Integrity Commission on shaky groundConclusionRe-cap
Last week we ended the column with the offices listed in Schedule I to the act, the holders of which must automatically file with the Integrity Commission, declarations of their income, assets and liabilities of themselves, their spouses and minor unmarried children by June 30 of the following year.
Staggering increase in external debt
Bad news
The country’s stock of external public and publicly guaranteed debt rose by 20.3 per cent to US$804 million from the end of September 2007 to the end of September 2008.
On the line: Banks DIH Annual Report
Banks DIH, the giant food and beverage company will be holding its 53rd annual general meeting on Saturday, January 17, 2009, close to four months following the end of its financial year of September 30, 2008.
Our world in 2009
Introduction
Certainly the most authoritative publication which predicts the grand occasions and developments of the following year is the widely circulated Economist, published in the UK.
Introduction
Today’s Business Page looks back not over the past year but to some fifteen years ago when on January 8, 1994, Ram & McRae (then Christopher L.
Who’s left now?
Conclusion
The death of socialism
Business Page last week suggested that amidst the cataclysmic dislocation to have rocked the capitalist world first manifested in the housing market in the United States, the response of the governments in the developed market economies is leading to a fundamental rethink of the role of ideology, and in the context of Guyana, raised the question playing on the word ‘left.’
Who’s left now?
The crisis facing the world economy is leading to a fundamental rethink of the role of ideology and the place of the ‘market’ in economic development.
Response to a crisis
Introduction
Today’s column looks at some of the ironies and contradictions in the response to what started as a domestic crisis in the mortgage sector in the US and the prospects for the developing countries arising out of the Obama victory.
Adjustment time in Trinidad and Tobago
Introduction
It has been a challenging week for Trinidad and Tobago where crime seems to dominate the headlines in the dailies.
David – a Goliath of a man
David de Caires was very clear on what Business Page was about – the dissemination of financial and economic information and discussion of ideas and issues aimed at enhancing the business culture and environment.
Curbing corruption: The Corruption Perception IndexConclusion
Introduction
Today we conclude this three-part article arising out of the publication of the 2008 Corruption Perception Index of Transparency International which ranked Guyana at a lowly 126 out of a total of 180 countries surveyed, with a score of 2.6 out of 10.
Curbing Corruption – The Corruption Perception Index
Introduction
Not unexpectedly, the Government has taken issue with the ranking accorded Guyana in the Transparency International (TI) Index for 2008 announced late last month.
Died on a Monday, exhumed on a Wednesday and born on a Friday: The rescue of a rescue package
It takes going back to the childhood nursery rhyme to capture the events of the past week in the United States of America.
A look at the Trinidad and Tobago Budget 2008-09
It was like a baptism of heat for new Minister of Finance Karen Nunez-Tesheira of the twin island state of Trinidad and Tobago as she presented the first budget of the re-elected Patrick Manning government and more personally, her first since her surprise appointment as the country’s first female Minister of Finance.
Crisis in the USA: Is America too big to fail?
September has been a disastrous month for the US whose leading presidential candidates like to refer to it jarringly as the greatest country on earth.
Coping with the EPA
Introduction
Over the strident objections of President Jagdeo the Caribbean countries and the Dominican Republic will sign the Cariforum-EC Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) some time within the next few weeks.
The Auditor General’s report for 2006
(Continued)
UpdateIn the first part of this review (BP 24.8.08) of the Auditor General’s report for 2006 we examined the several statutory obligations of the Audit Office under the constitution and several other statutes.