Local News>Bullock replaced at finance
ministry - Darlene Morrison acting as top financial civil servant
Financial
Gleaner
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Colin Bullock, who, as financial secretary, had an uneasy relationship
with his boss, Finance Minister Audley Shaw, is not being retained in
the job by the Golding administration, it was announced yesterday.
Bullock is being replaced, at least on a temporary basis, by the deputy
financial secretary for economic management, Darlene Morrison.
"... The PSC (Public Service Commission) will subsequently advertise
the post and make a permanent appointment," the finance ministry
said in a statement.
It was not clear whether Bullock, who turned 57 last week and is eight
years shy of the mandatory retirement age, will return to the Bank of
Jamaica on whose board he also serves.
NO IMMEDIATE STATEMENT
A central bank information official said that there was no immediate
statement on the matter and declined to speculate on the matter. "I
can't comment," she said.
Bullock, a University of the West Indies (UWI) academic turned central
banker, was seconded to the finance ministry in May 2005 to succeed Shirley
Tyndall, the long-serving financial secretary, who retired after 46 years
in the public sector.
But Bullock and Shaw have been at odds since Bruce Golding's Jamaica
Labour Party (JLP) came to office in last September's general election
after 18 years in opposition.
The internal tensions spilled over into the public sphere months ago
when Shaw, arguing that Bullock had overstepped his bounds, reversed a
decision by the financial secretary to contract legal cases involving
the Financial Sector Adjustment Company (Finsac) to the private law practice
of ex- solicitor general, Michael Hylton. Finsac is the vehicle that was
used by the Government to bail out depositors and policyholders banks
and insurance companies during the 1990s financial sector meltdown.
Cheap Loans
Finance ministry insiders also say that Bullock was uneasy with what
he felt was Shaw's less than nuanced approach to policy, including the
minister's long-held position that it would be easy to raise cheap loans
from multilateral financial institutions and Asian financial markets.
"The differences were obvious," said one source.
The ministry's terse, five paragraph statement announcing Bullock's departure
on May 1, however, made no mention of the differences.
"Mr Shaw has expressed thanks to Mr Bullock for his service and
professionalism during his tenure as financial secretary," the statement
said.
business@gleanerjm.com
The Financial Gleaner
The Financial Gleaner
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