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Lisa Hanna™️

@LisaHannamp51,881 subscribers

Lisa Hanna™️, MP (4 Terms) Businesswoman • Founder @lisahannafoundation Former Cabinet Minister | UNDP Goodwill Amb Global Leader • Columnist • Miss World 1993

Shorts

Welcome to JAMAICA. Have a nice day 🇯🇲

Welcome to JAMAICA. Have a nice day 🇯🇲

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Once upon a stage in 1993, I walked with hip dips: unaltered, unhidden. Three decades later, they remain: a reminder that beauty is neither perfect nor symmetrical, but lived through time, presence, and truth. May we teach the next generation that elegance is never crafted in clinics, but revealed in how we move through life with dignity, with authenticity, with grace. (Video: Miss Jamaica World Coronation September 11, 1993)

Once upon a stage in 1993, I walked with hip dips: unaltered, unhidden. Three decades later, they remain: a reminder that beauty is neither perfect nor symmetrical, but lived through time, presence, and truth. May we teach the next generation that elegance is never crafted in clinics, but revealed in how we move through life with dignity, with authenticity, with grace. (Video: Miss Jamaica World Coronation September 11, 1993)

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Guess I’m the one in her way.

Guess I’m the one in her way.

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Happy Friday! Have a good one.

Happy Friday! Have a good one.

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Today I spent the day in St. James - running the hills of Springmount to Mt. Salem and walking the streets of MoBay in support of our candidates: 📌 Jodiann Colomathi 📌Kerry Thomas 📌Michael Troupe 📌 Gordon Baldie 📌 Dr. Andre Haughton

Today I spent the day in St. James - running the hills of Springmount to Mt. Salem and walking the streets of MoBay in support of our candidates: 📌 Jodiann Colomathi 📌Kerry Thomas 📌Michael Troupe 📌 Gordon Baldie 📌 Dr. Andre Haughton

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Grooving into the weekend with gratitude—take a breath and relax even if just for a moment. You’ve earned it!

Grooving into the weekend with gratitude—take a breath and relax even if just for a moment. You’ve earned it!

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Even when the world asks the wrong questions, love is the answer - the truth we were meant to find. Not a reward given by another, but a gift we offer from within, a light that rises from our own heart. Have a great week everyone ❤️

Even when the world asks the wrong questions, love is the answer - the truth we were meant to find. Not a reward given by another, but a gift we offer from within, a light that rises from our own heart. Have a great week everyone ❤️

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Videos

LisaHannamp's profile picture

If you don't get paid for two months what would happen? Food in Jamaica is expensive. No one can deny that. Jamaicans pay some of the highest food prices in the world. Two months after the pandemic began, households that relied on savings said 50% of their savings could only last two weeks, 30% said they could only last one week and 18%for one day. (Caribbean Policy Research Institute, March 2021). Most of our food consumption is imported. As a result, any movement in the exchange rate increases the cost of these items. Therefore, individuals with fixed incomes will have to consume less when item prices go up, as it is improbable that what they earn will go up proportionally. For several years, I’ve been calling for the expansion of this list to more products consumed by minimum wage earners. What is there now cannot improve our people’s standard of living even with the increase on the minimum wage. Therefore, meet with the supermarkets and wholesalers and ask what people buy the most. In 2021, the Government of Trinidad and Tobago decided to remove the value-added tax (VAT) on the most commonly purchased items in supermarkets by most households due to increased food prices e.g. milk, instant coffee, ground coffee, black tea, green tea, orange juice, apple juice, still bottled water, fresh juice, biscuits etc. I would add diapers for infants and adults, toothpaste, and toothbrushes. What else would you add? We must help our people have affordable access to the right foods consistently, giving them a choice to eat substantial protein, wholesome vegetables, fruits and carbohydrates.

Lisa Hanna™️

55,801 次观看 • 1 年前

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We import US$ 23 million chicken neck and back is what we import annually to Jamaica, close to US$13 million in beef offals, beef trimmings US$ 16 million, rice US$84 million.... You may ask why there are so many parts of an animal and rice. Most Jamaicans cannot afford chicken, beef, or fish to feed their families, so they must resort to cuts and trimmings. In other words “Di Pot a boil but di food nuh nuff.” Disclaimer: I am not in the PNP's shadow cabinet, so what I am about to say may not contend. But this is something I've been speaking and writing about for years. I would like you to think for yourself and re-examine with data some long-held beliefs that others have tried to impose on you, saying they are supposed to be in your self-interest. Today, I want to highlight and explain just one and why it is a significant reason why our people remain unhealthy with obesity, high blood pressure, and other primary health ailments. They cannot afford to buy a balanced food basket because the cost of chicken is out of their reach. For decades, Jamaica has had 250% duty protection on chicken meat. Globally, the average import duty rate on chicken in other countries is 24%, so why must it be 250% in Jamaica? (it’s actually 260%) Is this really in our people's national interest, or are we serving the interest of a very few individuals, in particular 2 companies? Before you have a knee-jerk reaction to 'yes, it helps local production," let us look at the data rather than an emotion. The International cost breakdown of a chicken is feed (largely corn) at 61%, baby chicks at 18%, housing at 7%, others at 10%, and labor at only 4%. We do not make feed in Jamaica. We don't produce corn. We don't produce wheat or soybean; the inputs that go into feed. What we refer to as feed mills in Jamaica are really big silos and a mixer that blends these imported inputs into the final product, much the same as concrete is composed of sand, stone, cement, and water. But at least in concrete, all the inputs are produced in Jamaica, so the "local " feed is a totally imported product. So, in effect, the local Jamaican direct cost input of chicken is less than 10%. Therefore, I challenge the logic of providing excessive duty protection to any product with a local input of less than 20%, much less chicken, whose input is less than 10%. All the inputs in animal feed are traded as commodities on the world market, like oil; the price fluctuates in keeping with the law of supply and demand. The price of corn has fallen from $801 (US/Bu) April 2022 ,to less than $392.50today ( Check it yourself on on straight mathematical terms with 50% reduction in the cost of feed which represents 61% of the cost input of chicken our chicken prices should have gone down by about 30%, but instead it went up. Who benefits? Certainly not the Jamaican public whose citizens find it hard to afford a whole chicken dinner, certainly not the workers at the factory whose pay remains much the same, and certainly not the Jamaican economy as there has been little or no growth in our agricultural sector generally for years. Did you know that if you apply for a permit to import a container of chicken in any form, the ministry of agriculture first refers the matter to the two chicken monopoly producers to find out if they have any objections? Tell them to challenge me on this! What do you think is their response? With that system in place, there is effectively no real competition in the marketplace. In fact there is no marketplace. You pay what the two local monopolies decide you should pay. Since it’s so obvious, you will wonder why this backward policy has continued. Well, the false theory is that we are saving the livelihood of the 30,000 small farmers. But is this really true?

Lisa Hanna™️

32,429 次观看 • 1 年前

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Jamaica still has some of the highest food costs in the world. For years, I’ve exposed hidden hunger, challenged unjust tariffs, and called for policies to lower food prices and support our small farmers. Our tariff and permit system restricts competition, enriches the big players, and leaves small farmers poor, workers underpaid, and families burdened with high prices. We are told these policies protect local industry, but in truth they protect profits and minimize competition. Jamaica imposes a 260% duty on chicken - the highest in our region. Plus, Mexico has suspended its tariffs, while Panama, Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Nicaragua keep theirs at just 15–40%. This outdated system punishes families and fails to build real production capacity. I will not stop fighting until we reform our tariffs, support our farmers, and make local food affordable for every Jamaican. Read my latest column: The Unseen Face of Protein Poverty Explore my earlier writings: 1.Let’s Reduce Food Prices – Sept 1, 2024 2.What Do Milk and Sugar All Have in Common? – Aug 25, 2024 3.Time to Re-Examine Our Policies – Aug 20, 2024 Our Farmers, Grow Efficiently, and Export for Wealth Creation – Jan 14, 2023 Rain and the Prospect of No Food – Jul 17, 2022 6.Pot a Boil but Food Nuh Nuff – Nov 20, 2021 7.The Fierce Urgency of Now – Sept 4, 2021 8.Taking on the Fight to End Poverty – Jul 17, 2021 9.Agricultural Export Is the Way Forward for Jamaica – Jan 26, 2021*

Lisa Hanna™️

16,363 次观看 • 8 个月前