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Dem senator slams IMF agreement as ‘panic management’

Opposition senator Ryan Walters has accused the government of sending mixed signals on the economy, questioning why Barbados is entering a new International Monetary Fund (IMF) stand-by arrangement despite repeated assurances of strong economic performance.

Labeling the move as “panic management” that contradicts official claims of a booming economy, Senator Walters, the Democratic Labour Party shadow minister on finance and economic affairs, questioned the transparency of the administration’s economic reporting. 

He argued that the government has spent years painting a glowing picture of economic strength while simultaneously preparing the country for another IMF-backed intervention.

“Time and time again, Barbadians have been told that the economy is booming,” Senator Walters said in a press statement. “So naturally, Bajans are now asking a simple question: If everything is supposedly so strong, why is government suddenly rushing back to the International Monetary Fund for another 36-month arrangement?”

The statement comes on the heels of the Mottley administration’s entry into a three-year stand-by precautionary arrangement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for US$260m ($520m) as insurance, should future external economic shocks warrant.

The DLP lawmaker emphasised that stand-by arrangements are traditionally reserved for countries facing economic stress or balance of payments concerns, noting that Barbados previously utilised such facilities during economic crises in 1981 and 1991.

But the proposed three-year timeline is twice as long as those historical 18-month agreements, raising serious alarms about the true state of the island’s finances, he said.

“Let us stop pretending this is merely some innocent ‘standby insurance policy,’” said Senator Walters, dismissing the administration’s framing of the deal. “A government would not enter a three-year IMF arrangement tied to fiscal discipline, debt targets, structural reforms and macroeconomic management purporting to be ‘proactive’. This feels far less like precaution and far more like panic management.”

He expressed deep concern for ordinary citizens, warning that the return of IMF oversight typically signals tighter spending, delayed relief, pressure on public services, increased utility rates, and new fees for a public already grappling with the high cost of living.

Despite official rhetoric suggesting Barbados had moved beyond IMF dependence, the country’s financial obligations remain massive, Senator Walters said. He pointed to parliamentary estimates for 2026/2027 that Barbados still owed $864 million to the IMF as of late 2025, with total borrowing exceeding $1.1 billion.

The DLP is also questioning the substantial $520 million sum being sought under this new arrangement, comparing it to the $685 million borrowed during the height of the global COVID-19 pandemic.

“Are we left to believe that the government is preparing for another shutdown of the economy to that magnitude?” Senator Walters asked. “Calling it a ‘stand-by arrangement’ does not change the reality of what it is: an IMF programme. The language may have changed. The branding may have changed. But the fundamentals remain the same.”

The opposition senator suggested that underlying structural weaknesses – including alarming debt levels, slowing economic growth even during peak tourism seasons, foreign exchange pressures, stagnant tourism numbers, and lagging foreign direct investment – were the real drivers behind the sudden deal.

“Bajans should pay very close attention whenever a government that claims the economy is ‘excellent’ suddenly feels the need to secure a 36-month IMF safety net,” Senator Walters said. “Because this does not project confidence. It projects concern. It projects uncertainty. And moreover, it projects panic.”

 (RR)

The post Dem senator slams IMF agreement as ‘panic management’ appeared first on Barbados Today.

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