Applewhaite urges private, public sector partnership to boost services industry

Deputy Secretary-General of CARICOM Ambassador Lolita Applewhaite has called on the public and private sector to work together in the services sector to maximise its potential.

Speaking recently at the ceremony of the First Award of Excellence in Services, in Trinidad and Tobago, she emphasised the importance of synergy in exploring the vast possibilities of services because neither the private sector nor the public sector should work alone in harnessing the full potential of the sector, said a press release from the CARICOM Secretariat at Turkeyen.

Applewhaite said that ensuring the competitiveness of the sector was of primary importance, especially in the present global climate in which competitiveness was a “moving target.”

In this environment, she said, there was increasingly less room for low-skilled labour. “The continuing tooling and retooling of our workforce at both technical and managerial levels is an imperative for competition.”

“Competitiveness in services is increasingly based on our ability to develop and incorporate the results of research into our actual service processes and marketing, but importantly, also on our attitudes towards innovation and entrepreneurship.”

She also pointed out that these issues are universally important, whether in “financial services, tourism services, education and healthcare services, cultural services, utilities, or any other.”

Applewhaite used the forum to congratulate the awardees on winning the TTCSI Excellence in Services Awards, as well as Trinidad and Tobago Services Coalition for initiating these awards and encouraged other coalitions to follow suit, the release stated.

The Deputy Secretary-General noted that services coalition had the “full support” of the CARICOM Secretariat to make them “more effective and successful.”

“Let us make a difference.  Let us give excellent service.  Let us take our Services Sector to new frontiers, remembering the words of the leader of one of the world’s leading service economies: the race for excellence has no finish line,” Applewhaite concluded.