Hylton urges tangible prosperity beyond fiscal metrics in Sectoral Debate

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Anthony Hylton, Opposition Spokesman on Trade, Industry and Global Logistics, contends the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) administration has settled into a pattern of lauding headline economic indicators. “It celebrates fiscal discipline. It celebrates stability. It celebrates the growth of Jamaica’s Net International Reserves. And while those things matter, and while macroeconomic discipline is necessary, the Jamaican people are not living inside spreadsheets,” said Hylton. He added that, “They are living in communities where food and fuel prices continue to rise, where wages struggle to keep pace with the cost of living, and where opportunities for upward mobility feel increasingly out of reach.”
He was speaking on Tuesday in the House of Representatives as he wound up his contribution to the Sectoral Debate. The Opposition spokesman said younger workers are starting to ask whether the country still holds enough promise to merit long-term personal investment, while numerous households find it hard just to keep day-to-day life on an even keel. “And so the question before this Honourable House is not merely whether the Government can balance accounts. The real question is whether the economy is producing prosperity that people can actually feel in their lives,” said Hylton. “Jamaicans cannot eat fiscal credibility,” he declared, adding that, “They cannot pay mortgages with macroeconomic statistics. And they cannot build businesses from press releases”. According to Hylton, the Jamaican people deserve more than mere stability management. “They deserve a serious national growth strategy capable of producing resilience, opportunity, productivity, and long-term prosperity,” he said.
Addressing the chamber, Hylton said the island’s geography, people, English-speaking labour pool and closeness to major consumer markets all count in its favour. “We sit astride one of the busiest shipping corridors in the world. We possess a globally recognised cultural influence. We have entrepreneurial people, strategic assets, and enormous untapped potential. But potential without strategy is merely an unrealised opportunity”. “That is the central indictment of this Budget (presented in March), and it is the central challenge I place before this Honourable House today,” Hylton said.
Syndicated from Jamaica Observer · originally published .
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