Letter of the Day | Have you no heart, sir?
THE EDITOR, Madam ;
This is an open letter to Richard Byles, governor of the Bank of Jamaica
Dear Mr Byles,
I am shocked and angry at your most recent comments (August 21, 2023) cautioning businesses against excessive pay rises for employees as the country continues to grapple with inflation concerns. Only three months ago, on May 22, 2023, you defended the massive increases in salaries for the political class, in some cases up to 300 per cent, saying those increases would not affect the country’s finances. Sir, do you really believe what you have said?
And please do not make the trite and convenient excuse that there are only a few hundred members of parliament and councillors, so the impact of their massive increase will be inconsequential. There must be a higher logic and ethic by which you are governed. The wife of the prime minister, who is a successful real estate developer, has described her salary of over $1,000,000 per month as coming closer to a liveable wage. And I agree with her, a million dollars a month is about the right level of a liveable wage in Jamaica. But most Jamaicans earn less than $1,000,000 per year!
Have you no heart, sir? Are you so heartless that all you care about is protecting the political class and macroeconomic indicators? Do you place the comfort of the political class over improving the quality of life of the population? Where is the concern for human beings, the sense of morality which considers the larger good? Where is the balancing act which considers the stability of the macroeconomic foundations, and simultaneously the well-being of citizens?
EXPECT HARSH POLICIES
Ethics, let me remind you, is concerned with the larger good and taking decisions which promote the larger good, and in doing so takes account of multiple factors. What kind of society will we have when most people in this stable economic environment are poor or near poor?
Recall in 2016 when the Government increased the income tax threshold to $1.5m, a mere five per cent of the population benefited. This means that 95 per cent of the population was earning salaries below $1.5m.
But at least we now know where you stand. When the Bank of Jamaica’s monetary policies begin to hit us hard, then we will know that it is planned and intentional, and that the objective is to keep the poor, working poor, and struggling middle class in their places. We can now expect a set of harsh policies.
I wonder what your response will be when the downtrodden working and middle classes (if ever the middle class were to attain consciousness to act) take to the streets and demand justice.
It is a consistent playbook, also echoed by your boss, the minister of finance: massive salary increases to the political class represent far-reaching, necessary, and courageous policy moves, but a better deal for workers will reverse “all the gains we have made”. Whose gains? Your position is a profound example of cruelty and unconscionableness.
CANUTE S. THOMPSON, PHD
