a different name (File photograph by Akil Simmons)

Bermudians have been feeling the tightening squeeze of the rising cost of living. As a people, we have always had to contend with high prices, and so most Bermudians have worked out cost-saving measures that help them maintain their standard of living. However, we are witnessing those measures becoming less and less effective, causing many to cut back on certain luxuries they enjoy — whether it’s their favourite smoothie or snack, or skipping their annual holiday.

Families have had to pool their resources to hold on to their mortgages, pay for college tuition, or to cover their rent and bills. Across the board, many Bermudians have had to sacrifice in one way or another.

But while Bermudians are forced to adapt to these harsher times, our Progressive Labour Party government does not seem to know how to. Instead, it continues to make the same mistakes as previous PLP administrations.

When facing a global economic downturn, which is leading to another potential Great Recession, we find the Government refusing to curb its spending and continuing to forgo sinking fund contributions. Why is it that the average Bermudian can quickly grasp the concept of budgeting for hard times, yet those tasked to lead us through these tough times cannot? Have they learnt nothing from the last crippling recession in 2008?

As usual, an election victory means more to a PLP government than the longevity of our island. It blocked crucial immigration reform for Bermuda because it presented a political opportunity to seize the Government. Now it has boxed itself into a corner with its own rhetoric and the Burt Administration finds itself, six years later, only passing piecemeal changes.

The very person who opposed immigration reform under the One Bermuda Alliance is now a Cabinet minister and spends unnecessary time trying to repackage it and present it with a different name.

The $19.4 million in back pay for negotiated Civil Service raises and expansion of financial assistance offerings on the horizon looks good on the front end. Expanding social protections and good pay for our civil servants is something many of us support. However, we must look at the reality of our present situation.

I do not oppose good wages for the Civil Service. What I do oppose is risking our future generations’ financial security and access to opportunities. We cannot continue to reach into the pockets of our future generations to fund short-sighted initiatives to secure election victories for the PLP.

Bermuda is short of 9,000 working-class people, with an ageing-population bubble set to burst, our second pillar of tourism still struggling and health insurance premiums steadily on the rise. These decisions will come back to haunt us if the PLP does not begin delivering on its economic pledges, most notably increasing the working population.

If not, all of this will lead to an increased burden on the Government. All those increased benefits and pay raises will be taken back through increased taxes/fees, as there will not be enough of a workforce to sustain them.

The main factors that attract working-age people to a destination are a solid education system, affordable healthcare, amenities/leisure activities, national security and cost of living.

If we want Bermuda to be successful, the Premier and his Cabinet must produce a cross-ministry plan on how we can reform these key areas.

This plan should support economic growth instead of another economic document stating what we should be doing already. This is not just to entice more people into our workforce, but for the financial survival of our society. Bermuda has come to a point where it needs a complete overhaul as our existing model is outdated and not functioning on par with our competitors.

Bermuda has all the tools to be successful; it just needs an elected government that executes more merely than effective election campaigns.

Every budget that we fail to balance means there is more debt heaped on to those who come after us. It should be our top priority to work towards unshackling future Bermudians from this national debt.

Dwayne Robinson, a former One Bermuda Alliance senator, is the party’s co-chair and the adopted candidate for Southampton East Central (Constituency 30)

• Dwayne Robinson, a former One Bermuda Alliance senator, is the party’s co-chair and the adopted candidate for Southampton East Central (Constituency 30)

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Published July 07, 2023 at 8:00 am (Updated July 07, 2023 at 8:09 am)

Has PLP not learnt from Great Recession?

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