By Horace Palacio: Belize is once again on the brink of disruption.
Bus operators are threatening to strike. Meetings are being held. Government is asking for time. Operators are asking for relief.
And at the center of it all is one thing.
Fuel.
The Belize Bus Association has made it clear. They are under pressure. They are being paid about 14 cents per mile, while others receive more, and their costs are rising rapidly.
Fuel costs are not just increasing.
They are suffocating the system.
And this is where Belize must face a hard truth.
When you do not have the right economic policies, situations like this are inevitable.
Fuel is not just a cost. It is the backbone of the economy
Economists have long explained this.
Adam Smith spoke about the importance of efficiency in markets.
Milton Friedman emphasized how distortions in pricing create long term problems.
Friedrich Hayek warned that when governments fail to allow proper signals in the economy, systems break down.
Fuel is one of the most important price signals in any economy.
When fuel prices rise, everything rises.
Transportation costs increase.
Maintenance costs increase.
Parts become more expensive.
Operations become unsustainable.
That is exactly what the bus operators are saying.
Fuel is not the only issue.
But it is the trigger.
It pushes everything else up.
This is not just a bus problem. It is a national problem
Today it is the bus operators.
Tomorrow it is taxi drivers.
Then it is farmers.
Then it is small businesses.
Because fuel touches every sector.
This is what economists call a cost push inflation effect.
When input costs rise, businesses must either
raise prices
reduce quality
or shut down
There is no fourth option.
So when bus operators say they may strike, it is not because they want to.
It is because the numbers no longer make sense.
Policy failure creates pressure points
This situation did not happen overnight.
It is the result of weak policy responses to rising costs.
When fuel prices increase globally, governments have tools.
They can reduce taxes temporarily.
They can adjust subsidies.
They can stabilize key sectors like transportation.
Countries that understand this act quickly.
Countries that do not
wait
delay
and react when the system is already under pressure
That is what we are seeing now.
Meetings. Promises. Requests for time.
But the pressure is already there.
And pressure always finds a breaking point.
The real danger Belize must understand
If the buses stop
workers cannot get to jobs
students cannot get to school
business slows down
The entire country feels it.
This is not just about operators asking for more money.
This is about the functioning of the economy itself.
Milton Friedman once said that inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, but what we are seeing here is also a policy phenomenon.
When the cost of doing business becomes too high
systems begin to fail
one sector at a time
The bottom line
The bus operators are not the problem.
They are the signal.
They are showing Belize what happens when
fuel costs rise
policies lag
and economic pressure builds
And unless the root issue is addressed
this will not be the last disruption
It will be the first of many
Because when fuel becomes too expensive
the entire economy starts to crack
And Belize is now feeling those cracks.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author, Horace Palacio, and do not necessarily reflect the views or editorial stance of Breaking Belize News.
The post Belize is feeling the pressure of bad fuel policy appeared first on Belize News and Opinion on www.breakingbelizenews.com.
By Horace Palacio: Belize is once again on the brink of disruption. Bus operators are threatening to strike. Meetings are being held. Government is asking for time. Operators are asking for relief. And at the center of it all is one thing. Fuel. The Belize Bus Association has made it clear. They are under pressure.
The post Belize is feeling the pressure of bad fuel policy appeared first on Belize News and Opinion on www.breakingbelizenews.com.


