Consultant Business Editor
anthony.wilson@guardian.co.tt
One of T&T’s most prominent businessmen, Arthur Lok Jack, has stepped down as the chairman of Associated Brands Industries Ltd (ABIL).
Speaking at a dinner at the Hyatt Regency, Port-of-Spain, on Saturday to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the group of companies, Lok Jack said one of his three sons, Nicholas, has now been appointed ABIL chairman.
Nicholas Lok Jack has been ABIL’s group CEO and deputy chairman for several years
Reflecting on the fact that he turned 80 this year, Lok Jack said his new role in the group he founded in 1974 would be as advisor to the new chairman.
In his address to invited guests, Lok Jack described ABIL as one of the largest privately owned operations in T&T and one of the largest manufacturers in the region. He said the best days of the group, which manufactures chocolates, biscuits and cereals, are ahead of it.
Addressing guests before the announcement of his appointment as chairman, Nicholas Lok Jack said it seemed as though his father spent more time nation-building and region-building than running his own business.
Apart from chairing ABIL, Arthur Lok Jack served as chairman of Guardian Holdings Ltd, the then named Neal & Massy Holdings group of companies and BWIA and its successor company Caribbean Airlines Ltd.
According to a citation on Lok Jack on the website of the Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce, “He has played a pivotal role in the transformation of the economic landscape of Trinidad and Tobago and the Caribbean region through his roles as the first chairman of the TT Export Development Corporation; chairman of the Trinidad and Tobago Export Credit Company (now Eximbank); president of the Trinidad and Tobago Manufacturers Association and chairman of the Trinidad Free Zone Company.”
He was inducted into the T&T Chamber’s Business Hall of Fame in 2009.
As a benefactor to the development of business in T&T, the business school at UWI St Augustine is named the Arthur Lok Jack Global School of Business
The ABIL group has six plants around the world, including two in Malta, and has offices throughout the region, in Colombia, Miami and Panama.
At the function, Jamaica’s PB Scott, chairman of the Musson group of companies and Seprod, and Adam Stewart, executive chairman of Sandals Resorts International, paid video tributes to ABIL on its 50th anniversary. Also paying tribute to the group by video was Joe Esau, a former CEO of the ANSA McAL group.