An interview with OECS Director-General, Dr Vaughan Lewis
The OECS: making 'small is beautiful' come true
Ask any politician in the smaller Caribbean island states what
is the most effective regional organisation and you will discover that, without
hesitation, they all mention the OECS. The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean
States certainly seems to live up to Schumadher's famous adage that 'small is
beautiful'. Set up under the 1981 Treaty of Basseterre, its membership today
consists of eight small island states and territories - Antigua & Barbuda,
the British Virgin Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, St Kitts & Nevis,
St Lucia and St Vincent & the Grenadines. Over the past 13 years it has
succeeded in forming a solid and active sub region within the wider Caribbean.
Dr Lewis from St Lucia has been the widely respected Director-General of this
body since 1982. In an interview with The Courier at his headquarters near
Castries, he puts into perspective the many challenges which have suddenly
emerged to confront the OECS Member States. Political union may be off the
agenda for the time being but, in his view, enhanced domestic harmonisation,
going hand in hand with closer cooperation in the international arena, are vital
for survival at a time when protection has fallen away.
· Dr. Lewis, most politicians
here seem to agree that, among all the Caribbean regional organisations, the
OECS is one of the most effective. What are the specific reasons behind the
relative success of OECS regional integration? Is it because the countries are
smaller, because they are more or less at the same [eve/, that they find it
easier to work together or what?
- Well, part of it has to do with the fact that the OECS was
founded on the basis of a certain defensiveness, if I can put it that way. It
was organised originally as the West Indies Associated States Council of
Ministers after the Federation of 1958 was dissolved. The dissolution of that
Federation left us with a number of functional organisations, in particular our
Supreme Court, our monetary system - what was then the Eastern Caribbean
Currency Authority - which included Barbados, and the Directorate of Civil
Aviation, which is responsible for the management of civil aviation,
telecommunications and navigation activities in the region. When the Federation
broke up, and as the other countries - Barbados in particular - became
independent, it was necessary to hold together the assets which I have just
mentioned. And so, in a sense, the foundations of the OECS are our bank, our
judicial system and our Directorate of Civil Aviation to which, over the years
we have added a number of other institutions. In addition, it was necessary to
preserve our external economic relations system, particularly the protection of
our agricultural commodities - sugar and then bananas. To do this, we
established a number of trade commissioner-ships. When the OECS was formally
established, these became high commissonerships - in other words, we established
embassies in the UK and Canada, countries with which we had a preferential
relationship at the time.
We also had to try to ensure that we had some counterbalance to
the larger Caribbean countries. Once the Caribbean Free Trade Area had been
formed, our governments felt it necessary to organise the Eastern Caribbean
Common Market system. This was in order to protect the interests of what were
then seen as the less-developed countries of the English speaking Caribbean and
to strengthen our capacity to operate within CARICOM. It was a way of giving us
viability within the larger system.
From that essentially defensive starting point, and particularly
since the organisation of the OECS in 1981, we have moved towards a more
positive, activist approach. We have substantially widened the sphere of
functional cooperation in areas such as education, health, fisheries, export
development and agricultural diversification. And we have also given ourselves a
more significant profile in international relations. The West Indies Associated
States Council of Ministers, the institution that was the forerunner to the
OECS, did not have international personality but the OECS does. The governments
found it necessary to give greater prominence to the sphere of external economic
relations. This, of course, was reinforced when we joined the ACP Group. The
OECS secretariat had the job of dealing with the regional allocations under the
various Lomonventions. And we are taking a very active role in that today. We
have projects under Lomelating, in particular, to export development,
agriculture and education. So the OECS has moved from a defensive to a more
active stance.
Finally, I agree that the fact we are smaller, and have a
greater sense of cohesion than one might expect in a larger grouping, gives us
some degree of strength. Unlike CARICOM, the OECS has a strong political
component. It is not a system based on political integration or unification, but
there is a certain basis of political understanding that underpins the
organisation and allows us to function perhaps in a more direct way than some
other regional organisations.
· One of the weaknesses of
CARICOM that is frequently identified is the difficulty in translating political
decisions into concrete action. It appears that the OECS suffers less from this
problem than the larger organisations.
- Of course, that difficulty faces all regional organisations to
some extent but I think perhaps the difference in our case, which has meant that
it is less of a problem, is that in the areas of functional cooperation that we
deal with, the governments have felt that there was more at stake. There was a
very direct interest in working together to acquire new assets or to preserve
those that we had. There was more at stake for us, for example, in trying to
undertake major education projects under the Lomonvention. The same is true
of export development. We do not have the substantial infrastructure for
promoting investment and exports that the larger Caribbean countries have. So
there was a greater material interest in ensuring that we could undertake
something on a regional basis that worked. It was a question of ensuring our
viability. To illustrate the point, our Export Development Agency is currently
staging an exhibition in Grenada entitled OECS EXPO-1994. This is designed to
demonstrate what the OECS can do collectively, what volumes it can produce, the
quality of the goods on offer and so on.
· Continuing on this theme of
translating good intentions into deeds, what are your views on the fate of the
famous cruiseship tax? It was agreed by everyone but it appears that on/y St
Lucia implemented it That doesn't seem to be a very good advertisement for
Caribbean solidarity.
- As I said, that sort of thing is not peculiar in economic
integration systems. Countries break ranks and are more prone to do so at a time
like this when they are searching for new business and struggling to adapt their
structures.
Having said that, there is a belief that, in the longer term,
revenue has to be generated to help repay the loans that have been taken out for
investment in tourism facilities (notably the ports) and to protect the marine
environment, which is our key tourism asset. It is only right that the resources
should come from the enterprises which benefit from these assets. It is not yet
clear that all the cruiseship companies understand this. But we believe that
progress is being made and that we will eventually find common ground as to what
should be expected of the industry. The OECS countries are currently discussing
a project with the World Bank on solid waste management, which relates to the
disposal of cruiseship wastes. We don't want our Caribbean Sea to end up like
the Mediterranean. A project like this, which would involve a contribution from
the cruise companies, makes great sense and I think they will come to understand
the importance of what we are trying to do.
· You stressed earlier the
political role of the OECS. Is political union, as such, still an official
objective?
- We may as well speak frankly. I think that political union has
run aground to some extent. Many people, myself included, felt that there was a
window of opportunity in the 1980s for closer integration. We went through a
process of in-depth consultation, in particular through the so-called regional
constituent assemblies which were composed of all the interest groups and
political parties in our sub-region. Although we pushed it fairly hard, I think
some of the momentum was lost when we reached the point of having to stage
referendums. Referendums are a good thing in democratic systems but they can
also pose problems, as you know only too well in Europe. Our political
leadership came to realise the difficulties involved, particularly given the
form of political organisation that we currently have. There would have to be a
referendum in each country for the people to decide whether they wanted
political integration. There would also need to be a referendum to decide on the
nature of the new constitution. Each element would have to be approved - by a
weighted majority of two-thirds, three-fifths or three-quarters in both houses
(House of Assembly and Senate) of every national parliament before the process
was completed. With so many elements in our constitutions needing to be changed
in order to achieve unification, the process was bound to be extremely prolonged
and I think this caused some of the political leadership to hesitate. There was
also the fact, of course, that with six to eight countries involved, there was
always an election coming up in one or other of them. As you know, elections get
top priority in democratic systems and political union ended up on the
back-burner.
· You seem to be talking here of
a top-down process. Isn't political union a subject that should be driven from
the bottom-up?
- That isn't really the way it happened. The first initiative
taken by the countries was the establishment of the regional constituent
assemblies - there were four, one in each of the Windward Islands - but that was
preceded by a series of consultations on the issue in the various countries. And
the assemblies brought together all the interest groups as well as the political
parties. They were given free reign and their proceedings were broadcast on
television for a whole week.
· Now you seem to be talking
about the four Wind ward Islands and not the OECS as a whole.
- That is because there was a point at which Antigua and St
Kitts decided that they could not go forward with political union and the four
Windward Islands chose to take it further. There was a certain logic in that -
they were all islands that were deeply concerned about the future of the banana
industry which largely dominates their economies. What I would say is this:
There is still a realisation that it is only through some form of closer
integration and policy harmonisation that we can create a viable basis for
economic activity in the modem world, particularly given the changes in the
international environment. The approach governments are now taking is to place
more emphasis on achieving what is called the OECS single market. In other words
to rid the subregion of the remaining tariff and non-tariff barriers, to allow
greater freedom of movement of people and to create a system including, for
example, a stock exchange, which will allow for the free movement of capital.
· In other words, along the
lines being followed by the European Union, although you already have a common
curreny.
- Yes. The slight difference is that we have a common currency
and that has enabled us to take initiatives in respect of the banking system for
example; a home mortgage banking system throughout the area. It also further
enhances the possibilities for free movement of capital and allows us to move on
to estabilishing a stock exchange. These are the kinds of issues that are being
emphasised, although there is also the perception that to pursue them
effectively we need a greater degree of policy harmonisation and political
commitment.
· What do you say to the
criticism, often voiced by politicians in the smaller islands, that the burden
of servicing all the regional and international organisations they belong to is
too heavy? After all, in addition to the OECS, you also have CARICOM, the ACS,
the OAS and indeed the ACP Group. Very often, it is the same problems that are
discussed in all these groupings and it is only the number of participants that
varies.
- It is certainly true that the limited human and financial
resources at our disposal do not allow for very active participation in the
various regional institutions, not to mention international bodies, to which we
are committed. Nonetheless, I think there is the feeling that a number of them -
certainly the OECS, CARICOM and the Commonwealth - are crucial to our viability
and to our activity in international affairs.
There is also a degree of uncertainty stemming from the fact
that we are having to prepare for a kind of economic adjustment. We have the
development of the European single market, the changes that are taking place in
the banana industry, the estabilishment of NAFTA and the general liberalisation
of trade to contend with. We are witnessing the removal of the protectionism
under which we have functioned for so many years. It is understood that we have
to prepare for that and there is a view that resources have to be conserved for
investment in activities related to economic adjustment, without our having to
borrow too extensively. And so l think our countries are beginning to look again
at the kinds of institutions that they ought to belong to. Priority is given to
the regional institutions but, at the same time, it is understood that we derive
benefits from organisations like the Commonwealth, and that we need to preserve
our membership of them. There are institutions now coming on to the scene like
the proposed Association of Caribbean Stat" which the governments are looking at
closely. There are institutions like SAILOR, the Latin American Economic System.
Most OECS countries are not members of this but we obviously have some interest
in the wider sphere of Latin American cooperation.
It is clearly the case that many countries have difficulties in
functioning effectively in all the different organisations. They have to decide
which ones should be given priority - and I think it is fair to say that the
OECS ranks quite highly, especially if one looks at it in terms of the personnel
they allow us to have.
· Looking at it from the level
of the OECS sub-region, are you going to be able to survive in the changing
global environment without some form of protection? One hears from many
quarters, for example, that the private sector, with its mercantile as opposed
to production-oriented mentality, is lacking in entrepreneurship and is not
geared towards taking risks.
- In a sense, the changes that are happening have come upon us
quite suddenly. The OECS countries have never really had a substantial
manufacturing system. We did start, within the framework of CARICOM, on some
forms of industrial development, mainly with a view to exporting to the larger
CARICOM states. Up until the early 1980s, that process was going quite well.
Countries like Antigua, St Kitts and St Lucia, for example, began to develop an
industrial infrastructure and to export goods to Trinidad, Jamaica and, to a
lesser extent, Barbados.
Then the economies of the larger countries - Trinidad, Jamaica
and Guyana - went into decline and the markets started to disappear. There were
two reasons for this. First, in order to protect themselves, some of the larger
countries put up protective barriers - quotas, licensing systems and so on.
Second, they simply did not have the resources to purchase the goods. And so the
whole basis on which CARICOM was built as far as we were concerned, which was to
provide a market for our exports, while the larger countries themselves
increasingly exported to the rest of the world, began to disappear in the 1980s.
And the infrastructure for industrialisation that we had begun to develop was
damaged in the process. That set us back and left us unprepared for the largely
unforeseen events of more recent times - that is to say, the substantial
liberalisation of international economic relations. Whether we like it or not,
that process is going ahead, particularly here in the westerm hemisphere. We see
it in the NAFTA agreement between the USA, Canada and Mexico, and it is
happening increasingly in South America as well. America is effectively forcing
our own protective systems out of existence. As you know, the tariffs in CARICOM
are progressively being reduced. And we are doing this at a time when the
circumstances are not particularly favourable to us - when our agricultural
commodities, which have always had international or, to be more accurate,
'metropolitan' protection, are themselves under attack. So the climate in
general is not very good for the kind of economic adjustment that we, and in
particular our private sectors, need to undertake to survive in the future. This
has inevitably caused anxiety but I think there is a realisation that the
progressive liberalisation of global economic relations is inevitable, that that
process obviously includes the Caribbean, and that we will therefore have to
find a way of dealing with it.
· Time and again in the
Caribbean you seem to stumble upon the problem of management at all levels. With
this in mind, what are your feelings about the banana industry and about its
prospects for survival in a commercial setting?
- What the governments have tried to do here is to tackle a
future problem before it actually arises. Earlier discussions about the
management and commercialisation of the banana industry really began in
anticipation of the changes brought about by the European Single Market. I
believe that there is sufficient capacity within the Windward Islands and
certainly within the wider Caribbean for the proper commercial management of the
banana industry. The people of the Windward Islands have tremendous experience
in bananas and I am sure that we have a sufficient human resource base to manage
the industry. The key thing is to put greater emphasis on the commercial
environment - the importance of the market in determining policy. Up to now, the
preferential system has been the key policy determinant but that has now to be
adjusted. In some respects, the industry's main problem is not the commercial
management or marketing aspect, although that needs to be dealt with, but rather
the domestic management. To some extent, the banana sector suffers from the same
problem that affects all other industries and systems in these islands, namely
the shortage of capable middle management. This is a crucial element in keeping
the systems running. Some emphasis is being put on that now in the OECS
generally in our educational systems. Of course, there also has to be a proper
understanding of what the international market requires. For many years we have
been operating, not just under commercial protection, but also under a form of
institutionalised British protection. Now it is recognised that, with increasing
liberalisation, we need independent producers to have a more profound
understanding of the commercial aspects. Our market is no longer restricted to
the UK - it is Europe as well - and that means we need a greater degree of
participation in the marketing and promotion of our bananas, and even in the
shipping arrangements. Discussions about this are currently under way. We need
to develop new skills in this area because, even though the industry is nearly
50 years old, we have never really been involved in the international marketing
side of it.
· To conclude, how optimistic
are you about the future of the region, given what you say about the ending of
the benefits of the protectionist era?
- I believe there are substantial problems ahead of us. These
are both domestic and, of course, international in character. The fact that our
economies have always been open means that all the trends in the international
economic arena have a speedy impact on our domestic systems. Although we have
had formal protection in certain sectors, overall our economies feel the effects
of changes in the international system very quickly. But we have not developed
the instruments for dealing with the international economy. As I said earlier,
we have relied on the institutional protection of the United Kingdom but that
has now gone and we need to develop our own instruments instead. What this
points to, of course, is a greater degree of collaboration. I say this
particularly for the OECS but I believe it is important for CARICOM as well.
There must be closer collaboration between countries in the
whole business of international negotiations, international marketing,
international exports and international investment. We need to have a more
collective use of the human resources at our disposal and this is hard to
organise. The countries are sovereign. They believe themselves to have
particular interests which need protection. But more and more we find, as we are
confronted with NAFTA, the European single market and so on, that the problems
facing us are largely the same ones. So l think a greater degree of
collaboration in the international sphere is what our governments need to
concentrate on right now.
They also need to focus on closer harmonisation at the domestic
level, particularly in the areas of monetary and general macro-economic policy.
When we were colonies, we had a greater degree of macro-economic harmony -
because the British ran us - than we have today. We need to work together to
build up our capacity to supply quality products in sufficient volume. That
means, for example, coordinating the development of our human resource base. We
need a greater emphasis on creating region-wide companies producing goods of a
consistent high standard, so that we can make our impact on the international
system.
The challenge is, therefore, twofold: domestic harmonisation and
working much more closely together in the international sphere. I believe those
two approaches should take us through the foreseeable future. Our problem today
is in finding ways to create institutions that will allow us to achieve this.
There is a sense that our established integration systems are not completely up
to the task. They have not moved with developments in the international economy.
That was something that emerged from the report of the West Indian Commission
with which you may be familiar.
So we need new instruments. What I am not sure about is whether
our governments have come to terms with what is required to create these new
instruments and to have them work properly.
Interview by Roger De
Backer