By Annelia Nixon
Tribune Business Reporter
anixon@tribunemedia.net
The Attorney General yesterday agreed that The Bahamas must find a “fair balance” between skilled expatriate labour and locals after Bahamian attendees at a Securities Commission seminar complained they “are being driven out of the financial services industry”.
Ryan Pinder KC addressed concerns over the number of work permits being issued during a question and answer sessio at the Securities Commission’s international priorities and initiatives 2025 conference.
He responded after one attendee asserted that many Bahamian professionals have either turned to different industries or taken their talents outside of the country due to the number of work permits being issued to non-Bahamians in the financial services industry.
Asking what Mr Pinder is doing to address the issue, they said: “More of us, Mr AG, are being driven out of financial services. And when I say us, Bahamians, Bahamian professionals. We do have the expertise, went off to school...
“But somehow there are record numbers of work permits being issued in our business, and then we are forced to, I guess, find work in other industries. This is evident…
“How would you, or what are you doing, to help to balance this outflow, I mean exodus, of Bahamian financial services professionals - either to other countries or to other industries. Because what we're seeing is not the healthiest when it comes to sustainability of Bahamian financial professionals.”
Mr Pinder, in response, said there needs to be a “fair balance”, adding that cross-border institutions in The Bahamas must be promoted as well and that some smaller Bahamian firms sometimes benefit from it.
“That issue requires also a fair balance, right,” Mr Pinder said. “Because, to your point, you know, we want to foster Bahamian participation and Bahamian ownership within the financial services industry. That's important, and that's vital. We also want to foster and grow cross-border institutions in the country as well.
“And, frankly, if you have a healthy constituency of cross-border financial services institutions, they look for support services from smaller institutions like yours... and, frankly, we all know that you are a benefactor of that. Right now... And so you need that healthy balance to be an international financial centre, because the first word in IFC (international financial centre) is International. That's important.
“I think when you look at at the the approach of the regulators in this fashion, because ultimately, the regulators also have to approve senior executives in regulated entities, and certainly in a lot of entities - certainly, I think, in most, if not all, certainly most of the medium and smaller size entities that may have an international element to it,” Mr Pinder said.
“I know the regulators… insist on opportunities for Bahamian CEOs, and certainly, I think the compliance sector of the industry, which we have probably mastered as a jurisdiction, from a domestic expertise point of view, better than any other jurisdiction that I could think of, is almost entirely a Bahamian component within the industry. And so I hear you... and I hear your concern on that. But I also understand that you do need a balanced approach, and you can't just shut the spigot off.”
Mr Pinder added that a meeting was held on Wednesday night with discussions focused on fostering Bahamian growth especially within non-Bahamian entities.
“Can we be a little bit more, you know, pay attention to the issue, and a little bit more scrutinising? Sure,” Mr Pinder said. “I'm sure we can be, right, and I'm sure we should be. But I also think that there's a balance element in there that you don't want to completely dissuade international participation within the industry domestically.
“In The Bahamas, there's a lot of spillover effects, both within the industry and without. And do we always get the balance correct? No. I mean, I don't think any administration can claim that they get the balance correct. But we certainly work hard, and we work in conjunction with the regulators.
“In fact, there was a rather high-level meeting that occurred just last night where an element of what you were speaking about was ventilated at the highest levels in the country, with respect to the financial services industry and how can we as policymakers, as well as regulators, take an approach that fosters more Bahamian growth and Bahamian opportunities at the highest levels of these institutions,” Mr Pinder added.
“And how do we convince these institutions that, when you do this, when you're changing executive leadership or you're bringing on new executive leadership, that there is a legitimate, fair shake for Bahamian executives to participate in that, especially when it's a non-Bahamian entity. And so I can assure you that, at the very, very highest levels in the Government and on the regulatory side of it, that conversation was had really no earlier than last night.”



Comments
moncurcool 18 hours, 33 minutes ago
A bunch of do nothing said by the AG.
ThisIsOurs 18 hours, 11 minutes ago
Wow. Same thought I had, "what a bunch of scrambled words"
joeblow 17 hours, 23 minutes ago
... the real questions are who is approving these work permits and why? What legal recourse do Bahamians have if they are being pushed out of the industry by foreign workers? Is there a kickback scheme at work here? All questions that need answers!
Proguing 16 hours, 35 minutes ago
Question: Why don't these Bahamian professionals start their own company in the financial services industry? They would certainly benefit from lower costs, not having to pay for work permits and expat benefits. What other financial centre depends solely on foreign institutions? This is not a healthy industry.
SP 14 hours, 1 minute ago
Exactly what "balanced approach"and "balance correct" is this comedian referring to? Who said we need this "balance"? how does it benefit the Bahamas and Bahamians? who creates dictates and regulate this "balance"? and why the hell do we need to "balance" foreign participation in the financial services industry when no reciprocating country is minutely concerned about "balancing" Bahamians into their operation?
Politicians still think they can just get away with making up any kind of asinine word salad non-sense to feed to us. Bahamians are stupid!
It's not just in the financial services industry. Successive governments continue to allow far too many foreigners into our country to do jobs Bahamians qualify for in exchange for work permit fees.
This is the absolute nonsensical policy they use to raise funds for the treasury.
Stupid does as stupid is!
Porcupine 1 hour, 42 minutes ago
Generally, business people hire the most qualified applicant. They want value for their money. While we continue to stand in the way, all of us using word salads, the truly and exceptionally qualified are focused on doing their jobs, Perhaps, one would think that doing the same thing over and over is a recipe for failure, as well as, the definition of insanity. We have to, at some point in our short Bahamian history, quit blaming foreigners for ALL of our problems. We continue to elect third world politicians expecting first world results. Why would we be surprised by these outcomes?
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