Jamaican Government’s New Tax Announcement Sparks Outrage: “Everything Getting Pricey, Yet They Want Us to Make More Babies”

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The Jamaican Government’s promise of “no new taxes” is facing renewed scrutiny after Finance Minister Fayval Williams tabled a sweeping revenue package projected to raise $29.4 billion in the 2026/27 fiscal year. Framed as a necessary response to the fiscal strain caused by Hurricane Melissa, the measures include a new tax on sweetened beverages, higher Special Consumption Tax (SCT) on alcohol and cigarettes, General Consumption Tax (GCT) on international digital services, and an increase in tourism GCT from 10 to 15%. The announcement, made in the House of Representatives, has ignited a heated debate across Jamaican social media.

Williams defended the move as both lawful and unavoidable. She noted that the Independent Fiscal Commissioner had raised concerns about successive governments failing to table revenue measures alongside budget documents, as required under the Financial Administration and Audit Act. “Only a Category 5 hurricane with winds of 185 miles per hour could have interrupted that,” she said, referencing the Government’s long-standing record of avoiding new taxes. According to the Minister, reconstruction costs and widening fiscal gaps mean expenditure cuts alone cannot bridge the deficit. Instead, she argues, targeted revenue measures are essential to safeguard public services and fiscal credibility.

Among the headline measures is a new SCT of $0.02 per millilitre on non-alcoholic sweetened beverages, expected to generate $10.1 billion. Alcohol will see its SCT rise from $1,230 to $1,400 per litre of pure alcohol, while cigarette taxes will increase by $3 per stick. Meanwhile, digital services supplied from abroad — from streaming platforms to online subscriptions — will now attract GCT under the destination principle, with projected revenues of $4.2 billion upon full implementation. Tourism operators, long beneficiaries of preferential rates, will face a phased increase to the standard 15 per cent GCT by April 2027, a move expected to yield $11.4 billion annually.

Online, reactions have been swift and divided. “Where is the part where my salary increase?” one user asked. Another questioned access to public beaches, while others pointed to stagnant wages, crumbling roads and under-resourced hospitals. “Everything getting pricey but yet they want us to make more babies,” one comment read, capturing the frustration over rising living costs. However, some Jamaicans voiced support for higher taxes on sugary drinks, alcohol and cigarettes, arguing that curbing unhealthy lifestyles could ease pressure on the healthcare system.

The fiscal reset arrives at a politically sensitive moment, with critics recalling campaign rhetoric centred on avoiding new taxes. Whether the measures stabilise Jamaica’s post-hurricane recovery or deepen public discontent remains to be seen. For now, the conversation is loud, emotional and far from over.

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