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Tuesday, April 8, 2025

T&T in $3.5B hole

by

Curtis Williams
1854 days ago
20200311
Finance Minister Colm Imbert answers questions during an update on the financial situation in the country at the Ministry of Finance, Eric Williams  Financial Complex, Independence Square Port-of-Spain, yesterday.

Finance Minister Colm Imbert answers questions during an update on the financial situation in the country at the Ministry of Finance, Eric Williams Financial Complex, Independence Square Port-of-Spain, yesterday.

NICOLE DRAYTON

Cur­tis Williams

Fi­nance Min­is­ter Colm Im­bert has re­vealed that the crash in oil prices and low­er pro­ject­ed rev­enue from nat­ur­al gas will lead to a bud­get short­fall of an ad­di­tion­al $3.5 bil­lion.

“Our cal­cu­la­tions tell us that this will re­sult in a loss of rev­enue some­where in the vicin­i­ty of 3.5 bil­lion dol­lars,” Im­bert told a news con­fer­ence yes­ter­day at his of­fice at the Er­ic Williams Fi­nan­cial Cen­tre in Port-of-Spain.

Im­bert said the short­fall will now re­sult in a bud­get deficit in ex­cess of $8.5 bil­lion. He al­so re­vealed that the Dr Kei­th Row­ley-led ad­min­is­tra­tion had re­vised down­ward its pro­jec­tion for the price of crude oil and nat­ur­al gas.

Im­bert said: “The Gov­ern­ment has done its pro­jec­tions and we are now us­ing an av­er­age price for the year of forty dol­lars for oil and a well­head price for gas.

“Again, there is a lot of con­fu­sion about what price we use for gas in cal­cu­lat­ing the na­tion­al bud­get, there is a mis­con­cep­tion that the Gov­ern­ment us­es the Hen­ry Hub price, which is what you see post­ed on­line. We don’t, we use a well-head price which is the ac­tu­al price for gas pro­duced in Trinidad and To­ba­go. So we have used a well-head price of three dol­lars for the bud­get, we are now us­ing a well-head price of $1.80 as­sum­ing a sort of worst-case sce­nario, so we are say­ing oil will av­er­age $40 for the fis­cal year and gas will av­er­age a well­head price of $1.80.”

The Fi­nance Min­is­ter blamed the fall in crude prices on the drain on glob­al de­mand caused by the COVID-19 and the price war be­tween Sau­di Ara­bia and Rus­sia. He lament­ed that T&T was a price tak­er and could do noth­ing about it.

In that case, Im­bert said Gov­ern­ment was still for­mu­lat­ing strate­gies on how to deal with the loss of $3.5 bil­lion in rev­enue but was con­fi­dent that it can han­dle the chal­lenge. (See ed­i­to­r­i­al on Page 12)

“We have gone this way be­fore and we have been able to suc­cess­ful­ly come out of it by very care­ful man­age­ment of the econ­o­my,” Im­bert told the news con­fer­ence.

“If we keep our ex­pen­di­ture as we planned, we ob­vi­ous­ly will have to fi­nance it through two mech­a­nisms, no ac­tu­al­ly three. One would be bor­row­ing ... Sec­ond­ly draw-down on the Her­itage and Sta­bil­i­sa­tion Fund. We will have to do some re­struc­tur­ing of the man­ner in which the fund op­er­ates. Third­ly will be ex­tra­or­di­nary rev­enue from sale of as­sets and so on, we are putting a plan right now on how to deal with the three and a half bil­lion dol­lar short­fall we had al­ready pro­ject­ed to fi­nance the five that was stat­ed in the 2020 bud­get.”

He de­fend­ed the de­ci­sion to keep ex­pen­di­ture at $52 bil­lion and not cut ex­pen­di­ture in keep­ing with the falling rev­enue streams. Im­bert said to do so would sti­fle the econ­o­my and could im­pact jobs.

“We are still plan­ning to keep our ex­pen­di­ture tar­get as is. One of the prob­lems with slash­ing ex­pen­di­ture is that it sti­fles the econ­o­my,” he said.

“So that when you have a sit­u­a­tion like this you can­not re­act with a knee-jerk re­ac­tion and just slash ex­pen­di­ture be­cause there are all sorts of im­pli­ca­tions that come out of cut­ting ex­pen­di­ture in a dras­tic man­ner. We have bills to pay to sup­pli­ers, we have the ques­tion of re­funds to busi­ness­es for VAT and we have to keep peo­ple in jobs.”

He added: “Re­mem­ber we have cut ex­pen­di­ture from the heady days of 2014 by $10 bil­lion dol­lars. Even though the ex­pen­di­ture pro­file is $2 bil­lion more in 2020 than 2019, it is still $10 bil­lion less than 2014. So we do not in­tend to sti­fle the econ­o­my.”

The Fi­nance Min­is­ter al­so re­vealed that Gov­ern­ment was now work­ing with a nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion fig­ure of 3.6 bil­lion cu­bic feet per day. This is 200bcf/d less than Im­bert had pro­ject­ed dur­ing the 2020 bud­get de­bate.

“So our nat­ur­al gas fig­ures for 2019 av­er­aged out at just be­low 3.6 bil­lion. We ex­pect that to con­tin­ue in the fore­see­able fu­ture, 3.6bscf of nat­ur­al gas per day, that’s the pro­duc­tion we ex­pect,” Im­bert said.

He al­so rub­bished sug­ges­tions that he is of­ten wrong in his bud­getary pro­jec­tions for crude prices, say­ing in terms of oil rev­enue last year the coun­try ex­ceed­ed its pro­jec­tions.


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