Jamaica's financial quandary resembles Japan more than Greece, says Oppenheimer Inc. managing director, Gregory Fisher.
Concurrently, Prime Minister Portia Simpson-Miller, who described herself as the "female Lula" – a reference to the transformative former Brazilian president, Luiz Ignácio Lula da Silva – raised the issue of the pending International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan agreement but gave no new information on the negotiations.
"The negotiated IMF agreement, taken by itself, will not solve our problems. It will require a set of medium term reforms that will help to stabilise the macroeconomic situation and reduce anxiety and uncertainty," Simpson Miller said Tuesday night at the opening of the Jamaica Stock Exchange Investments and Capital Markets Conference 2013 in Kingston.
"Yes the IMF is important, but it is dependent on us to get it right and move this country forward," she said.
Fisher's comparison of Jamaica with Japan, the world’s third largest economy, ostensibly aims to build a positive outlook for Jamaica, which is currently mired in uncertainty attributable to the absence of an IMF agreement.
"My ongoing annoyance is with the litany of economists comparing Jamaica to Greece. I am tired of it," he told the conference.
"I am very sick of the analogy between Jamaica and Greece because the truth of the matter is that both countries have very little in common," Fisher said.
He said three nations are among the world's most indebted but that Japan has more similarities, including lost decades of growth.
"Both Japan and Jamaica suffer from lack of economic growth. Both countries have high debt to gross domestic product ratios, but Japan takes first place in that category, Fisher said.
“Both countries are embedded in deep seated traditions. Both countries have governments that truly care about the welfare of its people. Both countries have experienced ... devastation caused by natural cataclysmic events," he added.
Fisher said both Jamaica and Japan require a realignment of economic ratios, but that Japan has the luxury of time to print money while offering a low inflationary environment. Jamaica, on the other hand, requires "nasty medicine" to survive.
"A quick injection is exactly what the critically ill patient of the Jamaican economy needs to survive," he said.
"It is time that government makes the life saving choices that they have begun to implement. But it’s time for the people of this great land to get behind their elected leaders and fully understand the dire consequences of not doing anything," Fisher said.
A combination of capital spending on hotel projects, for instance, along with austerity measures are needed, he added.
Oppenheimer is also a main sponsor of the JSE conference, which is staged annually in January.
[email protected]
Concurrently, Prime Minister Portia Simpson-Miller, who described herself as the "female Lula" – a reference to the transformative former Brazilian president, Luiz Ignácio Lula da Silva – raised the issue of the pending International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan agreement but gave no new information on the negotiations.
"The negotiated IMF agreement, taken by itself, will not solve our problems. It will require a set of medium term reforms that will help to stabilise the macroeconomic situation and reduce anxiety and uncertainty," Simpson Miller said Tuesday night at the opening of the Jamaica Stock Exchange Investments and Capital Markets Conference 2013 in Kingston.
"Yes the IMF is important, but it is dependent on us to get it right and move this country forward," she said.
Fisher's comparison of Jamaica with Japan, the world’s third largest economy, ostensibly aims to build a positive outlook for Jamaica, which is currently mired in uncertainty attributable to the absence of an IMF agreement.
"My ongoing annoyance is with the litany of economists comparing Jamaica to Greece. I am tired of it," he told the conference.
"I am very sick of the analogy between Jamaica and Greece because the truth of the matter is that both countries have very little in common," Fisher said.
He said three nations are among the world's most indebted but that Japan has more similarities, including lost decades of growth.
"Both Japan and Jamaica suffer from lack of economic growth. Both countries have high debt to gross domestic product ratios, but Japan takes first place in that category, Fisher said.
“Both countries are embedded in deep seated traditions. Both countries have governments that truly care about the welfare of its people. Both countries have experienced ... devastation caused by natural cataclysmic events," he added.
Fisher said both Jamaica and Japan require a realignment of economic ratios, but that Japan has the luxury of time to print money while offering a low inflationary environment. Jamaica, on the other hand, requires "nasty medicine" to survive.
"A quick injection is exactly what the critically ill patient of the Jamaican economy needs to survive," he said.
"It is time that government makes the life saving choices that they have begun to implement. But it’s time for the people of this great land to get behind their elected leaders and fully understand the dire consequences of not doing anything," Fisher said.
A combination of capital spending on hotel projects, for instance, along with austerity measures are needed, he added.
Oppenheimer is also a main sponsor of the JSE conference, which is staged annually in January.
[email protected]


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