The One-Person Economy Forum
A Leadership Breakfast for Corporate Jamaica — Understanding a Structural Shift That Is Already Reshaping Your Market
The Rationale: A Silent Revolution Demands a Corporate Response
Something consequential is unfolding in Jamaica’s consumer landscape — quietly, without dramatic announcement, and largely undetected by conventional business strategy. Households are shrinking. Family formation is being delayed or abandoned altogether. And the economic unit that once anchored Jamaican commerce — the multi-person household — is giving way to the self-contained individual: living alone, earning alone, spending alone.
This is the One-Person Economy — and it is not a niche demographic curiosity. It is an accelerating structural shift documented across Jamaica’s own statistical record, visible in housing development trends, retail consumption patterns, financial services uptake, and a rapidly evolving informal economy. One-bedroom luxury apartments are selling out. Single-serve packaging is outperforming family sizes. Mobile financial products built for the individual are outpacing traditional household-oriented banking.
Yet corporate Jamaica — in its product development pipelines, its marketing strategies, its distribution models, and its workforce design — is still largely configured for a household economy that is quietly disappearing.
“The ‘One Person Economy’ reflects a structural shift to smaller households, delayed or avoided family formation, rising cost of living forcing individuals to operate independently and consumption designed for one, not many. This is not just lifestyle change. It is economic adaptation under pressure.”
— Dr. Leahcim Semaj, Psychologist & Quantum Transformation Facilitator, The Semaj MindSpa
The pressure driving this shift is not primarily cultural preference. It is economic. Food expenditure already consumes approximately 42% of household spending in Jamaica. Growth has been historically sluggish — under 1% annually across decades. The middle class is being progressively priced out of family formation. Up to 40% of the economy operates informally. These are the structural conditions from which the One-Person Economy grows — and in which corporate strategy must now operate.
There is, however, a dangerous illusion at work. Consumer spending is rising. One-bedroom luxury apartments are selling. Entrepreneurs and freelancers are multiplying. Visible success stories abound. It is easy to read these signals as prosperity. But as Dr. Semaj observes, there is a critical difference between an economy that is active and one that is genuinely strong. Individual consumption is rising — but shared economic resilience is declining. Family units as economic engines are weakening. Community buffering systems are eroding.
For corporate leaders, this dual reality — individual spending power rising while the structural foundations thin — creates both an urgent strategic opportunity and a long-term institutional risk that demands informed, proactive response.
The Planning Institute of Jamaica and the Statistical Institute of Jamaica hold the data that corporate leadership needs to act with precision. The case studies emerging from Jamaica’s own corporate landscape show what reinvention already looks like in practice — and what it must look like next.
This forum brings all of that intelligence into one room, for three hours, designed specifically for the executive leaders whose decisions will determine whether Jamaican businesses thrive or stagnate in the decade ahead.
Six Compelling Reasons This Matters to Your Organisation
Your Customer Has Changed — Your Strategy May Not Have
Product lines, pricing architecture, distribution systems, and marketing messages built for multi-person households are increasingly misaligned with the consumer who actually walks through the door, opens the app, or reads the offer. Understanding this shift is the starting point for relevance.
Data-Backed Intelligence from PIOJ and STATIN
Executive directors from the Planning Institute of Jamaica and the Statistical Institute of Jamaica will present the empirical reality beneath the One-Person Economy trend — providing the authoritative data foundation that must anchor any credible strategic response.
The Psychology of the New Jamaican Consumer
Dr. Leahcim Semaj will present the psychological dimension of this transformation — the rise of the hyper-independent, quietly vulnerable self-contained individual — and what this means for brand loyalty, decision-making patterns, marketing resonance, and employee well-being in your own organisation.
Real Corporate Case Studies — Jamaica’s Own Reinvention Stories
Drawn directly from Businessuite Magazine’s documented corporate case studies, the forum will examine how Jamaica’s corporate giants are already reinventing — and what the next wave of reinvention requires. Practical, sector-specific, and directly applicable to your leadership decisions.
The Long-Term Risk Hidden in the Short-Term Signal
The One-Person Economy presents a surface opportunity — but beneath it, collective resilience is thinning. Organisations that read only the opportunity while missing the structural risk will find themselves exposed as the decade progresses. This forum addresses both dimensions honestly.
Strategic Peer Dialogue at the C-Suite Level
With limited seating and an invitation directed exclusively at corporate executives and their leadership teams, this is a focused peer conversation — not a mass conference. The insights shared across the table will be as valuable as those presented from the podium.
Agenda: April 21, 2026 | Jamaica Pegasus Hotel
Who Will Be In the Room
Built for Executive Leadership
This forum is directed at the individuals whose decisions shape how corporate Jamaica responds to structural market shifts. Seating is deliberately limited to ensure the quality of dialogue that only a focused, senior group produces.
Registration & Investment
Reserve Your Seat at the Table
Limited seating ensures an intimate, high-quality forum experience for Jamaica’s executive community.
Registration fee is inclusive of full breakfast, delegate materials, and access to all forum sessions at Jamaica Pegasus Hotel, New Kingston · April 21, 2026 · 8:00 AM – 11:00 AM
For registration enquiries and group bookings, contact the Leadership Conversations CEO Council via businessuiteonline.com
