Share:

Jamaica Ripe For Business as Diaspora Conference Underway

KINGSTON, Jamaica  – Industry, Investment and Commerce Minister, Aubyn Hill, Monday said that Jamaica is one of the most attractive investment destinations in the Caribbean and is urging more diaspora members to do business in the country.

diaspjaHill addressing a panel discussion on the topic ‘Jamaica Open for Business: Transforming Investment and Enterprise in Jamaica through Diaspora Engagement’ cited the stability of the local currency as a key reason to invest in the island.

“There is no foreign exchange control in Jamaica. Clean money comes in and clean money goes out,” he told th discussion at the 10th Biennial Jamaica Diaspora Conference being held at the Montego Bay Convention Centre in St. James, north-west of here.

Hill said that the fact that the Government has been able to undertake infrastructure development and deliver critical services, particularly during the pandemic, without raising taxes, speaks to the strength of the economy, he said.

“We’ve gone through a pandemic where we had to spend J$100 billion (One Jamaica dollar=US$0.008 cents) of Jamaican money that we didn’t plan to spend and yet we didn’t borrow any new money and we didn’t raise taxes.

“In fact, for the last eight years…what we have done with taxes is cut them. We cut the payroll tax twice and cut VAT (value-added tax) once,” Hill said, adding that the infrastructure buildout, real estate potential and Jamaica’s position as the logistics hub of the Caribbean also makes the country attractive to investors.

“This is where your money should be. Come to Jamaica,” Hill said.

The chief executive officer of GraceKennedy Financial Group, Grace Burnett, said the highly productive and English-speaking talent pool is a major reason Jamaica is open for business, noting “our literacy rate is well over 92 per cent and we have a very stable democracy.

“When you look at some of the endorsements we have received from overseas institutions on ease of doing business and how we are performing as an economy, we have a very stable, strong regulatory framework and very supportive environment for starting a business and growing a business,” she explained.

The managing director of JN Fund Managers at JN Group, Brando Hayden, explained that the risk management and infrastructure necessary to give investors comfort is strongly in place.

“When you come to Jamaica, not only are we open for business, your investment or your participation is backed up by solid infrastructure.

“We have the Jamaica Central Securities Depository and when you invest through the stock market, whether it is a bond, a stock and they also do private equity and private debt, you know there is solid record for your investment. From the depository, you know exactly how much you have and you get your dividend payments,” Hayden said.

The chief executive officer of VM Finance Limited and VM Overseas Offices at the VM Group, Leighton Smith,  said that Jamaica’s economic stability, strategic location, strength of the financial sector, skilled workforce and diverse investment opportunities are factors that make Jamaica attractive to investors.

“What makes Jamaica the perfect landscape is when we think of the trade policies that exist… in terms of being the strategic location, which affords the opportunity to gain access to markets – CARICOM and the United States,” Smith said.

Meanwhile, the organisers of the conference, say that it is turining out to be one of the largest ever.

They said more than 1,100 people in the diaspora and on the island had registered to attend the conference, which exceeds the target of 1,000 set by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade.

“This is our largest number of registrants ever, our largest number of sponsors ever, it is our largest marketplace ever”, said  Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade MInister, Kamina Johnson Smith.

She told the welcoming ceremony that she felt “really moved to celebrate that this continued growing and expanded support of movement by our nationals at home and abroad is something that we can all collectively be proud o.

“You reflect the strong bonds that exists between Jamaicans and our homeland wherever we go. You demonstrate the desire to further strengthen the partnership with our homeland and to see how together we can build wealth, we can build community and build partnerships,”  she said.

The conference , which ends on Wednesday is the signature biennial global forum that connects Jamaicans and persons of Jamaican descent living across the globe, with the aim of strengthening linkages and building alliances that will fuel Jamaica’s growth and development on the world stage.

Johnson Smith encouraged delegates to engage with the activities set to take place throughout the conference, “which respond to expressed areas of interest from you,” adding that ““they are aligned with the four core goals of national development, [and] Jamaica’s agenda 2030 and over the next four days we want you to participate actively in the sessions.”

Minister of State with responsibility for Diaspora Affairs, Alando Terrelonge, in emphasiing  the significance of the conference, said that it unites Jamaicans living on the island with “our extended family from across the world.”

The event is being held under the theme ‘United for Jamaica’s Transformation: Fostering Peace, Productivity and Youth Empowerment’ and Terrelonge said the “highlights our collective dedication to building a better Jamaica…it calls on all Jamaicans, regardless of their current location, to join hands in shaping the future of our beloved country”.

Caribbean Today Logo

Contact Us

9020 Sw 152nd St
Palmetto Bay, Florida 33157-1928, US
  (305) 238-2868