The Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI) has warned that repeated increases in the national minimum wage could have wider knock-on effects across the economy, potentially driving up costs for businesses and consumers.
It also wants a stronger shift towards incentive-based pay systems linked to productivity.
Speaking at a press conference, BCCI president Paul Inniss said while the Chamber fully supported the principle that every working Barbadian should earn a livable wage, policymakers and businesses also needed to confront the unintended consequences that could flow from continuous upward adjustments in the statutory minimum wage.
“If you have a general increase in wages across the board, there is a cascading effect,” Inniss explained, noting that employees already earning above the minimum often expect corresponding increases.
“That creates a general increase in wage costs and those costs don’t operate in a vacuum.”
Pressure passed on
Inniss stressed that many businesses had no choice but to comply with the legislated increases, including the most recent adjustment, but said feedback from Chamber members – particularly in sectors such as retail and security services – suggested that higher labour costs were being felt throughout supply chains. In some cases, he said, the pressure was being passed on indirectly through contractual arrangements, as clients sought to cap spending while service providers struggled to absorb higher wage bills.
“We have received feedback about increased costs being transferred to customers and clients,” he said, adding that while the Chamber had not received reports from its members of workers’ hours being cut, some cost adjustments may be occurring further along the chain.
Against that backdrop, Inniss argued that Barbados needed a more mature national conversation about productivity and how wages were structured. While guaranteed wages were necessary to ensure basic standards of living, he cautioned that they could only go so far.
Incentivising pay
“We believe that incentive or incentivising pay – not only wage, but incentivising pay – is probably one of the options available to us as an economy,” he said, pointing to businesses that already combine base pay with performance-related incentives tied to productivity, targets and deliverables. Such systems, he said, allowed workers to earn more as businesses became more profitable, while avoiding a sole reliance on fixed wage increases.
Chairman of the BCCI’s Economic Advisory Committee Christopher Sambrano said the challenge for businesses was managing wage pressures alongside broader inflationary forces. He warned that a constant cycle of rising wages feeding into higher prices could exacerbate inflation if not carefully balanced.
“There is that tension,” Sambrano said, “but productivity is part of the solution.”
He argued that businesses could offset some of the wage pressures through better sourcing, improved systems, investment in technology and more efficient methodologies, including the use of artificial intelligence. While acknowledging that some costs would inevitably be passed on to consumers, he said the aim was to minimise that impact by driving efficiencies elsewhere.
Senior vice president of the BCCI, Paul Ashby, echoed those sentiments, noting that many Chamber members were already engaged in digital transformation initiatives aimed at improving efficiency. He said that while such investments carried upfront costs, they were also creating new types of jobs and enabling businesses to deliver goods and services more efficiently.
Caught off-guard
Addressing concerns that some businesses were caught off-guard by the timing of the latest increase, Inniss said the Chamber had been involved in earlier discussions on minimum wage adjustments through the Barbados Private Sector Association and was not surprised by Government’s decision. However, he acknowledged that the back-to-back nature of the increases had intensified pressure on businesses.
“What these policy positions do is inform how we continue doing business in Barbados,” he said.
“We can’t continue doing business the same way. We have to evolve.”
Inniss warned that if rising costs could not be passed on to consumers due to limits on what people could afford, businesses would be forced to find savings elsewhere to remain viable – a balancing act he said was essential to protecting jobs and sustaining economic activity.
“Nothing is in a vacuum,” he added. “We want our people to be able to live but we also want businesses to thrive.” ( CLM)
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