-Gov’t receives less due to stalled sugar divestment
(Jamaica Gleaner) The European Union (EU) has held on to €2 million (J$253 million), which it should have presented to Jamaica last Thursday, because of the Government’s failure to complete its divestment of the sugar industry.
Instead, the EU presented the Government with about J$700 million as part of its budgetary support for the sugar industry.
“This disbursement is a little less than what could have been expected. Roughly, €2 million is missing but there are hopes that by the end of the calendar year, you would receive those funds if the divestment proceeds,” Am-bassador Marco Mazzocchi Alemanni, head of the European Commission delegation in Jamaica, told government officials during a handover ceremony at Jamaica House.
In a quick response, Prime Minister Bruce Golding argued that the Government’s attempt to divest the sector was affected by the global financial meltdown and the depression that it has created in the capital market.
“But we haven’t given up. As a matter of fact we are encouraged that in reopening the bidding process we have received 14 bids that are being evaluated,” Golding said.
“The Government is very clear in its mind that the sugar assets must be privatised. We are not in a fire sale, we are not giving them away because we believe that they provide significant potential for investors,” Golding added as he expressed confidence that the divestment will be completed in short order.
In the meantime, Agricul-ture Minister Dr Christopher Tufton has dismissed claims that delay in the full handover of funds by the EU was the main reason the Government has not set a timeline for sugar workers to receive their redundancy payments.
“The redundancy payment is about J$2 billion, so that J$200 million (which the EU has withheld) would contribute but it would not address the problem in its totality,” Tufton told The Gleaner. He argued that the law gives the Government six months after the workers were sent home to make the redundancy payments and that deadline will be met.