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Monday, May 19, 2025

Winston Dookeran’s plea to politicians–Close the gap between promises and action

by

IRA MATHUR
547 days ago
20231119

IRA MATH­UR

On In­ter­na­tion­al Men’s Day this Sun­day, Book­shelf spot­lights a book by that rare crea­ture, a politi­cian whose in­tegri­ty is in­tact and who un­stint­ing­ly ad­vo­cates for the peo­ple of this coun­try.

Pro­fes­sor Win­ston Dook­er­an, for­mer Fi­nance Min­is­ter and Gov­er­nor of the Cen­tral Bank, a grad­u­ate of the Lon­don School of Eco­nom­ics and Po­lit­i­cal Sci­ence and Uni­ver­si­ty of Man­i­to­ba, Fel­low and Schol­ar at Har­vard and the Unit­ed Na­tions Uni­ver­si­ty (Helsin­ki), for­mer Pro­fes­sor at the In­sti­tute of In­ter­na­tion­al Re­la­tions of UWI, and the Uni­ver­si­ty of Toron­to is that states­man amidst us.

Dook­er­an, as an aca­d­e­m­ic, tech­no­crat and politi­cian, us­es all his plat­forms to bridge the gap be­tween the­o­ry and po­lit­i­cal prac­tice, to en­cour­age politi­cians to de­liv­er promis­es, and has nev­er played to the gallery for pop­u­lar­i­ty in a po­lit­i­cal land­scape that sub­sti­tutes race for ide­ol­o­gy. Fo­cussed on poli­cies over per­son­al­i­ties, he has not pan­dered to base racial pol­i­tics, nev­er wa­vered from is­sues close to his heart, mi­cro and macro-pover­ty, ill-health, un­em­ploy­ment, ed­u­ca­tion, health, in­fra­struc­ture, the de­vel­op­ment of our small is­land state, and our re­gion, in the best in­ter­ests of T&T, a land he clear­ly loves, and has worked for all his life.

Dook­er­an, a re­cip­i­ent of T&T’s high­est ho­n­our, the Or­der of the Re­pub­lic of T&T in Eco­nom­ics, and In­dia’s pres­ti­gious over­seas award, the Pravasi Bharatiya Sam­man (PB­SA) for mer­i­to­ri­ous achieve­ments in pub­lic ser­vice, launched his new book last week - Re­set­ting Caribbean Pol­i­cy Analy­sis in the Af­ter­math of the COVID-19 Pan­dem­ic.

The book, which reads like a pas­sion­ate plea for politi­cians to put their promis­es in­to eco­nom­ic and in­sti­tu­tion­al ac­tion and to have a long vi­sion, comes as a balm and an ad­vo­cate to the pop­u­la­tion of T&T who for years has been beat­en down by two-par­ty pol­i­tics of race, hostage to gen­er­a­tions of un­der­world em­ploy­ment, em­bed­ded gang and gun crime.

Dook­er­an told his au­di­ence at the launch at the Cen­tral Bank Au­di­to­ri­um that his book is “not a roadmap, but a vi­sion in the tun­nel that sees a light at the end.”

It’s what T&T des­per­ate­ly needs: a road map on “in­sti­tu­tion­al change” to end the “en­dem­ic in­er­tia that ex­ists to­day, and the false promis­es built on un­sta­ble premis­es and about do­ing some­thing Dook­er­an says the coun­try des­per­ate­ly needs, “link­ing the log­ic of eco­nom­ics with the log­ic of pol­i­tics.”

Dook­er­an traced the path to­wards this new book from his pre­vi­ous work, The Caribbean on the Edge (Uni­ver­si­ty of Toron­to Press), say­ing his “heart was filled with pride, over the sup­port of Bon­nie Mc El Hin­ny and Melanie New­ton, of Toron­to Uni­ver­si­ty, who en­cour­aged him to ex­plore fur­ther.

“A book rarely stands on its own - it comes from some­where and some­times trav­els un­known paths. When I re­turned to UWI, and af­ter dis­cus­sions with Sir Hi­lary Beck­les, I de­cid­ed to work on a miss­ing piece, “pre­dic­tive an­a­lyt­ics’ which be­came more ev­i­dent in the af­ter­math of the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic. I be­gan to trav­el the un­known paths that the epi­logue in the Caribbean on the Edge spoke about.”

Ex­cerpt with per­mis­sion from the au­thor:

Pref­ace De­vel­op­ment and Diplo­ma­cy: Re­set­ting Caribbean Pol­i­cy Analy­sis in the Af­ter­math of the COVID-19 Pan­dem­ic.

WIN­STON DOOK­ER­AN

“This book is a con­ver­sa­tion on pol­i­cy so­lu­tions af­ter COVID-19. It places the Caribbean at the cen­tre but may have broad­er ap­plic­a­bil­i­ty to small coun­tries else­where as it at­tempts to shape the con­tours of a gen­er­al the­o­ry in frag­ile glob­al pol­i­tics. It is lo­cat­ed in the his­to­ry of eco­nom­ic thought, digs deep in­to to­day’s eco­nom­ic chal­lenges, and ex­plores a syn­the­sis be­tween the log­ic of eco­nom­ics and pol­i­tics. It is a study of de­vel­op­ment eco­nom­ics and small-states diplo­ma­cy.

Adding the Pan­dem­ic to Caribbean Eco­nom­ic Thought Caribbean thought since in­de­pen­dence saw the in­flu­ence of the New World Group in the 1960s, the struc­tural­ist of the 1970s, and the rise of the mar­ket pow­er of the 1980s.

By the turn of the twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry, pol­i­tics be­came a cru­cial vari­able in de­vel­op­ment mod­els, cre­at­ing a new fo­cus on po­lit­i­cal econ­o­my is­sues. For each pe­ri­od, we saw a dis­tinct set of pol­i­cy di­rec­tions. In the ear­ly pe­ri­od, har­ness­ing more eco­nom­ic and in­sti­tu­tion­al space was led by the role of the state. Poli­cies aimed at con­trol of the main pil­lars of the econ­o­my and build­ing in­sti­tu­tions with de­vel­op­men­tal man­dates be­came a cen­tre­piece.

Soon, the struc­tural­ists’ think­ing came to the fore as the econ­o­my’s struc­ture to build re­silience and ex­port po­ten­tial led to the in­dus­tri­al­i­sa­tion strat­e­gy by in­vi­ta­tion. By the 1980s, the Wash­ing­ton Con­sen­sus and its re­liance on the pow­er of the mar­kets took the main stage as the re­gion sought to in­sert it­self in­to the glob­al econ­o­my. By the turn of the twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry, po­lit­i­cal dis­con­tent and ris­ing ex­pec­ta­tions of so­ci­ety saw a new mesh­ing be­tween the po­lit­i­cal and eco­nom­ic forces at work and a greater fo­cus on the work­ings and rel­e­vance of po­lit­i­cal be­hav­iour. The quest for sus­tain­abil­i­ty in the po­lit­i­cal econ­o­my be­came crit­i­cal.

Clos­ing the Gap be­tween The­o­ry and Prac­tice

Link­ing the­o­ry and prac­tice has be­come a crit­i­cal chal­lenge in pub­lic pol­i­cy. The uni­ver­si­ty’s test of rel­e­vance is in­creas­ing­ly be­ing mea­sured by this chal­lenge. Clos­ing the gap be­tween the­o­ry and prac­tice is an act of schol­ar­ship to con­verge knowl­edge cre­ation with tan­gi­ble ben­e­fits to so­ci­ety in the present and the fu­ture. It is a com­plex re­la­tion­ship, and like so many com­plex­i­ties, uni­ver­si­ties are a start­ing point for this dis­cov­ery. Sir Hi­lary Beck­les, Vice Chan­cel­lor of the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies, in his search for a “broad­er and more di­verse uni­ver­si­ty sys­tem”, for­mu­lat­ed the Triple A strat­e­gy – Ac­cess, Align­ment, Agili­ty – aimed at shift­ing the key per­for­mance pil­lars of the in­sti­tu­tion – ded­i­cat­ed to re­vi­tal­is­ing Caribbean de­vel­op­ment.

The Se­quel to Syn­chro­nise the Log­ics of Pol­i­tics with the Log­ics of Eco­nom­ics

I have al­ways been fas­ci­nat­ed by link­ing pol­i­tics with eco­nom­ics. It be­came my re­search pre­oc­cu­pa­tion over the years and in­formed my ca­reer choic­es in my long jour­ney of pol­i­cy ac­tion. My ear­li­er edit­ed book, Choic­es and Change: Re­flec­tions on the Caribbean (Dook­er­an 1996), took stock of the is­sues that not­ed schol­ars must con­front in the Caribbean. Some years lat­er, dur­ing my stint in gov­ern­ment, I be­gan to see the is­sues in a po­lit­i­cal frame­work, as pub­lished in Pow­er, Pol­i­tics and Per­for­mance: A Part­ner­ship Ap­proach to De­vel­op­ment (Dook­er­an 2012).

In the fore­word of the book, P.J. Pat­ter­son (2012, xi), the dis­tin­guished for­mer prime min­is­ter of Ja­maica, re­ferred to that work as “a fas­ci­nat­ing col­lec­tion of Es­says of ideas which span the gamut from Thomas Hobbes to Ma­hat­ma Gand­hi and against the back­ground of writ­ing from Machi­avel­li to Marx.”

While af­firm­ing that it is high time that the per­cep­tion of pol­i­tics as an ob­sta­cle to the ad­vance­ment of the Caribbean be re­moved, Pat­ter­son not­ed that the in­sights and pre­scrip­tions in the book are, in large mea­sure, al­so valid for uni­ver­sal ap­pli­ca­tion and that the ideas serve as an in­tel­lec­tu­al bridge to fill the gap be­tween ex­pec­ta­tions and per­for­mance.

It is par­tial­ly to ad­dress this gap that Cri­sis and Promise in the Caribbean: Pol­i­tics and Con­ver­gence (Dook­er­an 2017) was writ­ten. Ar­gu­ing that the ideas in the book chart new de­vel­op­ment spaces, Paula Mor­gan (2017, vi­i­ii), in her fore­word to the book, de­scribed that work as “A com­pre­hen­sive of­fer­ing . . . that com­bines bedrock prag­ma­tism with a fierce in­sis­tence on the high­er ground of tran­scen­dent as­pi­ra­tions and ideals.”

In this se­quel of writ­ings, and with time to re­flect, I put to­geth­er The Caribbean on the Edge: Po­lit­i­cal Stress of Sta­bil­i­ty, Equal­i­ty and Diplo­ma­cy (Dook­er­an 2022), which traces my ideas on the Caribbean as de­vel­oped over the years. In a time of per­sis­tent un­cer­tain­ty, frag­ile eco-struc­tures, the pol­i­tics of “pop­ulism,” and the lim­its in in­sti­tu­tion­al lead­er­ship, that pub­li­ca­tion sets the base­line for the road map in­to new shifts in glob­al­i­sa­tion and re­gion­al­ism for the coun­tries on the edge of his­to­ry in the Caribbean Sea.

Then, an event ti­tled “Fo­rum on the Fu­ture of the Caribbean in Trinidad and To­ba­go,” at­tend­ed by near­ly 600 Caribbean schol­ars (pri­mar­i­ly young) and prac­ti­tion­ers, re­sult­ed in Shift­ing the Fron­tiers (Dook­er­an & Elias 2016) with con­tri­bu­tions from a broad cross-sec­tion of per­sons from with­in and out­side the Caribbean re­gion. That Fo­rum and the pan­dem­ic that fol­lowed prompt­ed the work pre­sent­ed now in this edi­tion.

My se­quel ends with this co-edit­ed vol­ume with M. Ray­mond Izar­ali, De­vel­op­ment and Diplo­ma­cy: Re­set­ting Caribbean Pol­i­cy Analy­sis in the Af­ter­math of the COVID-19 Pan­dem­ic. It forges a re­think of de­vel­op­ment in the geostrate­gic shifts, as the world and the Caribbean nav­i­gat­ed a COVID-19 pan­dem­ic re­set to reignite Caribbean progress in the years yet to be trav­elled.”

End of Ex­cerpt

Win­ston Dook­er­an com­plet­ed this book as a Vis­it­ing Pro­fes­sor at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Toron­to. He taught at the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies for many years and most re­cent­ly was Pro­fes­sor of Prac­tice In­sti­tute of In­ter­na­tion­al Re­la­tions, UWI, St Au­gus­tine, Trinidad.

- Ira Math­ur is a Guardian colum­nist and the win­ner of the non-fic­tion OCM Bo­cas Prize for Lit­er­a­ture 2023. (www.iras­room.org)

Email iras­room@gmail.com.


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