Searchlight Logo
special_image

    • News
      • Front Page
      • News
      • Breaking News
      • Press Release
      • Features
      • Special Features
      • From the Courts
      • Sports
      • Regional / World
    • Opinions
      • Editorial
      • Our Readers’ Opinions
      • Bassy – Love Vine
      • Dr. Fraser- Point of View
      • R. Rose – Eye of the Needle
      • On Target
      • Dr Jozelle Miller
      • The World Around Us
      • Random Thoughts
    • Advice
      • Kitchen Corner
      • What’s on Fleek this week
      • Health Wise
      • Physician’s Weekly
      • Business Buzz
      • Hey Rosie!
      • Prime the pump
    • ePaper
    • Obituaries
      • In Memoriam / Acknowledgement
      • Tribute
    • Contact Us
      • Advertise With Us
      • Letters To The Editor
      • General Contact Information
      • Contact our Webmaster
    • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Interactive Media Ltd
      • St. Vincent & the Grenadines
    • Subscribe
    • News
      • Front Page
      • News
      • Breaking News
      • Press Release
      • Features
      • Special Features
      • From the Courts
      • Sports
      • Regional / World
    • Opinions
      • Editorial
      • Our Readers’ Opinions
      • Bassy – Love Vine
      • Dr. Fraser- Point of View
      • R. Rose – Eye of the Needle
      • On Target
      • Dr Jozelle Miller
      • The World Around Us
      • Random Thoughts
    • Advice
      • Kitchen Corner
      • What’s on Fleek this week
      • Health Wise
      • Physician’s Weekly
      • Business Buzz
      • Hey Rosie!
      • Prime the pump
    • ePaper
    • Obituaries
      • In Memoriam / Acknowledgement
      • Tribute
    • Contact Us
      • Advertise With Us
      • Letters To The Editor
      • General Contact Information
      • Contact our Webmaster
    • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Interactive Media Ltd
      • St. Vincent & the Grenadines
    • Subscribe
Our Readers' Opinions
August 4, 2006

When bananas fell-Part 1

by Oscar Allen

Banana is a slippery product and it falls easily, but it can rise quickly too. Look at three examples of up and down production. In 1975 production fell from 21,791 tonnes in 1974 to 18,630 tonnes and the next year it bounced back to 29,949 tonnes.

The same thing happened in 1980 and 1994. Bad weather and La Soufriere caused the fall in output and strong spirited growers and their organized social capital produced the bounce back.{{more}}

But bananas had a serious fall just over 10 years ago and when she was getting up, another set of kicks put her down. Right now bananas are making it only through the rescue efforts of “Fairtrade”, a subsidy, and the maneuvers of WIBDECO, but if we could see when and where and how bananas fell, well, we would have a lot to think about.

Since the beginnings in 1954, St. Vincent and the Grenadines never exported anything like 50,000 tonnes of bananas until 1988, when in one year we jumped from 35,307 tonnes to 61,868 tonnes! The next year we went higher, to output 65,685 tonnes, and then higher still in 1990. This is what WINBAN – the Windwards Banana Association reported at the time in 1990.

Significant increases in production were achieved in St. Vincent where production reached a record high of 79,876 tonnes, some 23.6% above the record set in 1989 …record production levels were set in every given quarter in 1990.

How did this banana boom happen? WINBAN stated: “Acreage as well as number of growers have been increasing steadily since 1988”. Perhaps the 1989 report of the St. Vincent Banana Growers Association makes the important point that: “In 1988 growers received the highest price in the history of the industry, 20 cents per pound basic from January to March and October to December, and 25 cents per pound basic from April to September”. (Actually, the 1988 and 1989 prices were not very different, but they were satisfying to growers).

In the six years, between 1988 and 1993, SVG banana exports remains above 50,000 tonnes, then a drought reduced our export output in 1994 to 30,933 tonnes. We raised it to 50,013 in 1995, but that was it.

Since then, for 10 years, we have exported less than 50,000 tonnes, even dropping to below 20,000 tonnes in 2005.

True, in 1997 there was a dry five months at the start of the year, and in 1998, a torrential end-of-year rainy season from September, but these only compounded the setbacks of what had become an industry that was run by ubiquitous haul and toss, and lacking internal coherence.

When we examine what was going on all the time behind the back of banana growers, we get the feeling that our bananas were falling just around the same time when we were exporting high volumes of fruit.

In an early (1995) study on the decline of the SVG banana Industry (1993…1994), “ineffective management” is identified as “the major factor causing decline”.

The authors of the study, Minerva Latham and Otto Sam found that “…when external changes placed new challenges before the industry” the weakness in management/governance exposed itself.

The way ahead, according to the Latham and Sam study, is to make the SVGBGA “commercially oriented” led by personnel “endowed with executive authority and operating as an industrial team”. In 1995, when the two teachers did their research and report, the SVGBGA had at least eight contending “heads” –

(1) the General Manager,

(2) the Chairman of the Board,

(3) the Prime Minister,

(4) the Geest Company,

(5) the Supermarkets multiples,

(6) the British Ministers of Agriculture and Overseas Development,

(7) the Technical Assistance Programme and

(8) Director the Windwards Collaboration.

There was no single person or team with “executive authority”. The industry had so many bosses that it was in meltdown, fall down. Policy in the industry had no one source or place of origin. On one occasion, in 1992 the Geest Chief Executive Mr. Rapier asked the Windwards Prime Ministers to stop the Banana Associations from pushing for progressive change. He mentioned money. The Prime Ministers said, “Sure thing boss”.

It all came to a head in the long years of change in the marketplace in Europe. Some of the changes were:

(1) the commanding position of supermarkets and the competition between them, to have their brands as the best;

(2) the setting up of the one European market in place of the British market,

(3) the hostile way the bigger US-based banana companies went to war for the British/European market,

(4) the birth of WIBDECO and the taking over of the Geest banana business by the Windwards,

(5) the desire to have a Windwards brand of banana,

(6) the backward position of the British that they would give aid only if the Windwards did not venture into their own banana business operations in Britain; and so on.

In those years we had to deal with names and forces like, WTO European Commission, MAFF (UK), Cargill, WIAP, Stabex, 5 Isles, WIBEC, WINBAN Investment – WIBDECO, Pack Types, Dole, etc.

Bananas fell when our politically primitive way of managing, our commercially unsound approaches, and our styles of governance that keeps growers in the bush, as it were, had to face global business cannibals. We are still at that stage, and I will touch down on some of the features of our fall in the next article.

  • FacebookComments
  • ALSO IN THE NEWS
    ULP, NDP sign Code  agreeing to peaceful,  fair General Elections
    Front Page
    ULP, NDP sign Code agreeing to peaceful, fair General Elections
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    The Unity Labour Party (ULP), and New Democratic Party(NDP), have signed the General Elections Code of Conduct agreeing to keep the peace in the run-u...
    Monday, is  Nomination Day in SVG
    Front Page
    Monday, is Nomination Day in SVG
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    Candidates who will be contesting the November 27, 2025 general elections in St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG), will hand in their nomination papers...
    Media  visionary, Paul  McLeish dies
    Front Page
    Media visionary, Paul McLeish dies
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) has lost one of its iconic media visionaries with the death of Paul MacLeish who passed away on Tuesday, November ...
    No reports of political  violence say ULP, NDP
    Front Page
    No reports of political violence say ULP, NDP
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    Director of the Institute of Governance and Politics of Latin America and the Caribbean Augustine Ferdinand, and Chairman of the New Democratic Party(...
    Stubbs man shot, killed in Akers
    Front Page
    Stubbs man shot, killed in Akers
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    The number 666, often considered a bad omen due to its association with the “Number of the Beast” in the book of Revelation, seems to have brought bad...
    Senior citizen dies in Mahaut house fire
    Front Page
    Senior citizen dies in Mahaut house fire
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    A male senior citizen in his 70’s perished in a house fire in Mahaut, Campden Park on Monday night. Dead is Kelvin Murray, who neighbours said lived a...
    News
    Duo charged with multiple offenses
    From the Courts, News
    Duo charged with multiple offenses
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    Two young men who have been charged for allegedly attacks against a police officer and use of indecent language pled not guilty when they appeared sep...
    Participants ready to make use of Financial literacy training
    News
    Participants ready to make use of Financial literacy training
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    Persons who attended a two-day Financial Literacy workshop for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) organised by the Centre for Enterprise Deve...
    ULP new candidates blaming government for constituency failures, says Dr Friday
    News
    ULP new candidates blaming government for constituency failures, says Dr Friday
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    Leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP), Dr. Godwin Friday said first time candidates of the Unity Labour Party (ULP) are distancing themselves from ...
    World Paediatrics do life-changing surgeries on 17 children at MCMH this week
    News
    World Paediatrics do life-changing surgeries on 17 children at MCMH this week
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    This week saw 17 children from across the Eastern Caribbean (EC) and Barbados receive life altering surgeries that mark the beginning of new chapters ...
    Roads are like craters says Cummings
    News
    Roads are like craters says Cummings
    Webmaster 
    November 7, 2025
    Chairman of the New Democratic Party (NDP) Daniel Cummings continues to complain about the condition of roads in his constituency. Cummings, the incum...

    E-EDITION
    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    Subscribe Now
    • Interactive Media Ltd. • P.O. Box 152 • Kingstown • St. Vincent and the Grenadines • Phone: 784-456-1558 © Copyright Interactive Media Ltd.. All rights reserved.
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok