hello, there. on thursday we are electing a new parliament. voters here will choose 18 new mps. we are live from belfast debating the big talking points that matter to go. joining us. gavin robinson, the leader of the dup. we invited the leader of the dup. we invited the sinn fein leader and the party tonight is represented by chris hazzard. colum eastwood is a leader of the sdlp and the leader of the alliance party is naomi long. and we also invited the of the ulster unionists, the deputy leader, robbie butler, completes the line up. on the order they are positioned in was determined by the drawing of lots. the questions come from our studio audience. largely made up of grassroots party supporters from across all parties standing in northern ireland. we also have a number of undecided voters. at home, join the discussion on social media. a hashtag is #bbcnidebate. i should point out the team of bbc news correspondents are fact checking this debate on the news nite website. l
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Barbados is in a serious debt trap and the sooner government is willing to admit this and come up with a strategic development plan, the better.This is the view of retired university Professor of Economics Michael Howard who laments that while borrowing is necessary for economies like Barbados, the country is facing a major problem because government’s present borrowing is unsustainable.“There is a danger of borrowing too much and this is what [Prime Minister Mia] Mottley seems not to understand,” he told Barbados TODAY.Howard’s comments came on the heels of Government’s announcement on Wednesday that an agreement had been reached with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a fresh Extended Fund Facility (EFF) arrangement to support the new three-year Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) programme. Under the EFF, which is to become available as early as November, the island will get access to about US$110 million over the three years, an equivalent of $85.0