An Economic Report From The Bermuda Triangle

How would an international bureaucrat based in London or Washington view the economic prospects for a mid-Atlantic Island of just over 20 square miles of barren rock, 700 miles from the nearest land mass, with a population density several times that of UK and USA, which is two-thirds black, voted in a referendum in 1995 to retain its colonial status, imports everything from energy to electrical plugs, has no opera house or concert hall, no central bank, no national airline, no university, is dependent on rainfall for its water, and apart from a benign climate and natural beauty has no … Continue reading An Economic Report From The Bermuda Triangle