This white paper applies the life-coherence framework to St. Kitts and Nevis as a national diagnostic and transition architecture. It argues that the Federation’s central development challenge is not a set of isolated sectoral problems, but a deeper pattern of mis-nesting: the tendency for abstract systems such as finance, GDP growth, Citizenship by Investment revenue, tourism throughput, imported consumption, debt, and institutional targets to outrun or degrade the life-support systems they are meant to serve. These life-support systems include water, food, health, energy, households, youth, coasts, ecosystems, culture, governance, and the civil commons.
Building on the concepts of life-ground, life-capital, civil commons, mis-nesting, and re-nesting, the paper interprets the country’s fiscal pressures, water insecurity, food and fuel import dependence, noncommunicable disease burden, youth vulnerability, waste leakage, tourism exposure, climate risk, and governance-data gaps as interconnected expressions of one national life-system. It proposes seven mutually reinforcing national missions: Water First Federation; Food as Medicine, Farming as Sovereignty; Renewable Energy as Fiscal Medicine; Youth Belonging and National Service; Circular Island Metabolism; Regenerative Tourism; and Life-Capital Budgeting and Sovereign Resilience.
The paper further proposes a National Life-Coherence Dashboard, a Life-Capital Test for public investment and policy decisions, a life-capital budgeting approach, and a sequenced 100-day, one-year, and ten-year roadmap. Its central claim is that St. Kitts and Nevis can deepen its Sustainable Island State aspiration by moving toward a Life-Coherent Island Commonwealth: a whole-Federation development model in which finance serves life-capital, tourism serves place, food serves health, energy serves sovereignty, youth become co-builders of national renewal, and governance protects the conditions of intergenerational flourishing.