Like the decision to dissolve Parliament in the middle of a five-year term, Prime Minister Manning's seven-day delay in calling the general election is strange and puzzling. It is unprecedented in the country's 48 years of post-Independence history–and the 11 general elections held in that period–for the Prime Minister to dissolve the Parliament and then not call the elections immediately. The Prime Minister may have been swayed to his choice of May 24 because that date is the anniversary of the 1971 general election that would have propelled a young, geology graduate named Patrick Manning into Parliament on the back of a no-vote campaign, led by ANR Robinson, which resulted in the ruling party sweeping all 36 seats.
Prime Minister Manning's decision to advise President George Maxwell Richards that the 2010 general election would be held on May 24 has eased the mood of uncertainty that was beginning to develop in the country. Picking up this mood of uncertainty on Wednesday, the president of the T&T Chamber of Industry and Commerce, Angella Persad, boldly requested of the Prime Minister, who was present at the Chamber's annual meeting, to "reveal the election date as early as possible so we can settle back to work." Speaking on Thursday, Central Bank Governor Ewart Williams said he suspected that the reaction to the dissolution of Parliament "would be one of wait-and-see and indeed it's possible that we would see very little attempt at restocking, new investment, taking your plans off the shelf and implementing them until the new administration takes effect."
Both Mrs Persad and Mr Williams seem to be suggesting that the formation of a new administration may provide some impetus for new investment decisions which, they imply, would follow May 24.
But for more than two years the country has been bereft of the amount of new investment–in either the energy or non-energy sector–that is needed to reverse the economic decline and place the country on a path of sustainable economic growth. The evaporation of investment by both the private and the public sectors predated the economic downturn that afflicted the country in the last quarter of 2008. The lack of public sector investment may have been caused by problems surrounding the proving up of new natural gas reserves and an irrational anti-industrialisation posture adopted by some university lecturers and others. These issues would also have had an impact on the foreign multinationals who wish to develop our natural resources.
Like the Prime Minister's decision to delay calling the general election, the decision by a significant percentage of the local private sector to withdraw from investing in the local economy is strange and difficult to fathom. It bespeaks a deeper and more insidious uncertainty than that touched upon by Mr Williams and Mrs Persad in their own ways. The businessmen and entrepreneurs who have remained on the sidelines–parking their money in the safety of savings accounts both local and foreign–should be reminded of the significant leap of faith that Anthony N Sabga showed when he acquired the controlling interest in McEnearney Alstons in 1986–also an election year and a time of significant economic downturn. The times require a similar vision in the country's future. It is to be hope that the 2010 general election results in an end to the bickering and sourness that has increasingly dominated the public mood in T&T over the last three years or so. While by no means seeking to make a partisan point, this country would certainly benefit from the boost and the feeling of one love that many felt in the immediate aftermath of the 1986 general election.