
Life
+ Debt DVD
If you come to Jamaica as a tourist this
is what you will see...
Utilizing excerpts from the award-winning non-fiction
text "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid,
Life & Debt is a woven tapestry of sequences
focusing on the stories of individual Jamaicans
whose strategies for survival and parameters of
day-to-day existence are determined by the U.S.
and other foreign economic agendas. By combining
traditional documentary telling with a stylized
narrative framework, the complexities of international
lending, structural adjustment policies and free
trade will be understood in the context of the
day-to-day realities of the people whose lives
they impact.
The film opens with the arrival
of vacationers to the island - utilizing Ms. Kincaids
text as voice-over, we begin to understand the
profound contrasts behind the breathtaking natural
beauty of the island. The poetic urgency of Ms.
Kincaids text lends a first-person understanding
of the legacy of the country's colonial past,
and to it's present day economic challenges. For
example, as we see a montage of the vacationer
in her hotel, voice-over: "When you sit down
to eat your delicious meal, it's better that you
don't know that most of what you are eating came
off a ship from Miami. There is a world of something
in this, but I can't go into it right now."
(adapted excerpt "A Small Place")
As we begin to understand the post-colonial
landscape outlined in Ms. Kincaids text, we cut
to archival footage of Former Prime Minister Michael
Manley in a post-independence speech condemning
the IMF stating that "the Jamaican government
will not accept anybody, anywhere in the world
telling us what to do in our own country. Above
all, we're not for sale."
Former Prime Minister Michael Manley
was elected on a non-IMF platform in 1976. He
was forced to sign Jamaica's first loan agreement
with the IMF in 1977 due to lack of viable alternatives--
a global pattern common throughout the Third World.
At present Jamaica owes over $4.5 billion to the
IMF, the World Bank and the Inter-American Development
Bank (IADB) among other international lending
agencies yet the meaningful development that these
loans have "promised" has yet to manifest.
In actuality the amount of foreign exchange that
must be generated to meet interest payments and
the structural adjustment policies which have
been imposed with the loans have had a negative
impact on the lives of the vast majority. The
country is paying out increasingly more than it
receives in total financial resources, and if
benchmark conditionalities are not met, the structural
adjustment program is made more stringent with
each re negotiation. To improve balance of payments,
devaluation (which raises the cost of foreign
exchange), high interest rates (which raise the
cost of credit), and wage guidelines (which effectively
reduce the price of local labor) are prescribed.
The IMF assumes that the combination of increased
interest rates and cutbacks in government spending
will shift resources from domestic consumption
to private investment. It is further assumed that
keeping the price of labor down will be an incentive
for increasing employment and production. Increased
unemployment, sweeping corruption, higher illiteracy,
increased violence, prohibitive food costs, dilapidated
hospitals, increased disparity between rich and
poor characterize only part of the present day
economic crisis.
In one segment addressing the Free
Trade Zones, we meet workers who sew five-six
days a week for American corporations to earn
the legal minimum wage of $30 U.S./week ($1200
- $1500Jamaican dollars/week). The port of Kingston
is lined with high-security factories, made available
to foreign garment companies at low rent. These
factories are offered with the additional incentive
of the foreign companies' being allowed to bring
in shiploads of material there tax-free, to have
them sewn and assembled and then immediately transported
out to foreign markets. Over 10,000 women currently
work for foreign companies under sub-standard
work conditions. The Jamaican government, in order
to ensure the employment offered, has agreed to
the stipulation that no unionization is permitted
in the Free Trade Zones. Previously, when the
women have spoken out and attempted to organize
to improve their wages and working conditions,
they have been fired and their names included
on a blacklist ensuring that they never work again.
Free Trade Zones are encouraged by the U.S. government,
for example projects financed by the U.S. Agency
for International Development (U.S. AID) have
used over $34,960,000 in U.S. tax dollars to target,
persuade and provide incentives to American companies
to relocate offshore in Jamaica. Yet now due to
NAFTA, these dismal yet precious jobs are being
lost to Mexico, Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic.
Another segment tells the story
of a chicken plant which had a flourishing business
selling high-quality chicken to the domestic Jamaican
market. Business has recently been undercut by
U.S. "dumping" of low-grade chicken
parts in Jamaica . While there are many restrictions
on foods and goods imported into the U.S., there
are often no restrictions on food and goods exported
to foreign developing countries. Agreements such
as NAFTA and the Caribbean Basin Initiative function
to enforce this inequity under the guise of "free
trade."
The lessons of Jamaica--where these
policies have been in effect for nearly twenty-five
years--extend far beyond its shores. In nearby
Haiti, former President Aristide was pressured
to accept loans from the IMF; in Russia, billions
in IMF loans have been accepted for the first
time and the country is already suffering from
the stringent conditions prescribed by the Fund;
throughout Africa, countries struggle to meet
scheduled adjustments. Life & Debt is a tribute
to the ingenuity and strength of the people who
defy the odds of survival, yet its primary aim
is to inform young adult audiences in the U.S.
of the impact these policies have on our neighbors
abroad.
The film features original music
by Mutabaruka plus some vibrant reggae from luminaries
such as Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Ziggy Marley.
"This
is a seething, reasoned documentary. And it should
make you angry - globalization is a killer."
New Internationalist film review - http://www.newint.org.au/issue356/mix.htm
"A
must-see film" - Michael
M. Thomas, New York Observer
"Powerful"
- Steven Holden, New York Times
DVD Region:
Code 0 (all regions)
Duration: 86 minutes
PAL
format
This movie is in PAL format
and is not suitable for use in France, Japan,
Canada, USA and Mexico unless
a multi-system player is used (since these
countries use NTSC format,
not PAL).
For more information on multi-system players
visit http://www.dvdoverseas.com and
to check what system your country uses visit
http://www.dvdoverseas.com/world_broadcasting.htm
Region
Codes
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areas in the world in which they can be
played. Code 0 means that DVDs can be
played in all regions. For further information
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