by Francis Amèdé, MD
In the sunlit islands of the Caribbean, particularly Grenada, a quiet crisis deepens.
While tourism and agriculture sustain many, rising violence, entrenched nepotism, social fragmentation, and a growing sense of self-contempt among the marginalised threaten the social fabric. Young people leave for better opportunities abroad, communities fracture along political and family lines, and a sense of collective hope fades. This is not merely an economic issue; it is a cultural and spiritual one.
Yet, other nations facing similar postcolonial challenges have transformed themselves by deliberately strengthening social norms, governance, and community values. Singapore rose from a poor, divided port to a global powerhouse through disciplined meritocracy. China lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty via targeted community governance and social harmony. In Africa, Rwanda rebuilt after genocide through national reconciliation and strong institutions, while Botswana and Mauritius maintained stability through anti-corruption measures and inclusive growth.
Grenada and the broader Caribbean can draw selective, practical lessons from these models. By adapting proven attributes, without losing our vibrant Creole identity, we can reduce violence, combat selfishness and nepotism, heal self-contempt, and build genuine social cohesion. Real change demands honest diagnosis, courageous leadership, and community commitment.
The challenges facing Grenada and the Caribbean
The Caribbean records some of the world’s highest homicide rates, with organised crime and gang violence exacerbating insecurity. In Grenada, concerns about gun-related crime prompted stricter legislation in 2024. Gender-based violence remains pervasive, with many women experiencing domestic abuse. Corruption and nepotism erode trust in institutions, as favouritism in public appointments and resource allocation leaves qualified citizens sidelined.
Social cohesion suffers from political tribalism, where party loyalty often trumps merit or national interest. This fosters selfishness and undermines collective action. Self-contempt, or internalised self-hate, manifests in high emigration rates (brain drain), substance abuse, and resignation among the poor and voiceless. Many feel left behind as elites and connected families advance, creating a two-tiered society.
Implications are profound. High violence deters investment and tourism, stifling economic growth. Nepotism breeds mediocrity in public service, leading to inefficiency and lost opportunities. Lack of cohesion weakens disaster response, critical for hurricane-prone islands, and erodes mental health. Spiritually and socially, it breeds hopelessness, contradicting the communal “we” spirit once central to Caribbean life. Without intervention, inequality will widen, leaving larger segments of society without real hope (Freedom House, 2025; UNDP, 2026).
Lessons from Singapore: Meritocracy and disciplined governance
Singapore offers one of the most compelling models of rapid transformation. Since its independence in 1965, it has faced ethnic tensions, poverty, and corruption. Its success rests on meritocracy, rewarding ability, effort, and integrity over connections.
Singapore’s education system emphasises excellence and equal opportunity, with heavy investment in quality public schooling and skills training. Strict anti-corruption laws, enforced transparently, include high salaries for public officials to reduce temptation. Community-based social programs encourage family responsibility and mutual support (“Many Helping Hands” approach). Low crime rates result from visible policing, swift justice, and cultural emphasis on discipline and respect for authority (Chua, 2020).
A cornerstone of Singapore’s success has been its transformative public housing policy managed by the Housing and Development Board (HDB). Today, approximately 80% of the resident population lives in HDB flats, with a homeownership rate exceeding 90%, one of the highest in the world. Through heavy government subsidies, price controls, and integration with the compulsory Central Provident Fund (CPF) savings scheme, housing has been made affordable for the majority while promoting intergenerational wealth. Critically, the policy deliberately created mixed-income estates and enforced ethnic integration quotas to prevent racial enclaves. This social engineering, combined with well-planned communities featuring shared spaces, has significantly strengthened social cohesion, reduced crime, and given citizens a tangible stake in national stability and progress.
For Grenada, this suggests creating a National Meritocracy Framework for public service appointments, with independent oversight boards using transparent, competency-based selection. Strengthening technical and vocational education (building on GNTA efforts) could equip youth with marketable skills, reducing idleness-linked crime. Public campaigns promoting personal responsibility and community volunteerism could counter selfishness. Additionally, a carefully designed national housing initiative inspired by Singapore’s HDB model could address overcrowding, promote mixed communities, and foster greater social integration and pride in Grenada.
China’s model: Social harmony, targeted support, and community governance
China’s poverty eradication program, completed in 2021, offers insights into addressing marginalisation. Through targeted poverty alleviation, the government identified specific households and villages, providing tailored education, infrastructure, and economic support. Strong central leadership combined with local accountability reduced corruption in aid distribution.
The philosophy of social harmony (hexie shehui) emphasises collective well-being, discipline, and shared national purpose. Community-level governance structures foster mutual monitoring and support, while massive investment in rural infrastructure connected remote areas to markets. Anti-corruption drives held officials accountable (Zhang & Wu, 2017; Scirp, 2022).
Caribbean adaptation could involve Community Prosperity Councils in every parish or village, locally elected bodies partnering with government to identify needs and monitor program delivery. Expanding skills training and micro-enterprise support (like the Spice Replanting Programme) with transparent tracking would build trust. Cultural campaigns promoting national pride and mutual responsibility could reduce self-contempt by highlighting shared identity and achievement.
African success stories: Reconciliation, integrity, and inclusive stability
Several African nations provide culturally resonant models. Rwanda transformed after the 1994 genocide through the Gacaca community justice system, which emphasised truth-telling, forgiveness, and reconciliation. Strong leadership under President Kagame prioritised security, anti-corruption, and visionary governance. Investments in education, technology, and women’s empowerment created broad-based growth. Rwanda now ranks among Africa’s safest nations (Global Peace Index data, 2025).
Botswana stands out for prudent resource management (diamonds) and strong democratic institutions. It maintains low corruption through independent oversight, merit-based appointments, and political stability. Cultural emphasis on botho (humanity and respect) supports social cohesion.
Mauritius combines multi-ethnic harmony, sound economic policies, and high safety standards. It scores among the best-governed African states through rule of law and inclusive growth (Ibrahim Index; US News, 2026).
For the Caribbean, these examples highlight the power of national reconciliation processes, perhaps through truth and healing forums addressing historical grievances and political tribalism. Strengthening independent anti-corruption bodies with prosecutorial power and embedding ethical leadership training in schools and public service could tackle nepotism. Reviving and adapting African-Caribbean values of Ubuntu (interconnectedness) and communal solidarity could counter selfishness and self-contempt.
Concrete solutions for Grenada and the Caribbean
To translate these lessons into reality:
- Combat violence and crime: Adopt Singapore-style community policing with visible presence and swift adjudication. Integrate conflict resolution education in schools, drawing from Rwanda’s reconciliation model. Launch youth mentorship programs pairing at-risk young people with successful locals.
- Reduce nepotism and corruption: Establish an independent Civil Service Commission for merit-based hiring and promotions. Mandate asset declarations and digital transparency in government contracts. Publicly recognise ethical leaders to shift cultural norms
- Build social cohesion: Create parish-level Community Harmony Forums for dialogue across political and social lines. Promote national service programs for youth, fostering shared purpose. Use media and churches to celebrate stories of collective success and individual resilience
- Heal self-contempt and marginalisation: Expand targeted support for vulnerable households, modeled on China’s approach, skills training, micro-loans, and mental health services. Incorporate cultural education celebrating African, Indigenous, and Creole heritage to build pride and identity
- Incentivise government and leaders: Civil society and faith communities should advocate through petitions, town halls, and performance scorecards. Reward constituencies showing measurable improvements in safety and cohesion. Regional Caricom collaboration could share best practices and pool resources for training
Implementation requires political will, but citisens can drive change through local action, parent-teacher associations demanding better schools, churches organising community support networks, and youth groups advocating for transparency.
A hopeful path forward
Grenada and the Caribbean possess rich cultural assets, creativity, resilience, and spiritual depth. By selectively adopting meritocracy, social harmony, reconciliation practices, and accountable governance from Singapore, China, Rwanda, Botswana, and Mauritius, we can create a society where opportunity is real for all, violence declines, and dignity is restored.
The choice is ours. Let us move beyond outrage to organised, loving action. By investing in our people, strengthening institutions, and reclaiming communal values, we can leave no one behind and build a Caribbean worthy of our children’s future.






















When using the example of Singapore, the complete story must be told. For Singapore’s model to develop, a long period of one party dictatorship was required. Government enforced firms social controls on the society, restrictions on civil liberties, suppressing political opposition, unions and the press. Are we prepared to accept those kinds of controls on our freedom to enable time for planned development? While praise is given to China now, it was always denounced as a Communist state, with even stricter conditions than Singapore. Are we prepared to live under those conditions? So, both China and Singapore are good examples, but give the entire picture.
Our populations in the region are less cohesive than many of the ones mentioned, because of our history. So, we have to find creative ways of managing our uniques characteristics.