What Now? with Trevor Noah - Prime Minister Mia Mottley: Climate, Immigration, and the Power of Small Nations
Episode Date: January 20, 2026In this very special bonus episode that’s as smart as it is fun, Trevor goes one-on-one with Barbados' Prime Minister, Mia Mottley. Between lessons on Bajan slang, "road tennis" Olympic dreams, an...d big ideas on global finance, climate change, and managed migration, Mottley proves she’s a force of nature—though even she can’t score Trevor an invite to Rihanna’s next birthday bash. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Discussion (0)
I've always noticed it, but I've never thought to myself, it seems so obvious now, but I've never thought to myself, oh yeah, you can't tell Rihanna's story without talking about Barbados.
Exactly.
The music, the way she sees the world, the way she interacts with the world, the fact that she's still, you know, a citizen of Barbados, like all of these things inform how she goes.
And that she still has a Belgian accent.
That's true.
Yeah.
So if I said that phrase to her, she'd know what it means?
Of course.
So, wait, how do I say it?
You still have a...
No, the fair.
The fair...
How do you say the phrase?
Oh, dying fair.
Dying fair.
Or you've got to treat people fairly.
But you said dying fair.
Dying fair.
Dian fair.
I'm going to work on.
But you have a good Beijing accent already.
I'm working with yours.
Dying fair.
I'm going to learn it.
I'm just going to say to people dying fair.
And I'm going to get there.
Rihanna, you didn't invite me to your party.
Dying Fair.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Now we're on.
Now we're on.
This is What Now with Trevor Noah.
Prime Minister Mia Motley.
welcome to the podcast.
Thank you very much, Trevor.
I was thinking of every possible question I could ask you
because you're one of the most brilliant thinkers I know.
You're also one of the most original human beings I've ever met.
And as I was going through everything I could think of,
I went, there's one pressing question I've always wondered
and I've always wanted to ask you.
And that is, does it ever bother you that most people think Rihanna's
the Prime Minister of your country.
I wish you was.
Then I'd be able to spend more time on the beach.
Now, Rihanna is phenomenal.
I mean, look, Rihanna has made Barbaras known in places and with people that would not
otherwise have known it.
I mean, we like to think that everybody knows about Barbaratus.
That's what happens when you come from a small nation.
I know what it's like.
But the truth is that she really has extended the boundaries for us.
and she has defined excellence.
And I want to speak to it because people don't appreciate
that I genuinely feel that she is the businesswoman
and artist that she is because of how she was raised.
Huh.
Barbados is a place.
Barbaratis is a place that social justice matters.
If you go to a Beijing, the first thing they tell,
man, you can't unfair that body.
That in fear.
Everything is about fairness, justice.
And Rihanna, when she decided to go into business, said, look, I'm going to do a makeup company.
Because guess what?
Everybody's been doing makeup for certain colors and certain hues.
I'm going to do it for everybody because everybody matters.
Everybody must be seen.
I keep talking about seeing, hearing and feeling people.
She did it.
Then she wasn't satisfied with that.
She said, I'm going to do a lingerie company.
And then you look at the shows and the lingerie is for every shape.
size, those who are fit, those who have been maimed, those who are disfigured for everybody.
And that sense of inclusion, that sense of social justice that was instilled in her from
birth, that was reinforced in her in school, is what she's living.
So when people ask, why is she successful?
Because she's authentic, because she's real, because she's living out what really matters.
and that sense of fairness and inclusion,
the world buys into with her.
I think that's beautiful.
Yeah, man.
I've always noticed it, but I've never thought to myself,
it seems so obvious now, but I've never thought to myself,
oh yeah, you can't tell Rihanna's story without talking about Barbados.
Exactly.
The music, the way she sees the world,
the way she interacts with the world,
the fact that she's still, you know, a citizen of Barbados,
like all of these things inform how she goes.
And that she still has.
a Beijing accent.
That's true.
Yeah.
So if I said that phrase to her, she'd know what it means?
Of course.
So, wait, how do I say it?
You still have a...
No, the fair.
The fair, how do you say the phrase?
Oh, dying fair.
Dying fair.
You've got to treat people fairly.
But you said dying fair.
Dying fair.
I'm going to work on.
But you have a good Beijing accent already.
I'm working with yours.
Dying fair.
I'm going to learn it.
I'm just going to say to people dying fair and I'm going to get there.
Rihanna, you didn't invite me to your party.
Dying fair.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Now we're on.
Now we're on.
Until the next time, you see, when you invite me, then I can eventually say we is we.
We is we.
We is we.
We is we.
We is we.
That's the most powerful three words.
That's the most powerful.
Okay.
We is we.
Dying fair.
I almost feel like that's a perfect place to start a conversation because if we think of Rihanna as a concept and as an idea, you have a single human who has had an outsized impact on the world.
They came from a place that many would have considered insignificant.
They started in a place that many people would have considered unremarkable.
And yet there's no denying that music, fashion, beauty has now been shaped by this person.
Absolutely.
I feel like your journey and the journey of Barbados has been very similar.
The truth is that the journey of Barbados before has been there for good and bad reasons.
And let's start with the bad.
Barbaras was settled.
And in fact, this is 400 years this year that the British first landed.
But the history was written that they were the first,
although we now know that people were probably there who came from Europe,
but the story that nobody told was the Amerindians who lived there for centuries
and who at the time when the British came,
there was evidence of settlements and life,
but nobody had been living on the island at the time.
I start there really to carry you to the fact that the modern story of Barbados then is shaped
by the British conquists.
And they started a parliament in 1639.
It's the third oldest in the Commonwealth.
And they passed a law, which really is something
that we are not proud of at all.
And it became the structure for modern racism
and institutional racism, as we know.
And it was the bedrock for slavery.
It was a 1661 slave code passed by the Barbados Parliament.
It was followed in Jamaica.
It was followed in South Carolina.
It was followed in Georgia.
It was followed in Antigua.
Almost all of the countries in the Americas used that 1661 slave code,
which denied the humanity of black people as the basis for their thing.
The British treated Barbados as the jewel in the crown.
It was the producer of sugar.
It was for them, the earner of great wealth.
Yeah, yeah.
And it was also the place by which they understood how.
to control and denigrate black people as slaves.
So that we feel as modern, independent Barbadians,
that we have a duty to pay forward.
And that duty to pay forward is as a result of that history.
Now, there were other things that happened at the time
because of how important the colony was to the British.
So after King Charles took back over from Cromwell, ironically, King Charles,
he gave some of the planters in Barbados land in the Carolinas
and therefore there is a huge impact of Bayjans
and Beijing slaves moving into the Carolinas
and the linkages between Charleston and Spitesong
and the north of Barbados go back 370, 75 years.
That's fascinating.
Yeah, and there is also a belief
that we need to do more research with the Gullah people
and to really see the linkages between,
the Carolinas and Barbados.
In addition, prior to that, when the royalists tried to fight against Cromwell, they had the
charter of Barbados in 1651, which they saved 125 years before independence, the Declaration
of Independence in the USA, really spoke to a lot of the same things in terms of no taxation
without representation
and a lot of the same things
that came to be discussed there
so that you see Barbados popping up
in a supersized way
throughout history
and in a sense, therefore
I don't try to claim it for Rihanna
or myself or others today
as the country
because it really has always had that tradition.
Yesterday on my social media
a picture came up of
the father of independence,
Errol Barrow and his wife
meeting President Lyndon Johnson
here in DC.
and the story goes at that time that President Johnson said to this Prime Minister of a newly independent country,
the organization of American states, the U.S. will pay your Jews to join.
And Mr. Barrow said, sir, with all due respect, where I come from, if you can't afford the Jews, you don't join the club.
I give you that story as well as in his first speech to the United Nations, he declared that we would be friends of all.
satellites of men. So there's a strong sense of dignity, a strong sense of we have a
responsibility to do things and to give, especially because of what we went through. And that
does not mean that we are more powerful than we are because at the end of the day, size still
does matter. But on things of thought, leadership and dignity count us. Because you know, you
I mean, when you talk about size, I think it is important to understand the size of Barbados.
What's the current population?
It's probably about 270,000.
Okay, yeah.
300,000 was what I thought.
Just under 300, yeah.
Just under 300,000.
We actually regrettably have declined, and we're right now going through a whole conversation about building back up their population.
Is that because people have been leaving?
Part of it is that, but part of it is that we've done a damn good job at family planning.
and family planning has been strong in the country from the 1950s.
You know, this is one of the things that, like,
feels like one of the greatest conundrums that the world is facing.
Yeah.
Right.
Is actually, I was having a conversation with my mom about this.
Okay.
So my mom was asking me what I think about marriage, when I'm going to get married,
you know, all of these questions, but not pressing, but pressing.
And as moms do.
As moms do.
Yeah, as moms do.
And then I said to her, one of the things I've been pondering,
is how much of our advancement
has limited the natural progression
of what it is to be human,
because now you have to like choose to make a family.
Back in the day, you know, if we think about,
this is only in this century.
People didn't think, they just did.
You just did and you couldn't, you know,
I mean, obviously there's like old,
you know, I've seen like ancient prophylactics and things,
but for the most part, people just had kids
because they had kids.
Like, how do you,
How do you begin to think about this idea?
You know, we see people saying, oh, populations are declining here.
Populations are declining there.
Is it the threat that some people say it is two nations?
It is.
I mean, look, in the Caribbean, the first thing I did when we won government in 2018
was to create a National Population Commission.
Because having served as Minister of Education many years ago,
I realized just from the numbers going into schools that we had a problem.
In those days, I had about 42, 4, 4,300.
kids every year.
When I came in to office in 2018, it was down to about 2,500, 2,600, something like that at the
beginning.
And now the guans going in and infants A are like 2,200.
So that, you can clearly see the sharp decline in 30 years.
And if I go to other countries in the region, let me give you context.
Guyana, that is the fastest growing country in the world.
Ghana is...
Guyana is?
Yeah, yeah, because of the oil.
Okay, okay, got it.
But Guyana's population, in spite of it being the same size as the United Kingdom,
United Kingdom is 65 million.
Guyana is struggling to be a million.
Let's go to Belize.
Belize is the same size as Israel.
Israel is 8 million.
Belize is 400-something thousand.
Suriname is just larger than the 9.
Netherlands. The Netherlands is 17 million. Serenam is 580,000. And if I take Barbados,
Singapore grew itself literally by reclamation of land. I think they've gone up by 30 or 40%.
Yeah. They're more or less, a little bigger on Barbados, they're 5 million. I'm struggling
to be at 300,000. So you have this predicament that other than Haiti, almost every country in the Caribbean
community is underpopulated.
To Jamaica, Trinandand, Tobago, all of us.
Do you think it's because people are
able to choose to have kids or is it because people are choosing
to have fewer kids as their standard of living goes up?
I think it's a combination of reasons.
Yeah, how does it work?
I think it's a combination of reason.
I think some of it was emigration.
I think some of it is more people choosing not to have children
or not having children for whatever reasons.
And then what do you say to them if that's the, you know,
as a leader, because now you have the predicament, and it's a confusing one, you need more people.
Do you tell people to have people, or do you?
Well, I'd like them too, but the reality is that I still need people before they do it the pleasurable way.
So while they have pleasure in doing it, we're going to need that.
I still need skills now.
And when you start to see the shortage of skills, then you begin to realize this is a real, real constraint on stability.
and growth.
I would love for you
to help us get an insight
into thinking about the world
like a leader should
versus how we think about the world
as the passive participants
of what's happening.
What you just said,
we often read about it.
Like everyone reads about it,
they go,
oh, I was reading that
there's not enough workers
coming into this country.
There's not enough people,
you know, Japan is experiencing
a decline, Germany, etc., etc.
When you're with world leaders
or when you're working on these problems,
is there a light that is shining in one direction?
Is it immigration?
Is it something that we're not thinking about?
Like where are the possible solutions?
I fear that the conversation about immigration and migration
is rooted in racism.
In a way.
Rather than rooted in the needs of a country.
I think that people are fearful of becoming a minority in their own country.
And that's natural.
You can't think that.
But at the same time,
without the influx of people,
you're not going to be able to stabilize
or get the growth that you need as a country.
And one of the problems is that in the world
we have worked out how to move money.
Nobody worries about how to move money globally.
But as soon as you start talking about moving people,
everybody gets nervous.
And in 20, it was it December 2018,
I think, at the OACP organization
of African Caribbean and Pacific States
in Nairobi. I made the point, and I continue to make it, that we need a proper deal for migrants.
And this notion of people having to drunk just because they want a better life when countries
else we actually need them and can provide opportunity and dignity to them, something is
fundamentally wrong. And regrettably, that's one of the things I can say we are unfair in people.
We definitely are. We are unfair in people.
We're seeing people die unnecessarily when we can have a structured program.
And part of it comes back then to the sustainable development goals, the SDGs.
Because most people don't want to leave their own countries.
They leave because there's a reason.
They have to.
They have to.
They're either running from something or running towards something.
And if we could get a basic agreement globally,
that there's certain things that we must provide people,
basic education, which means from pre-primary to secondary.
I mean, I'd love to say post-secondary and tertiary, but let's start.
But just starting up a base level, everyone in the world.
Must have a basic education that allows them to learn at any stage of their life again.
That basic health care for the very basic things.
The opportunity to play football or cricket or whatever sport you like or road tennis,
which I hear people talk about pickleball.
I want you to come to Barbados and help me.
promote road tennis.
Because road tennis can play in this room.
Wait, wait, wait.
What's it called?
Road tennis.
Road tennis.
Yeah.
And what's road?
What is road tennis?
The guys at home made these rackets out of plywood.
Okay.
The net is effectively about what, six, nine inches off the ground.
So it's like knee height.
So if you're not fit, you can't play it.
So even I got a little trouble sometimes.
And then a tape ball.
And you can play it.
It's like the size of a.
table tennis board, but it's played on the road.
On the road.
And that's it.
So it's the most perfect sport for in a city,
areas and ghettos.
Where there's no cars.
Yeah.
Well, even when they're playing road tennis.
So you stop, you pull up the net, the car passes,
and you move, swear to God.
When you come to buy, minutes, you'll see.
I'm actually going to come and see, you know,
so it's funny, in South Africa, we used to,
I mean, most places,
in the world. You know, friends of mine who grew up in, like, Harlem have the same stories
that I have growing up in South Africa and the townships where you would just close the road,
you'd play the game, and then when a car needed to come through, it would come through.
But I think as a, if I'm pitching this as like an Olympic sports, it's going to be tough
to pitch this idea that we're closing, closing me. But okay, we'll get it.
For the Olympics, we'll leave out the cars.
I think that's what'll make it interesting. If you want to get viewers, you leave the cars,
that's a real gold medal. We could do that too.
If you finish the match, you get a medal.
I love that you bring up the idea of thinking of new ways to think.
Because that's probably what inspires me most about you is whenever I see you speak.
And whenever I've even, I've been lucky enough to have like two conversations, I think, with you.
Every time I've left our conversation thinking, oh, wow, nothing is fixed.
There's new ideas in and around everything.
You know, like immigration.
We all think of immigration as the super.
fixed idea. It was people going somewhere and then that was it. Do you think there's ever a world where,
like you say with money, do you think there's ever a world where we find a way for people to go work
and then go back to their countries? People used to do that in a more structured way. But because
the world hasn't created, governments haven't created the opportunities. We create movement,
we create treaties that allow for movement of money. We create opportunities for people to invest.
But we just don't see people and feel that's important enough for us to create a virtual community where you need these skills.
I mean, look, in a very small way, you've had the farm labor program out of Canada, the Caribbean people have gone to for years.
They go, they work, they come back.
It's a structured thing.
And that's a structured thing.
And that works well.
It works well because it helps the farmers in Canada.
Yeah.
And it helps the persons at home who don't have.
work at the time, we'll have an opportunity.
So get the labor where the labor's needed
and then get the money where the money's needed.
And so you're just bridging the gap, basically.
And technology actually allows us to do it
in a very seamless way now.
So that to my mind, if we just rolled up our sleeves a little bit
and gave it a little effort, we could do a lot more.
Let's take Africa, every time I go to Africa,
the amount of young men you see on the roads,
just waiting for work, working for opportunities.
and I'm saying, but there are other parts of the world
that are in serious need of people.
And I'm not talking basic menial labour.
I'm talking skills at all levels.
And I genuinely feel that if we can create
the right framework for the movement of skills and labour,
that the world would be a far better place than it is today.
When you share these ideas with other world leaders,
do they see the possibility?
Or like I've always wondered, when you're having these conversations internally,
are world leaders being pushed by the people or are they the ones pushing the people?
Which way does it really go?
You have the ability to push them.
And I don't mean that facetiously.
Where leaders are politicians, most of them who operate in democracies rely on people's votes.
And the people have the ability to shape the work of their leaders.
as well as leaders have the ability to nudge the population.
I genuinely feel that there are things that we are going to have to do
at a popular level globally in order to be able to see the status quo of power move.
In what way?
Why would they change what they're doing if it's working for them?
Okay, yeah.
You understand?
And what we're asking, in fact, is a change in the power relationships
and the status quo of how people are treated when they're doing.
move beyond borders. And that is going to require a little more effort. Look at the conversations
that are happening across North America, across Europe. Look at them. And regrettably,
and some other countries, it's becoming par for the course. But could the USA be the USA if it was
not for migrants? It's immigrant labor. It's the dream of the US. The fundamental story. That's right,
that anybody can come and be whoever they want to be in this country.
That was the seed of its greatness.
And then let's look at biology.
I didn't do much biology in school,
but any instrument, any organism that closes in
and that doesn't open up, dies, atrophies.
So I really, really feel that the problem that we're facing
is the browning of the world.
The browning of the world.
Ralph Gonzalez, who is Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadine,
says it all the time.
I mean, it's absolutely correct.
It's the browning of the world.
So that, you see, when you let too many people come in and people start to mix,
in a sense, everybody's beginning to get the same color and the same type of thing.
And that frightens people.
Because love knows no boundaries, does it?
That's true.
That's true.
I mean, I'm sitting here.
Yeah.
So, but I, you know what I sometimes think it is?
I think, I think us seeing the browning of the world.
world as one of the factors is completely correct. But I often wonder if this is not a natural
byproduct of people experiencing a standard of living that declines over time and then they start
to point somewhere. Yeah. Because if you look at Europe itself, some of the biggest wars that
have ever been fought only involved white people. You know, they were just fighting with themselves
about themselves. And so whenever I read these stories throughout history, I go,
oh wow it doesn't matter
Brown is almost the easy thing
for somebody to pick on now
but when you get rid of that someone will find something else
and somebody will find something else
and so I almost wonder
I think it's a combination
I think that there is
a definite
a definite contribution
with respect to inequity
and the fact that people who
could have believed that this was the type of life
that they could aspire to
now realize that that is now beyond them
I mean in this country you have it
with the industrialization that left
and therefore strong, credible, dignified jobs
were all of a sudden taken from people
and those jobs sustained families.
But let us not forget as well
that there is still regrettably
an eye for differences in the world.
Oh, definitely, yeah.
And I think the combination of all of those things
has helped to create that sense of almost despair
and the despair has led then to anger
and the anger has led to shutting out people
and focusing in.
But tell me when in history
any civilization has conquered or survived by shutting in.
Any living organism survives by shutting in.
It doesn't work.
And regrettably, we have to get worse
before we get better,
before we realize that it is a crisis,
and that the survival of all depends on the well-being and welfare of all as happened in COVID.
Yeah, those are the only times when people start to think differently about the world that they're in.
We'll be right back after this.
Let's look at Barbados in isolation because I think it's the same problem that many countries are going to face,
thinking about their populations, how they replenish them, how they keep skills,
how they keep growing sustainably.
Have you seen any countries that have gotten it rights?
And have you seen, you know, an example where you go,
that is the way that I would hope we can bring people in.
We can sustainably grow.
Canada has probably done a better job than most of the developed countries.
I think that they found a way of recognizing that they need to bring in people.
But at the same time, they treat them as Canadians.
The U.S. had it right before, too.
I mean, for whatever reason, the U.S. is in a schism as it relates to migration.
And I'm not passing judgment on them.
I'm just noticing that, you know, you do grow and you do succeed if you create those opportunities.
I think you were absolutely correct and also making the point that in those parts of the country where people were denied
or didn't have the ability to move at the same level and to increase their quality of life at the same level,
they then assume that it's because of a foreigner,
it's because of an outsider.
You're seeing it in France.
You're seeing it in other places.
But remember when Angela Merkel brought in a million people from Syria when it was here?
And it was like a shot of adrenaline because she understood that Germany was facing the worst possible future,
a declining and aging population.
The irony is that's what we're facing in most Caribbean countries.
The Eklat agency predicts that in Barbados that one and every two people could be over the age of 65 by the year 2050.
One and every two.
That's crazy.
Oh, that's not a great ratio.
Exactly.
And in the case of Jamaica and Trinidad, 39, 40%, somewhere around there.
So this is a real issue that we have to solve now because we're 25 years away from that point in time.
At the same time, the Caribbean is a microcosm of almost most of the largest civilizations of the world.
It really is.
Not all, but most of them.
So you have African, you have European, you have Asian, in every sense, Indian, Chinese, you have Middle Eastern, and you have the traditional Indians, most of whom were taken out.
But in St. Vincent and in Belize, you still have the Garifuna, in Dominica, you have the Caribs.
So you still have a few remaining.
And I like to believe that the Caribbean, because of our history, has a story to tell to the rest of the world and an example to share with the rest of the world.
We've not been perfect by any stretch of the imagination.
But for the most part, we have been able to bring about development to our people in the post-colonial environment that sees people, that feels people.
that here is people that recognizes that, look, okay, we need to provide education, shelter, housing,
et cetera.
Yeah.
We haven't done it for all yet, but we're on that pathway.
Not everybody's gotten on the train yet, but a lot have.
And when you start to compare it to other countries and other regions in the world,
you begin to see that.
The difficulty has come in that in many instances, small states have had rules imposed on them
that don't make any sense.
I mean, for years, the last 30 years we've been arguing to the,
the WTO, that we need special and differential treatment as small states, and that my percentage
share of global trade in goods is 0.000% and my percentage share of global trade in services is 0.001%.
So we have no capacity to distort global trade. But if you treat me as if I am equal,
to a large nation, then you will kill me before I can even start.
You destroy anything that I can do to keep my population alive in terms of manufacturing or in terms of whatever.
Yeah.
So that there is the old Aristotle principle, equality for equals and proportionality for unequals.
And if we were simply to use that and to recognize that you can't have the same one-size-fits-all prescription, you can't do it in a family, far less a country.
fire less a global community.
And if we can get that,
so many things that we've been trying to solve
will find themselves in place.
And part of the difficulty is
that the new world post-1945
was still remade in an imperial order.
So that all they talk about sovereignty
and independent countries,
you're independent so long as you do as I say.
Not even as I do.
Because when they told us,
Don't do quantitative easing and don't print money.
The truth is when COVID hit, what did the developed world do?
Oh, they printed money.
Did you see them printed and printed and printed and quantitative easing?
And, you know, so we have to find a way of letting some air, some oxygen, some transparency, some light.
And to begin to see that the one size fits all rule will not work.
And that you have to be able to give a little elbow room.
Not a lot, but a little elbow room for us to do the things that we need to do to keep our people alive, to keep our people prospering, to not cause our people to want to get into the things that you complain about globally in terms of migration or crime or other things.
Yeah, I've always been fascinated by, like sometimes what I think is very short-term thinking from some of the bigger nations in that they'll often think about mass migration, but they don't seem to one.
why people are leaving the place that they're in.
The first part of me goes, like, maybe it's just an arrogance.
I'll give you an example.
Yeah?
They do things that literally shoot themselves in the foot sometimes.
In what way?
In 2006 and seven, there was a big debate about the international criminal court
and the fact that the ICC, that U.S. heads of state and army, military, military,
people did not want to be subject to prosecution.
And they went around the world trying to get countries to agree that they should be exempted.
And Wayne the Caribbean said, hey, we hear you, but one, it don't make sense because this is
intended for all people.
But two, even if it wasn't, this is the idea of the former Prime Minister of Trindonan, Tobago,
A.N.R. Robinson. And as a matter of solidarity, as well as principle, we can't do it. They said, well,
If you don't do it, we're going to withdraw all military aid from your countries.
Wow.
I said, okay, that's not a wise thing to do, but we talked for a year, 18 months,
and eventually said, we're going to do it anyhow.
What happens?
Nature abhor is a vacuum.
China, who never had any relationship with any of the militaries in the region, really,
then stepped in and developed a relationship and provided training and equipment and things thereafter.
Does that make sense to a country?
country that is so frightened for China?
See, when you're saying that, I wish more people understood, especially Western nations,
you know, quote unquote, I wish they understood how many of the problems they're experiencing
are created in a cycle.
Yeah.
You know, so friends and I were talking the other day, you can't talk about 9-11 without
talking about Osama bin Laden.
You can't talk about it without talking about al-Qaeda.
You can't talk about.
But then you can't talk about it without talking about al-Qaeda.
then you can't talk about it without talking about the CIA,
which you then can't talk about without talking about the U.S.
and what it was trying to do about communism.
And now many of those people go,
oh, we did the wrong thing,
but the effects are felt so many years later.
And what you're saying is the same.
If you watch the news in America,
if you watch the news in the UK, let's say the BBC,
they'll very quickly say, China's expanding.
We've seen China here and China's in Africa
and China's in the Caribbean,
and China's doing the China's...
But I don't think I've seen any news reports that say,
well, the US opened the door for China and the US reneged.
The North Atlantic countries have not necessarily treated to the issue of development
in the post-colonial era as well as they could have.
We talk about official development assistance being 0.7% of GDP.
Most countries don't even observe that.
As in that's a portion that they're supposed to contribute to developing nations.
Exactly.
But countries like my country,
own have been said, oh, you're a middle income, you don't need money from us. So we effectively
don't get any aid from the USA or from Britain or whatever other than a part of a regional
study or a regional thing that is done. And that's one of the things that we've been arguing.
And I'll come to that in a bit because that's at the core of a lot of the development issues
that we are asked to be able to access capital from the official financial institution,
international financial institutions on the basis of historic GDP per capita,
which really doesn't, I tell people, that is like taking my blood pressure two years ago
to determine if I'm going to have a stroke today.
It's completely irrelevant.
You understand?
That's a great energy.
So that what matters because in 72 hours, a hurricane can hit me.
And I can have wipeout risk.
Now, a hurricane can hit in Florida.
You don't have wipeout risk.
Hurricane hits in the Bahamas or Dominica, it's gone.
Yeah.
And instead of dealing with qualitative issues in education,
you're now dealing with basic access to schools again.
So we make the point that the North Atlantic countries,
for whatever reason, had the Caribbean
and a lot of the other small island developing states in the Pacific, etc.,
in a certain prism.
This is how they view you.
This is how they're going to relate to you.
And China and India and others come along and say,
oh, these are some of your real development needs.
Oh, you need a gymnasium.
You need help in building a port.
Yeah, you need a road.
You need help in doing roads.
We're going to lend you the money at 3% or 2% or 4%.
Who else is lending you that money?
Nobody.
So I think that, remember what I said,
we want to be friends of all satellites of none.
so we're not looking to be anybody's pawn
but at the same time
we're not looking to be disadvantaged or unfair
because you don't believe I should talk to my neighbor
when in truth and fact the neighbor's done me nothing
and then secondly when I look at your circumstances
you have greater exposure with your treasuries to them than I have
the Chinese hold 4% of my debt
it can do me
it can do me less than a hurricane can do me
there are others who hold a far greater percentage
of my debt and the Chinese whole far greater percentages of debt in the developed world,
in the G7 countries.
It almost feels like a contradiction then in some ways.
It's almost like some of the larger countries are basically restricting smaller countries
from engaging in the best way or even in an autonomous way in the way that they feel is best
for them.
But you see, you get it.
So why do you get it?
Because you've been exposed now to the facts.
Tell me where in large developed countries are you exposing your population to the facts?
Or is it purely an opiate diet that you give them with respect to entertainment and dulling down the senses and no real discussion?
You look at the news at night and it's the same five stories being done on every channel when you look at this country or Britain or wherever.
And the Jewish rabbi, who I really truly respected, Jonathan Sachs, his chief rabbi in London,
wrote a series of books
and I encourage you to read them all.
But one is the dignity of difference
which really talks about moving from narrow,
from broadcasting to narrow casting.
And of course, we all know it.
I saw your last podcast on the impact of these devices on children.
And if you ask me one of the things that worries me at night,
this is it.
And I think left up to me,
how can we came back into office to find that everybody had these things.
in schools. But we need to have a national and an international conversation as to how do we balance
people's access to a world that is not there and is in the hands of a child whose brain
and whose maturity is not yet fully developed. You're going to tell them they can't smoke.
Remember with children you were told you can't drink coffee when you're young. It's not good for
young children. But yet you give them this most powerful weapon. Yeah, it shapes them.
It molds them, it influences them, yeah.
And at the same time, I've been arguing
that you need to expose our kids to risk
because what do children want to play adults?
They start at young and they can get away with it
because they go and take their mother's makeup
and their mother's shoes and whatever
and they're playing house.
By the time they become teenagers,
it gets a little more dangerous.
They want to smoke, they want to ride a bike,
they want to have sex, they want to do other things.
You now got us.
And I'm saying to them,
we teach children,
to cross the road as little kids safely.
How do we prepare them to manage other risk
as they get older?
And therefore the educational transformation
that we need is not to give people knowledge
because facts for the most part,
although you have to be discerning,
are found there in technology.
What we need are the values and attitudes,
the skills, the commitment to excellence
in whatever you do,
and empathy
because you have to care about people
if not even me in trouble
and you have to do the best
that you can do in everything that you do
however little, however small, however large
and you have to show them
how they develop and mature
which is what we don't talk enough
about the social and emotional learning targets
what do you expect a child
to say or do at 7, at 10,
at 12, at 14, at 16.
when the hormones start to get in the way,
how do you deal with that?
Recognizing that relationships with parents
are not always the easiest during that period of time.
So how do you create a pressure cooker type thing
where the steam can be taken off
and the child just doesn't explode into some kind of awful situation?
So these are the things that matter.
So I'm seeing more and more a world
that is not allowing us to have the conversation sufficiently
that we need to have.
And regrettably, it means that at the level of international policy,
where we were talking about an international diplomacy and power relationships,
that some of the things that ought to make common sense are ignored,
and then we only get to it when it becomes a crisis.
You know, so there's so many things that we can do better.
And let's take climate.
Okay, they say that there's no climate crisis.
crisis. I think this weekend you guys are going to have 90 degree weather in the end of September
when you really should be looking at moving to fall. The reality is that whether we say it or not,
the temperatures and the climate is not changing. There's a clear difference of opinion
between those now who say there's no crisis and those who are frightened as hell that this is
the greatest existential crisis.
that the planet will face.
So how do you bridge this moment in time?
You've got to find a common love language.
What do I mean?
Methane is 80 times more dangerous than carbon.
We talk about carbon all the time.
But carbon stays in the atmosphere for hundreds of years.
Methane stays in the atmosphere for 12 to 15 years.
but it's 80 times more dangerous.
Methane is generated from gas leaks,
and the flaring of gas is generated from how we raise our livestock
and farm rice, it's generated from landfills.
If we were simply to fix the pipes that are leaking,
and stop flaring the gas, because when you flare gas,
you can't make money from it.
If you were to capture the gas
and if you were to fix the leaks,
what would happen to the oil and gas companies?
They make more money.
That's their love language.
What would happen to the planet?
It would stop the destruction of it.
That's our love language.
And the scientists actually tell me
that if we get this right in the next 15 years,
we can actually reverse the temperature
by half a degree.
So what does that also do for the oil and gas companies?
Oil and gas companies are not the villains.
The emissions are.
So if they can invest at scale for decarbonizing technology,
then they can continue to have a longer route to run.
And the controlling of the methane gives them the time
to do the research.
To get the decarbonization.
President Trump did with the COVID vaccines.
Remember the Warps Operation Warp Speed?
Yeah, we've talked about them.
You need Operation Warp Speed for methane.
And that's what, I mean, I'd love to tell President Trump that.
Because he gets what he wants and the world gets what his needs.
How is this missing?
I mean, you're saying this to me now.
I've said it a few times publicly because I think the world needs.
It's logical.
It's what you're saying to me doesn't, I'm trying to think of it in my head and I'm going,
I don't understand why this.
It's common sense.
So what's falling way?
Is it companies that are trying to cut costs?
I've been trying to...
I've been talking to President Macron.
I've been talking to a number of other leaders
and I'm saying, look, we need to have a face-to-face meeting
with the oil and gas CEOs
because I actually believe that there is a win-win for us all.
Remember Sting's song?
I hope the Russians love their children too.
Yeah, yeah.
I believe that the oil and gas companies love their grandchildren.
And unless they have a plan to live on Mars that they haven't shared with us yet, they've got to get this act right on Earth.
I feel that if we can reach a legal agreement, just as we did with the Montreal protocols to cover the, I think it's got HFCs.
I keep fixing it up in my head, but the air conditioners and everything with the ozone.
Right.
And we've been successful.
in doing that.
If we took the same approach to methane
and had a global methane agreement,
now the Europeans might get a little antsy
on the livestock farming,
but there are ways to deal with that as well.
That will not stop the farmers from making money.
The farmers in the Asia who do the rice,
they may also get a little nervous,
but I know that President Banga at the World Bank
has already been working on how we can do things
in terms of changing how we farm there.
This thing is so simple, Trevor.
Yeah, but we seem...
It is simple, but it's...
It is simple, but it's...
Complex because you can get people to change.
Yeah, but we come up with these solutions
or rather we find solutions when it's war.
I've never seen a single war
and I've never watched a documentary,
I've never read a book about any major war
where people said we can't.
You get what I'm saying?
The atom bomb is an impossible idea.
It is truly impossible.
But nobody's...
said we can't. They said, find more scientists. They said, find more brilliant people. They said,
find more pieces of land. They said, they made it happen. You know, there's a trillion dollar jet
that America never got right. When I'm being facetious, I say, if we can find a way to cure men's
baldness, we can find a way to save the planet. But is that the problem maybe? Is that the problem?
Is that it is it that we haven't found the right priority? Yeah, isn't that, is it that maybe we haven't
found the right lever, you know, because when you talk to most people about climate change,
I don't think I'm being mean when I say, most people don't necessarily care, care, care about it,
or don't feel like they can't afford to care about it on a daily basis because it doesn't seem like
the thing that impacts them now.
So let me tell.
Like we're so bad at seeing slow problems, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
But let me tell it.
It's happening faster than we think, though.
Yeah.
Look at California this year.
Look at the fires.
I mean, it was apocalyptic.
Right.
Look at the fact that from as far back as probably two, three years ago, insurance companies started to say we're no longer insuring for fire risk.
Then let's look at southeastern, southwestern U.S., sorry, Florida, Texas, Louisiana, all of those states, especially in Florida, you're getting insurance companies.
and in the Northern Caribbean
starting to say,
hey, I don't know if I want to insure you for flood.
I don't know if I want to insure you for hurricanes.
Now, what, and I've been saying for a while,
what becomes uninsurable,
eventually becomes uninvestable,
whether it's a country, a sector, or a region.
The financial system globally
is premised upon insurance in many ways.
You go to a bank, you want to borrow,
money for a car,
insure the car.
You want to borrow money for a house, a mortgage, insure the house.
You want to borrow money for a company.
These are the covenants that we require
and we acquire you to cover insurance, blah, blah, blah.
I mean, it goes back to shipping days.
That's the point, you know, yeah.
So when uninsurable becomes uninvestable,
then the world is going to listen
because the financial markets and the financial companies
and the finance people of the world
are going to say, hey, what's happening here?
Now, Barbedo's, we were not the first, but we are the largest with respect to the issuance of commercial paper debt with natural disaster clauses.
I could make this joke here because, you know, you would get it.
We call it natural disaster clauses and then the World Bank and the British and everybody came and gave it new names, just as they gave us new names when they brought us across the Atlantic.
But we're accustomed to that.
So, but these natural disaster clauses simply say this and understand the internal logic.
If I get hit by a hurricane tomorrow of a certain category, not any and everyone,
your first thing you're going to worry about if you lent me money, are they going to pay?
Can they pay me back?
Yeah.
And you price that risk into the cost of the paper that you're charging me.
So I come along and say, hey, you don't have to worry.
I'm going to give you a legal commitment
that if you allow me not to pay for two years,
well, I get my body strong again,
my country strong again.
Because I have a lot of uninsured people,
which you know about.
So the state has to step in.
If you give me that two-year break,
I'm going to back it up at the end of the payments.
You remain whole.
I'm not even asking you to take a haircut,
which really untrue you should.
But I'm not asking you for the haircut.
And you don't have to worry about whether I'm going to default or not.
You're just giving me the ability to fix my stuff and move again.
So let me knock some word hard because if we get hit,
these clauses now allow me to get just under 20% of GDP
released over a two-year period for me to fix up the infrastructure.
to the place where you can pay people back.
Exactly.
Yeah, it becomes a more sustainable model essentially.
Exactly.
Like, I'm listening to you saying this and I'm going,
I can't help but draw parallels between what's broken in many societies.
Forget on a geopolitical level.
I think about the United States.
You look at what's happening in France right now.
And then we can go to African countries, South Africa being one of them.
The amounts of people who are one car accident away,
from completely being destitute,
the amounts of people who are one medical procedure away
from being completely wiped out,
the amounts of people who will have one moment where...
Forbearance is called.
But what's mind-blowing to me?
What's mind-blowing is if these...
I always wonder,
why can't these companies who are in charge of this?
Why can't these companies see
that the person being given an opportunity
to get back to whole
becomes better for them long-term...
Stronger.
then by squeezing them when they have the very little that's left?
I gave a speech in Algeria last week, Thursday,
where I quoted Derek Walcott, who is his noble laureate for literature from St. Lucia.
And there's a poem that he has that talks about the reassembling of the broken vase
and that the love that it takes to reassemble makes it stronger.
Oh yeah, it's similar to the Japanese technique.
I'll send you the quotation when we finish here.
And that's exactly the point that you're making
and that the country becomes stronger,
the individual becomes stronger.
And what does it really require
an understanding of the circumstances
or maybe the practice of the golden rule
do unto others as you would have them do unto you?
But do you think that's become broken
because corporations have been outsized power
in all of these conversations.
Like if you're a CEO
and you're only working towards that quarterly
quarterly report.
You don't see or hear anything else.
Yeah, and all they're thinking about is
I need to make sure that this number
in the next three months
is bigger than the next number,
is bigger than the next number, is bigger than the...
And so what that then means is you can't think long term.
You can't think in a beautiful soft curve.
You can't think in a way that's sustainable, I feel.
Which brings us back to the conversation
about narrow casting
and echo chambers, it brings us back to,
there's some kids in the region that I met recently
and their parents said,
I make my child watch something that is an hour long every day
because they are so consumed by quick.
With one minute and two minute that their capacity
to sustain attention and to think and to reason is compromised.
Yeah.
I think it's more than that as,
well. I always find myself bristling when people say, no one has an attention span. And I go,
that's not true. I really don't believe it. And the reason I don't believe it is because somebody
can stay on TikTok for four hours. So they do have an attention span. But they just rotate it.
Yeah. I think what they've done is we've created a system. We've monetized a world. We're keeping
you addicted to the drip drip. It means that you don't realize the long-term reward of exploring,
understanding,
misunderstanding,
re-reading,
digging deeper,
and then getting to the end
of something where you go,
oh, wow,
there's a moment
where I knew nothing about this.
There's another moment
where I thought,
then I lost,
and at the end of it,
what a beautiful expanse of information
I now have.
And it's a discipline
that people had before,
but I think that we need
to get people to understand
that you need
to be able to discern
and to explain
and to understand.
You don't have to agree
with everything.
you read, but you need to understand what it is you're doing and where you disagree.
Don't press anything. We've got more. What now? After this. You talk a lot about global debts.
And I think you've had one of the most outsized influences in helping people understand why so many
countries in the world are stuck in the positions that they're stuck in. You know, I grew up,
in a country where people, until this day, we'll say,
oh, well, I mean, look at South Africa.
They haven't, you know, and look at,
and then I've seen them say that about African countries.
Well, you know, Africa, they haven't done well for themselves.
I mean, you can blame the European,
but Africa hasn't done well for itself.
And you talk about this global hypocrisy and inequity
in a way that I think most people have never heard.
And it made me wonder, like, what do you think,
what is one practice that you think is the most globally, you know,
indefensible weight in how larger companies or countries are treating smaller countries.
You were right in saying larger companies too, because I think it's a form of bullying and a failure
to put yourself in the position of the others and to craft rules that work for you but not for
everybody. So let's look at everybody knows the story of Greece with their economy.
Greece and Ghana, and I'm not talking about Ghana in the last post-COVID years, but just before COVID,
Greece and Ghana had basically the same credit rating.
But Greece was accessing money in the international capital markets at a fraction of what Ghana would access it.
Part of it has to do with the safe assets and part of it has to do with a lot of underlying assumptions that were made as you created these institutions.
And if I want to get it as basic as I can,
why should Europe determine who's the head of the IMF
and why should the USA determine who's the head of the World Bank?
Doesn't South Africa have somebody who can head the World Bank?
Doesn't India have somebody who can head the IMF?
So a lot of these assumptions were made
and the rules were crafted in the image of a few,
not of the many.
And as a result, we've been paying the price
of those rules
that have not been touched
have not been deconstructed
and reconstructed
and we have been paying the price as well
that just doesn't matter enough
you know, okay,
South Africa is having problems, okay,
that's a conversation piece, okay,
maybe there's too much corruption in Africa.
What's happening in Europe and North America?
The same corruption not there?
It takes two hands to clap.
More often than not,
it's a European or a North American investor
in Africa.
That's driving the corruption.
And it takes two hands to clap.
This makes no noise.
So I think that bringing these things to light matters in terms of those who have a conscience, immediately say, you're right.
That's true.
And those who don't have a conscience will find it more difficult to sustain the error of their ways.
You've said things that have made me think of how we convince people differently because I remember one day you said, and you'll correct me because I'm,
paraphrase you incorrectly, you essentially said, we'll listen to people fighting about like migration
and who's going where and who's going. We never think to ourselves, how can we pay somebody to stay
in their country? And I saw you saying this. Yeah, I saw you say that. Some people were like,
oh, no, you should never. How could you say such a thing? Because I realize there's this,
there's this idea around immigration that has been romanticized, you know? And I think maybe because
I'm an immigrant and because I've been an immigrant in other country, I think sometimes people
don't realize that for the most part, I'm not saying for everyone, but for the most part,
people do not wish to leave their home.
They don't.
You know what I mean?
Some people want to explore.
Some people, but for the most part, people want to stay home.
What chases them out is a war.
What pushes them out is a famine.
What pulls them somewhere is an opportunity that they don't have where they're from.
But if they had those things in the place that they were.
Yeah.
You find that that would stay their home forever.
And when you said that, I remember thinking,
this is wild that a world leader would say that,
pay people to stay in their country.
Yeah.
Look, and it may not be as crude as that.
It may be in terms of the development package
and the investment opportunities.
But it broke through when you said that, I think.
But that's the point.
And the thing is to get people's attention
to start to think differently.
Yes.
Because what I find is that there are too many assumptions
that we accept as rigid positions.
Rather than,
and the thing I say to my government,
to my ministers all the time, to the country all the time.
Let us deconstruct and reconstruct.
What is the public policy we're trying to serve?
What is the public mischief we need to avoid?
Has technology made it more possible or easier for us to do things
in a way that we weren't doing it before?
And if so, who are the winners and who are the losers?
Because if you don't see people, you're doing nothing.
There will always be somebody who will suffer
as a result of the change in the status quo
and there will always be somebody
potentially who can benefit
but sometimes you need to go in
just like a sculptor
and you need to just smooth it out
because even though you're going in one direction
you may find that that's an outlier
that you really need to bring back
and if not down the line
it'll lead to X, Y, Z.
How do you maintain your hope
being such a small nation?
Because I always think to myself
Or Bedos to me is the perfect analogy for what many humans feel in life.
They feel small, they feel insignificant, they feel like an afterthought.
And yet every day you'll go out and you'll meet with other world leaders who will give you the time.
You will speak at the United Nations, knowing full well that many of the nations that you're speaking to see you as an insignificant part of the conversations that they're having.
So I guess it's two questions really.
One is where did that hope come from and what keeps it going?
And the second part of it is how have you found or what have you found enables you to make an outsized impact relative to where you're coming from?
Let me say that hope is human.
Without hope, you lose your humanity ultimately, I feel so strongly.
You have to believe that an ex-examination.
minute, the next moment, the next month, the next year can in fact be better even if you're
going through the hardest of times. At the same time, I've always relied on the fact that
God and time and circumstances can be allies. God for faith, time, because we have a
saying in Barbados, why in catch your impasseur?
Why in catch your impassee?
Yeah.
What I like that.
I like that.
Just because it hasn't caught you yet, it hasn't passed you either.
Oh, I like that.
And in terms of circumstances, things happen.
And we don't, it's maybe part of the divine if you're a person of faith,
or things just happen if you don't have that.
And why is my voice on climate resonating more today?
Because of the floods in Pakistan.
because of countries in Africa
that are going through famine and locusts,
because of wildfires in Greece and California,
those are the circumstances.
Time, because 20, 30 years ago,
when Al Gore was telling us about an inconvenient truth,
nobody wanted to listen.
So circumstances and time and faith
have a way of conspiring
to create that opportunity, even regardless of how small you are.
And as you learn in the stories with David and Galeath,
regardless of how large you are.
Do you think the world's...
And the fact that, let me give you a small example,
because South Africa plays cricket.
And Nelson Mandela made the point that when he was in prison,
learning about the conquest of the West Indies cricketers,
beating the British,
beating the Australians
in the 1960s
that this gave him
such a sense
of warmth and hope
and you understand?
And that's what it does
for ordinary people.
So Barbados,
as small as we are,
before Rihara,
there was
Segarfield Sobers,
Gary Sobers,
the greatest cricketer
of all time.
You go to Australia,
they'll tell you
who's the greatest
cricket of all the time
all around us,
Gary Sobers.
You go to England,
Gary Sobers. You go to India, Gary Sobers. He's still living. He is our first living national hero. Rihanna joined him a few years ago. And for me, you know what's special? Both of them grew up within a mile of bridge down in humble circumstances. And both of them came to be the greatest of all in the field that they have been practicing in. So smallness and
poverty and circumstances of birth or geography do not define us.
And that must always, always, always be kept ever most in our minds.
And as we raise our children, nobody's better than us,
and we're not better than anybody.
But we have the capacity to be the best that we can be.
And sometimes our best will actually be better than everyone else.
Talk to me about the Bridgetown Initiative.
Yeah.
So that's just a way of us being able to encapsulate us.
lot of what we've been discussing here.
Yeah, but it's so fascinating.
Please just talk us through it because I think regardless of where you're from,
it's great to hear, you know, amazing ideas that could shape any corner of the globe.
Talk to me about the idea it's inception and what you hope it achieves.
So we realized that the things that we've been speaking about aren't unique to us.
And a few years ago, I said, look, let me bring together a number of the people globally
that have been meeting, that have been agreeing with us,
that fundamentally believe that things must change.
And some of them came from mainstream,
within the financial institutions and the UN,
some of them from outside, some of them from NGOs.
And we brought them all to Barveras a few years ago.
And we started the discussion to frame out
how can we bring greater transparency and equity
and opportunity to countries
so that we can achieve these sustainable development goals
and at the same time we could say,
of the planet.
We are on the front line of the climate crisis.
There's no two ways about it.
I mean, for six months of the year, you worry about a hurricane.
For the other few months of the year,
Barbara, this is one of the 15 most water-scarst countries in the world.
Two years ago, we actually had 50% of our 30-year rainfall
for the first few months of the year.
So it's real.
When we brought everybody together,
we realized that, look, we need to make a major statement
and to go after a set of reforms globally.
You heard me speak about the fact about the need for inclusion.
Why should the head of the IMF be a European
and the head of the World Bank be an American?
That's a deal that was done by a few boys in a club decades ago.
But it doesn't apply to the world that you and I live in today.
It also doesn't necessarily mean that the best mind is doing the job.
Exactly.
You may have the best mind, but you may not.
But you may not.
Yeah.
What we want is opportunity.
Let's deal with the Security Council.
You have five countries that are the permanent five.
But then you have other countries outside it, like India,
that has over, what, 1.4 billion people out of 8 billion people in the world,
and they don't sit on the permanent five?
You have Africa.
And I'm not talking about individual countries in Africa,
because I keep making the point that the day that Africa gets,
is act together and becomes the United States of Africa.
Then you have Africa, India, and China.
And don't tell me about ethnicities or boundaries drawn because India has as many ethnicities
or Africa has more than India, but India has hundreds of ethnicities and languages.
Languagees.
Yeah.
But they found a way to stay whole as a nation state.
So why shouldn't Africa be represented on a Security Council as a permanent member?
Why should they have to go and fight for an election for a different country every other year
to get on.
Let us look at, we talked about the per capita GDP as the basis.
Why should I have to pay more money to borrow money for development when I am more vulnerable
and you're not taking into account my vulnerability in terms of the cost of capital,
the interest rates that you'll charge me.
But you're asking me to use the notion that, oh, you've come out of poverty.
So what do you do?
You put me back on an escalator to be pauperized again because you're charging me now too much
money and I'm spending more money in interest than I'm spending in health and education.
That makes sense to you?
No.
So these things all started to come together.
And as we went, we realized that there are issues pertaining to trade, the issues pertaining
to recently the credit rating agencies because they have a significant and some argued
disproportionate impact.
Yeah.
I mean, they determine where money goes.
And the cost of it.
Exactly.
So all of these things we're saying, let's pause.
New York is a lovely place to be.
London is a lovely place to be.
Zurich is a lovely place to be.
But guess what?
It's a closed club.
And the closed club is not necessarily working for us
because it doesn't make sense.
In COVID, I was told as a country that,
oh, you can't benefit from things that we would like to give you therapeutics,
vaccines, et cetera,
because your per capita income is too high,
your upper middle income as a country.
I said, but then I got nothing to do
with people getting COVID here
or the fact that I don't have ventilators
or the fact that I don't have vaccines.
And when it really mattered,
who was it that helped us?
It wasn't in North Atlantic countries.
We asked, we had export restrictions put on us
for equipment coming out of the US.
We had the UK refused to give us even 10,000
vaccines, fireless, whatever.
Prime Minister of India stood up
and he gave us 100,000 vaccines.
I could have kept them all for Barbados,
but when you live in a small community in the neighbourhood,
dying fair.
So we keep up and we gave to our brothers and sisters
in the rest of the region, however small it was.
Then Dr. Tedros at W.HO said,
and Uhuru Kenyatta said to me,
I want you to meet Strive Nasirah
because the African countries
have asked him to put together the Africa medical supplies platform.
And we believe, I was chairing the Caribbean community at the time,
and we believe that there may be some opportunities there.
I call Strait.
Next thing we got the Caribbean countries on that platform.
So a country as small as Sinketsan Nevis with 38,000, 40,000 people
could access goods at the same price as a country of Nigeria
with over 200 and something million people.
And it meant that therapeutics, vaccines, equipment,
all of that started to come together
and that the financing would be provided
by the Afriq Zim Bank out of Africa.
Good things happened.
That made a huge difference to us.
Since then, Afriq Zimb Bank decided to come into the region.
They've now signed partnership agreements
with all the member states.
They've now opened their first office outside of Africa
in Barbados.
And the whole African Renaissance
in the Caribbean in the last few years
has been growing.
I mean, when we came to office,
said to the population, we want a project called reclaiming our Atlantic destiny. We were defined
by Middle Passage coming across. Well, we're going to reclaim it now. I told you about the 1661
slave court. We have a duty now to shape the world in a way that makes sense for us. And the Caribbean
is part of the diaspora, which is the sixth region of Africa. And we are proud of it. But we also have to do some
serious repair.
There is no direct
link
by boat or by
plane that is
scheduled between
Africa and the Caribbean.
And yet between Barbados and Africa,
there is no landfall.
Explain that. Make that make sense
to me.
You know what this makes me think of?
And I wonder if there's anything
similar in your history. But
in South
Africa, there was a thing that my grandmother introduced me to because she was part of it. I just
watched her. They called it a society. And what it was was a collection of all the old grannies
and they would put money into a collection parts, right? Just their own money, a small amount of money
they would put together. So let's just say dollars because everyone, you know, so you put in your
$10 and this group of 20, 30 women would put their $10 in every month. And every month,
that fund, that little kitty would then give one of the grannies a lump sum of money.
You know what I'm laughing? Why? That's a sous. That's what it's called? A sous.
And I then learned actually only a couple weeks ago that in Nigeria, they call it, I think,
Isuzu or something very similar. Oh, so that's very similar in that, yeah. In Barveris, we call it either a
or a meeting turn.
Yes.
I love that.
You take your turn out of the meeting money.
And everybody puts in the piece and that is how families were sustained.
Exactly.
But when you look at what it's trying to do, it built the system where people realized on the
smallest level, as black South Africans, they were unbanked, they couldn't get loans,
they couldn't get access to any funds that would enable them to do something that required
more money than they had at that moment.
But if they all put in a little bit, each person every month was getting a lump sum.
And then some of it was kept aside in case there was a tragedy, like a funeral, a death that was unexpected, etc.
And then over time, and I've seen this happen in like some parts of Africa, some intrepid business people have realized that a market exists where people told them it didn't.
And they've gone in and said, hey, we will bank you even though you are unbanked.
We will connect you to the financial systems.
You know, even the things you're talking about now.
Kenya is a perfect example.
Yeah, impessa.
Yep.
And remember all the European banks pulled out of Kenya.
Yeah.
And risk that the European banks would never have taken.
But what is it?
The Kenyan banks took.
Yeah, but this is the thing I found.
I find fascinating.
Poor people pay back.
But this is what I find fascinating.
Those, like, they say risk, right?
But Mark Zuckerberg will wake up tomorrow and tell us he's lost $100 billion on a virtual reality world that never happened.
Yep.
Straight-faced.
You'll go, it's going.
gone.
Yep.
You know, we'll talk about risk.
You know, there's major companies that were invested in partially by these same
countries.
They lost all the money and it's just gone.
And you've just hit what the Bridgetown initiative is about.
It's about fairness.
We started the conversation with Rihanna about that.
It's about fairness.
That's why Bridgetown's name is put to it.
It's about decolonization.
It's about creating opportunities and bringing light in.
And we're not asking for any special favor.
We're asking Jess for transparency and fairness.
And remember what I said, equality for equals, proportionality for unequal.
And that's what the Bridgetown initiative is about fundamentally.
Let me ask you this before I let you go.
And it gets technical for the economists and the financiers in terms of the capital adequacy framework and the ratios and all that.
But fundamentally, this is what is about fairness.
When you speak to people,
who are from larger countries.
When you speak to somebody who's in England, in the United States,
in France, wherever they may be,
how do you make them see,
or what do you say to them that helps them understand
why their fate is tied to yours when it doesn't seem apparent?
Well, I think climate, as I said,
has done a great, great job, circumstances
in proving that point for us
because they begin to see similarities in what's happening.
The difference is that because we're small, we have wipeout risk.
They don't.
They can live to see another day.
They can live to find the way to build resilience.
Yeah.
So that works.
And the truth is that when you get in front of most people, people get it.
Yeah, it's actually true.
What happens is the lack of audience, the lack of voice.
And that's why I genuinely believe that if I were to sit in front of President Trump tomorrow
and say, look, let's do this thing with methane.
So you've never, you've never set with him?
Not since he's back this time.
Okay, okay.
You guys can drill baby drill.
And we can save the planet.
You understand?
And it's a perfect love language.
But what it does require is leadership from the G7 or G8 or whatever you want to call them.
And that's why I've said to President Macron,
Emmanuel is a good friend.
We've worked together on a number of things.
President Ruto himself and Barveras,
we're working on how do we finance.
I actually feel that if the World Bank was created today,
it would be created with a different purpose.
80 years ago, you created a bank that needed to help
with the reconstruction because of World War II.
World War II, yeah.
Okay, and I can give you all the examples
of the discriminatory treatment,
including the fact that you allow Germany to keep,
cap its debt service payments on the basis of its exports, percentage of its exports, or that
UK took 100 years to repay for World War I. But yet you want me to borrow and pay back
for a school in 15 years or a hospital. Makes no sense. We need longer term, cheaper capital
in order for the developing world to get where it needs to get and to stop the migration
that you're complaining about and to have structured arrangements for.
for labor movement and labor shortages.
But if we go back to all of this,
we find that, look, the absence of that capacity
to have cheaper money and cheaper capital
is actually making the world unfair.
Transpose it as you did to populations.
The rich get access to loans on a phone call
and the poor have to depend on a sous
or a meeting turn if they're lucky.
and it is that absence of fairness
that I believe that if we get in the same room,
most human beings do have empathy.
Most human beings do care about fairness.
But when you're in a large corporation, as you said,
and you're pushing for quarterly returns and all of these things,
you can hide behind all of that.
Yeah.
But if I confront you face to face,
you're actually going to say,
you know you're right.
You know that I'm fair.
And we start to begin, even if it is going to be complex for you to deconstruct,
we start the process and we at least agree on the destination.
And then we start to discuss the modalities for reaching that destination.
And climate has come at a time that maybe if I was leading 15, 20 years ago,
I'd just remain a voice in the wilderness.
but the global circumstances
and in fact the democratization of voice
because of technology
has created the capacity for a movement
to start to build globally
and I'm not the one who started it
I'm not the one who's going to finish it
I just happen to be one of the travelers
along the way
and I will do my best
there's a part of the Talmud that says
that we are not expected to complete the task
but neither are we at liberty
from residing from it.
And I use the metaphor
of the relay all the time
and that is why
I say to you that we have to do
our part and
while I'm doing my part where I am
and I'm not
a prime minister, I do the work
of a prime minister, that's not who I am, I'm here.
So for as long as
I'm here I'll do that part of it
but there's going to be a time when I'll be like
travel and I will
choose other modalities to be able to bring about and influence people. And a conversation at
its smallest in a block in a community is exchange and persuasion. It's no different at the
international level. The problem is that at the international level, you're not given access to
the room. Shirley Chisholm, who, as you know in this country, was the first black American
Congresswoman, Beijing Roots, was actually schooled in Barbados, gave credit to her
Barbadian schooling and grandmother for defining who she was as a person.
She was the first woman to dare a black origin, to dare to run for president in a established
political party in this country.
You go back and listen to her speeches.
They are as relevant today as they were then.
But she said one major thing that continues to remind me,
well, a few things actually, but one, I share.
If they don't have a chair at the table for you, bring your folding chair.
And that's what we've had to do.
I like that.
Bring our folding chair to the table.
That's sort of what Ethiopia has just done.
I mean, you know, what we're just speaking about is Ethiopia has been trying for a long time
to build a dam.
And I know it hasn't come without its political, you know, sensitivities with Egypt.
and other countries that are downstream from the Nile.
But it's really revolutionary what they've done
because Ethiopia wanted to build a dam
that they needed to generate electricity for a region
that covers how many millions of people?
The population of Ethiopia is over 100 million.
And only, I think, just over 50% of their population
have access to electricity.
And if you talk to anyone about the story of Africa,
the biggest problem in Africa
is that when the world is,
talking about technology.
600 million people
who are 1.4 billion
do not have electricity.
And the World Bank is committed
to doing 300 million
and I thank Ajay for that.
But what's happening
to the other 300 million?
The world has more than enough money
to finance it.
And the fact that they're using a dam
means that they're using
renewable energy
that is not becoming
a drag on the planet as well.
But how they funded it was fascinating.
That's the story of resilience.
I mean, that's the most fascinating story.
alone from the international bank.
And the banks, international community,
refused to fund it for whatever reasons,
and the Ethiopians turned inward.
And between the central bank and the banks in Ethiopia
and the ordinary citizens.
That's a mind-blowing story.
Citizens buying bonds, citizens given donations.
And I said to the Prime Minister,
two days ago when we opened it to Abbey,
I said, look, you know that this is the 21st century,
Adwa.
And for those who don't know about Adwa,
Adva is the battle where Ethiopia be Italy in 1896.
Nobody believed it would have happened.
And Ethiopia came together and it took them, I think,
almost two years in the long trek,
and they rose majestically.
Adwa is what led to the beginning of the Pan-African movement.
The New York Times, when you go to the museum in Addis Abava
that commemorates Adva,
You see the New York Times articles showing that this little African country,
their mind or mind is much bigger than Italy, beat the great Italians.
And out of this then came the entire movement that, guess what,
black people can achieve something after centuries of domination and subjugation.
And out of that came the glory of the Pan-African movement,
the conferences, ultimately the 1945 Manchester conference,
which really was the last major one
before the independence movement
and Krumah and all of the others coming out.
So for me,
this engineering fee is the biggest dam in Africa.
It's like two kilometers wide, 550 feet high.
I mean, you have to see it to believe.
I've never seen water move at that speed.
And even after they take the water
that they need for the dam to generate the electricity,
the overspill is coming down
with the ferocity that I've never, I've never seen it.
And that they could do it when the world said no.
It took them 14 years, but they did it.
So do you think there's a future where smaller countries and countries that have been
cast aside start to think like this or will, but do you think there's a possibility that
the larger countries who are being pushed by corporations will put their thumb on the scale
to block that from happening?
Because if Barbados, South Africa, a random country.
countries come together and say, you know what, let's do our own little projects. Let's get
our susses going. Let's get our societies together. Maybe I'm a little paranoid. I feel like
there are companies and countries who have been benefiting this for a long time who would go, no,
we don't want you to do that, even though we're not going to help you do it for yourself.
Because the status quo changes. And most people don't want those who are in control of the
levers of power don't want the status quo to change. By the same token, I've also been around
long enough to know, and I think you've seen it in South Africa, that some of the very same
people who were opponents eventually become converts.
Yeah, that's true.
And I think that that is why I believe first always in dialogue.
And that's why even what happened with Charlie Kirk, I think, is regrettable and horrific
because violence is never the answer.
Violence is the mechanism by which a fuel retain instant gratification or instant power, but
it doesn't sustain you in a long run.
and I think that the ability to have conversation must always, always be our first option.
So I'm more than prepared to be able to say, look, let us look and see how we can free up the movement of capital to be able to help those who really need it.
And quite frankly, I can lose weight in terms of even debt sustainability.
I use the metaphor of losing weight, partly because it's a personal challenge.
You know what I'm saying?
But you can lose weight at two pounds a month, three pounds a month, six pounds a month,
10 pounds a month.
There comes a point at which the rate at which you lose it is unsustainable.
Yeah, it's unsustainable now.
And we said simply to the international community in the Bridgetown Initiative
that the rate at which you want us to achieve debt sustainability
as developing countries in the world is too stark a rate, too rapid.
and that if you do that, I can bring back down debt overnight
because I can negotiate new terms.
But I cannot replace a generation of persons in under 15 to 20 years.
So let us understand what is immutable and what can change.
And quite frankly, what you think is immutable
is immediately renegotiated in a compromise agreement
between lawyers and financiers.
what I'm telling you cannot be changed
is a lost generation
and hearing you say this
I think back to some of the points in our conversation
populations declining
skills in short supply
in many places in the world
people not feeling like there's upward mobility
all of these I feel like we can
sort of draw a circle around
and the Venn diagram of all of them
becomes the singular idea
of giving people a chance.
And what I mean by that is,
you know, when you're talking now about a population,
I go, I often wonder why so many governments and corporations
can't see the direct link between their actions
and why people wouldn't want to have a child.
They're very quick.
I've seen, you know, whether it's the Elon Musk, whoever go,
this is the greatest challenge we're facing.
People are not having enough children.
And I go, yeah, but why would you want to have a child in a world
where you cannot pay for that child schooling,
where there is no health care for that child,
where you don't know where the next meal for that child is going to come from.
You don't need to bribe people.
Yeah, you don't create the environment that is necessary for them to want to expand.
And if your state is not going to catch the ball for you,
then why do it?
Exactly.
So that's why, and you ask me why?
Because in Barrettis, we believe that we have a responsibility to provide for every child education.
from pre-primary to tertiary.
The last government removed tertiary education,
free tertiary education.
The first thing we did when elected,
even as we were entering an IMF program,
was to reintroduce free tertiary education for Bejans
at the University of the West Indies at Cape Hill campus.
Because without education,
the opportunities are simply not going to be there
and the capacity to reason with people
will not equally not be there.
By the same token, we provide access to health care.
I'd like to do even more, but we do more than most countries of the world, quite frankly.
And I think that in understanding that, you then begin to say to the finances,
that's why I need 30 years or 40 years to pay back for the construction of a school or a hospital,
because I need to make sure that the people in whom I'm investing are now earning,
to help me pay back that debt at that point in time.
But if you give me 10 or 15 years to do it,
everything bunches up,
and I'm not yet at the stage where I have the capacity to repay,
given the investment that I've made in people.
Yeah, my mom always used to say,
you need to give the tree long enough time to bear fruit.
Absolutely.
And if you let it grow long enough,
you can keep plucking fruit forever.
That's the point.
And it's so basic that if we can,
and that's why I say to you,
that you have the ability, you and others,
you and Eva Duvenet and others who are storytellers,
who are communicators,
more than anything else,
we need the world to hear the message.
And as a prime minister or as a political figure,
they'll immediately devalue what I say by 70%
because politicians don't carry this way
that you will carry as a comedian,
as an entertainer
that she will carry
as a producer and a director
that Yusain Bolt
or Gary Sobers will carry as a sportsman
or Rihanna will carry as an artist
you have the ability to reach people
when they are vulnerable and willing to hear
and it'll stick
well we start like this
exactly we start like this
and then our next conversation on a road
playing in Barbados
but I'm not going to be playing
road tennis with you I'm going to get some of my
constituents to do it
as any good leader does
know when you are not the best person for the job
that's the mark of a good leader
I will arrange it I'll manage it
I'll even commentate for you
it's on
Prime Minister Motley thank you so much
for joining us and yeah I mean
you know one of the
as I say one of my favorite things about listening
to you is my name is Mia by the way
Oh, no, I mean, yes, but in my culture, ha-ha, let me call you that and see what my people will say to me.
I acknowledge that, but no, I think, I hope you don't take for granted.
We live in a world where so many world leaders either can't or don't feel the need to break down some of the most complicated issues that people are experiencing in the world.
And then they turn around and are shocked by people protesting in the streets, burning things down, or even just losing.
complete faith in the system that exists.
They go, why won't people vote?
And you go, yes, but why won't you listen to them when the voting isn't what's the most
important thing at that time?
And I think what I've always appreciated about you is you take the time to break down the
concept, you take the time to see what someone you don't agree with is seeing, and you put
a concerted effort into doing what I think all great leaders should do, which is educating
us about the world that we live in.
So thank you so much for joining me.
Thank you.
You know, we are last rebellion in 1937.
The theme was educate, don't agitate.
Hmm.
I like that.
Educate, don't agitate.
Well, you mean sometimes need to, but at that time, that was what they said.
Every revolution has a different theme.
Yeah, yeah.
And I want to thank you for the opportunity for this conversation.
And I want to thank you for making us laugh.
You know, there's a great Trinidadian-Calapsonian.
the mighty chocolate
and he says
you either have to learn
to laugh
or you go mad
and write your epitaph.
So keep us laughing.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
What Now with Trevor Noah
is produced by
Day Zero Productions
in partnership with Sirius XM.
The show is executive produced
by Trevor Noah,
Senaziamin and Jess Hackle.
Rebecca Chain is our producer.
Our development researcher
is Marcia Robiu.
Music, mixing and mastering
by Hannes Brown.
Random other stuff.
by Ryan Harduth.
Thank you so much for listening.
Join me next week
for another episode of What Now?
