But what does this work look like in practice especially for all Jamaicans, young or old, high-net-worth or just getting started? How do we expand the lens from one event to a broader economy, to a shared future?
Recovery cannot simply mean “business as usual” restored. For many, the storm’s aftermath stripped more than a roof or a road: it stripped certainty, savings, and the feeling of being secure. School-aged learners will miss weeks of classes; informal traders will lose weeks, possibly months of income; older persons found routine services disrupted. The economic toll is broad and varied.
Rebuilding must therefore factor in inclusion: ensuring that support, resources and opportunities are available to those most exposed or least prepared. Whether you are just starting your working life, raising a young family, or entering retirement, resilience means having access to safe housing, reliable income, financial literacy, and a social-system that does not leave you behind.
The physical destruction of roads and homes is visible, but the hidden cost is financial fragility: loss of savings, higher insurance premiums, increased borrowing, and delayed investments (in education, business, health). The question becomes: how do we mitigate the long-term financial strain of climate and disaster risk?
- For someone with modest means, this might mean building a small emergency fund, understanding insurance options, or exploring micro-finance programmes aimed at resilient housing.
- For more established earners or investors, it might mean reassessing asset portfolios for geographic, sector, or climate-risk exposure; diversifying; stressing scenarios; and including resilience as part of the strategic outlook.
Building stronger roads and houses matters but so does building stronger institutions and social frameworks.
- Transparent procurement, good governance and clear accountability mean that when funds are allocated for rebuilding, they are spent wisely and equitably.
- Education on climate-risk, land-use planning, building codes and community risk-management means that Jamaicans everywhere are equipped to participate in resilience, not just as recipients but as active agents.
- A resilient Jamaica requires investment in its people: up-skilling, entrepreneurship in green or resilient industries, and creating new pathways for economic participation.
Often the “investment mindset” is seen as relevant only to the wealthy. But resilience-thinking is universal.
For younger Jamaicans: investing in your skills, savings, and community now builds your resilience later.
For working-middle-income Jamaicans: allocating resources (time, money, energy) into diversified income streams, building a buffer, and reducing exposure to single-point failures (job loss, business interruption) are key.
For retirees or near-retirees: having a plan that contemplates not just market risk, but environmental/fiscal risk; how will storms, infrastructure damage, or climate-driven economic shifts affect income, health, legacy?
For small business owners: considering how your business could be disrupted by extreme weather, how your supply chain might be affected, and what safety nets or contingency plans you need.
Jamaica has an opportunity to lead, not just script “we were hit, we recovered,” but “we built differently, we innovated, we turned vulnerability into value.”
- Sectors like renewable energy, climate-smart agriculture, resilient tourism, coastal restoration and infrastructure retrofitting are not only socially vital, but economically promising.
- Young Jamaicans can recognise that the future is not just waiting for them: they can help shape it. Innovation, digital platforms, community-based projects can be part of this wave.
- Fiscal policy, credit markets, domestic and foreign investment flows all will be shaped by how well Jamaica demonstrates not only recovery, but resilience.
“The storm has passed” may feel like the end of something. But it is the beginning of a deeper, more inclusive work. The work of rebuilding not just infrastructure, but future capacity. Of protecting not just assets, but people’s hopes and opportunities.
For Jamaica, for every Jamaican, the imperative is the same: we must not simply return to what was. We must build what must be.
Tenagne Griffen is Manager, Personal Financial Planning at Sterling Asset Management. Sterling provides financial advice and instruments in U.S. dollars and other hard currencies to the corporate, individual and institutional investor. Visit our website at www.sterling.com.jm
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