Days after the announcement of a resolution plan to pay Government and policyholders of the Colonial Life Insurance Company (Clico), various analysts are now calling for more details of the arrangement to be made public.
Among them is financial analyst David Walker, who in a television interview yesterday, asked what prevented the Government from paying policyholders sooner and how interest will be calculated.
"You remember in October 2010 the Prime Minister and the then Minister of Finance stood up in Parliament and told them that to pay people properly, according to contracts without having need for this law that banned legal action, would cost the nation an additional $7 billion on top of the $7 billion that was already spent.
"Now, my arithmetic tells me that seven and seven is 14. We could not have afforded then, we were told, so there had to be this alternative plan which presumably would have cost less. Now we know that old plan was costing somewhere in the vicinity of $25 billion yet suddenly, we can afford it," he said
Questions have also been raised by former Minister in the Ministry of Finance Mariano Browne, who expressed concern about how the repayment will be financed.
"Let me hear where the money is. Let me hear the numbers. The numbers are what I am interested in because that really tells you the company's position, whether it is capable of doing it or not.
"This is an election year. This is a matter they said that would have been fixed as part of an election promise. So that we are going through the motions. I mean, one of the issues would be what is the value of Angostura? What is the value of Home Construction? Home Construction is the largest land bank in the country."
Economist Mary King, in a commentary posted on line, noted that the Clico calamity was not the only one in the world but in the other CASES the governments handled the requests for cash flow bail outs differently.
She wrote: "The US bailed out AIG (US$85 billion), Bear Sterns and JP Morgan (US$29 billion), Fannie May and Freddie Mac (US$25 billion). Today these companies have weathered the storm and have repaid these advances where necessary, the assets were preserved and now are viable companies."
King said in the case of Clico the hue and cry was to advance money to the company's benefit so that "as many of their investors could be paid off, hoping that when the global economy picked up again the assets would be sold to repay government and the rest of investors and creditors."
She said no thought was given to funding Clico that it would weather the storm and emerge as a viable operating asset that could repay its debts.
"Today as the global economy turns up we are here selling what is left to pay debts, denigrating our financial innovators. Instead we could have been celebrating the survival of a conglomerate that was our own creation," she said.
On Friday, Central Bank Governor Jwala Rambarran announced a plan to settle outstanding debts owed by Clico to the T&T Government and its policyholders.