


Jamaica is currently in the midst of constitutional reform, a process being hailed as a watershed moment in the island’s history. Much of the public debate has been consumed by two proposals: the desire to become a republic and the replacement of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London with the Caribbean Court of Justice as the final appellate court. These ideas are being advanced with great fanfare, yet they are driven more by sentiment than by sober reasoning. They are products of anti-colonial rhetoric rather than serious engagement with the principles that should guide a modern constitution.
The obsession with “cutting ties” to Britain is not a plan for national development but an exercise in historical grievance. Politicians speak of republicanism as though replacing the Governor-General with a Jamaican head of state will transform governance. In reality, Jamaica already enjoys full legislative and executive authority. The monarch has no real influence over the decisions of parliament, the cabinet, or the courts. Changing the title of head of state does not make the nation freer or more prosperous; it merely indulges the belief that identity politics can substitute for meaningful reform.
The same applies to the campaign for the Caribbean Court of Justice. Advocates present the CCJ as a sign of regional pride, arguing that it is offensive for Jamaicans to seek justice in London. Yet the Privy Council is one of the world’s most respected judicial bodies. Its rulings carry weight far beyond the Commonwealth, its judges are known globally, and its traditions are centuries old. Investors, foreign governments, and international businesses regard the Privy Council as a guarantor of stability and impartiality. The CCJ, by contrast, is largely unknown outside the Caribbean, and its authority is confined to a small group of states. Replacing the Privy Council with the CCJ is therefore not a step forward but a step into provincialism, weakening Jamaica’s credibility in the global economy.
Anti-colonial rhetoric may excite politicians and academics, but it is a distraction. Independence is not measured by symbols or by cutting ceremonial links to Britain. Independence is measured by the ability of citizens to live freely, to own property, to trade, and to prosper without arbitrary interference from the state. Jamaica’s constitutional reform will achieve nothing if it continues to indulge the politics of resentment rather than building the framework for liberty.
The true path forward lies in embedding economic freedom into Jamaica’s constitutional order. Economic liberty is the foundation of prosperity. Nations that constitutionally protect property, contract, and enterprise consistently outperform those that do not. Switzerland provides one of the clearest examples. Article 27 of the Swiss Constitution guarantees economic freedom, including the right to choose one’s profession and to engage in private enterprise. Article 94 requires the Confederation and cantons to respect this principle and to create conditions favorable for the private sector. This ensures that the government cannot arbitrarily interfere with economic activity, and that restrictions on enterprise must be strictly justified.
The United States also demonstrates how constitutional protections can safeguard economic freedom. Although it lacks a single economic freedom clause, its Constitution provides robust safeguards through several provisions. The Takings Clause prevents property from being seized without compensation, while the Contracts Clause prohibits states from impairing contracts. Federalism itself limits government overreach by decentralizing authority and leaving the foundations of property and contract to state law. As John Harrison notes, the American Constitution protects economic liberty indirectly by recognizing property and contract as pre-existing rights and then constraining the federal government from encroaching upon them.
These models offer lessons for Jamaica. Rather than squabbling over whether to keep the Privy Council or replace it with the CCJ, Jamaica should be drafting constitutional provisions that guarantee property rights, freedom of contract, and the right to pursue enterprise. Such provisions would reassure investors, encourage innovation, and limit the destructive tendency of governments to overregulate or expropriate. In practice, this would mean enshrining guarantees that no property can be taken without full compensation, that contracts cannot be retroactively impaired, and that individuals are free to pursue any lawful trade or profession.
Such reforms would do more for Jamaica’s independence than adopting a republic or abandoning the Privy Council ever could. They would free the individual from the arbitrary hand of the state, encourage entrepreneurship, and attract international investment. They would shift the nation away from politics built on nostalgia and grievance and toward a constitutional order built on liberty and prosperity.
The politics of decolonization has become an obstacle to clear thinking. It fosters the illusion that Jamaica’s problems are the lingering fault of Britain, rather than the result of its own policy failures. The reality is that Jamaica’s challenges— limited growth, corruption, and weak institutions are self-inflicted. No ceremonial change in head of state or appellate court will solve them. Only constitutional protections for economic freedom will.
Jamaica has a rare opportunity to reform its constitution. The tragedy is that its leaders seem intent on wasting it on symbolic changes that have no practical effect. The obsession with republicanism and the Caribbean Court of Justice is sentimental posturing, not serious reform. If Jamaica wishes to build a prosperous future, it must abandon the theatrics of anti-colonial politics and follow the examples of nations that have made economic freedom their constitutional foundation. Switzerland and the United States have demonstrated that prosperity flows from securing property, contract, and enterprise, not from rewriting symbols of statehood.