Quantcast
Channel: Jamaica Observer
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 9214

Gov’t must help us help ourselves

$
0
0
Dear Editor,

Following the South Central St Catherine constituency conference, convened this past Sunday, I feel compelled to share with the wider public some of the observations I made in addressing my constituents. There is no doubt in my mind that the matters are as relevant to the society as a whole, as they were to those in attendance.

The conference took place against a backdrop of chronic levels of unemployment, especially among the nation's youth, unprecedented levels of social despondence and hopelessness, and, of course, the unrelenting crime monster. Shocking it is that with as few as 13 days gone in the new calendar year, some 32 lives have been snuffed out by criminal elements.

We cannot disregard the many compelling studies that show a very strong positive correlation between high levels of crime and high levels of unemployment and an overall lack of economic opportunities. No well-thinking person can deny that the levels of crime and social disorder in this country are heavily influenced by the extreme economic and social hardship that have been visited upon the people. Where there is significant breakdown in home and family life, a lack of economic opportunities, limited access to education, and inadequate social intervention, criminality is likely to flourish.

If the Statistical Institute's most recent labour market survey is anything to go by, there is little doubt that at an unemployment rate of just about 40 per cent among the 17-35 age group, we are courting disaster. The much-touted JEEP programme has delivered significantly less than it promised. Those who supported the Government with their votes following promises of jobs and other economic benefits have quickly come to realise that they have been fooled.

Instead of jobs and economic progress, they are now engulfed by hopelessness and despair. It is this disappointment that is perhaps contributing to the revolting incidents of crime. I have to interact on a daily basis with constituents and their dependents who are now teetering at the brink.

Many have attended universities or have invested in other educational programmes and are now certified, but unable to find jobs. Of those who are currently employed, there is a growing cohort of working poor who feel just as hopeless because they have to spend so much more on basic amenities, while receiving little or no increase in their earnings. Not to be left out are those being laid off or otherwise displaced due to the poor performance of the economy and the contraction in business volume being suffered by their employer.

For our part, we in the Opposition have put on the table at least one ready-to-implement solution. The fast-tracking of development approvals stands to have such a catalytic effect on the construction sector that it would immediately put hundreds of our people, many of whom are low-skilled, to work. It is time the government puts its shoulders to the wheels and engage in the kind of policy engineering that will allow us to do more for the people we serve.

A programme of austerity will enable us to manoeuvre the fiscal accounts, but it will not generate the levels of growth we need so desperately at this time.

Andrew Wheatley

Opposition spokesman

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 9214

Trending Articles