Prime Minister Andrew Holness has firmly denied claims that Jamaica is at present in a recession, asserting that whereas the nation faces financial challenges, its economic system stays robust and able to rebounding.
“By all accounts, Jamaica isn’t in a recession,” Holness said on Friday throughout a ceremony for the handing over of a two-bedroom home in Dobson, close to Christiana. “We’re very cognizant of the truth that there are challenges, however we’re assured that the Jamaican economic system is powerful and can rebound. In the identical method that we’ve got rebounded after the pandemic, we are going to rebound from the impacts of Hurricane Beryl and Tropical Storm Raphael.”
His feedback are available response to latest media reviews suggesting that the nation’s economic system has entered a downturn. The Jamaica Observer lately printed a front-page article titled “Sweeping Cuts: Spending Management in Tight 2025/26 Recession Finances,” highlighting the federal government’s determination to slash its annual price range by $126 billion whereas sustaining funding for key infrastructure tasks and the upcoming common election.
Holness acknowledged that financial fluctuations are a part of the pure enterprise cycle and that exterior elements, reminiscent of extreme climate occasions, can affect development.
“A recession is a pure a part of the financial cycle—generally the economic system goes up, generally it goes down,” he defined. “There are every kind of issues that may trigger the economic system to say no, reminiscent of climate occasions, hurricanes, and floods that injury financial exercise. World points past our management, like pandemics, wars, and rising commodity costs, can even have an effect.”
The prime minister pointed to the results of Hurricane Beryl and Tropical Storm Raphael as key the reason why Jamaica’s economic system has not proven development during the last two quarters, significantly within the agricultural sector and infrastructure.
“We had Hurricane Beryl, which considerably impacted agriculture, adopted by sustained heavy rains that broken our street infrastructure. Then we had one other climate occasion, Tropical Storm Raphael,” Holness mentioned. “These occasions have affected our productive capability, however that in itself doesn’t create a recession.”
He emphasised that the federal government has been working to construct a resilient economic system able to withstanding such shocks.
“We’ve got been constructing an economic system that’s resilient—which means when issues hit us, we’re in a position to soak up the affect and bounce again,” he said.
Regardless of issues over lowered authorities spending, Holness stays assured within the nation’s financial trajectory, reiterating that Jamaica has overcome challenges earlier than and can achieve this once more.