Former Minister of Energy Kevin Ramnarine believes that any removal of the fuel subsidy in today’s Budget will bring more hardship to the people of T&T.
He was one of many expectations we sought on today’s Budget including what the theme would be.
The 2020/21 Budget’s theme was “Resetting the Economy For Growth and Innovation.”
After the last fiscal year of continuing pandemic problems, there have been views that the 2022 package will have to go in a particular direction–recovery.
Minister Imbert will read the Budget in today’s sitting of Parliament which begins at 1.30 pm.
Kevin Ramnarine
Former Energy Minister Kevin Ramnarine:
“I think he’ll try to paint a picture of recovery in 2022 - but it will be a tepid recovery. This is the Finance Minister’s eighth Budget speech, coming at a juncture where we’re facing extremely difficult economic and social circumstances. I don’t expect anything creative by way of transformative strategy. I expect that in 2022 debt will increase and there will be more HSF drawdown. The Minister needs to set aside the politics in this presentation and clearly define the reality of where we are in terms of our economy.”
Ramnarine warned that the removal of the fuel subsidy would bring more hardship.
“I’d like Minister Imbert to tell the unvarnished truth and not say ‘I can see clearly now, the rain has gone’, or say the energy sector is ‘booming’ as he did some years ago which turned out to be quite the opposite.”
“The Minister should state clearly what the plan is for super and diesel prices as we’ve been hearing all sorts of things about this change to the fuel subsidy. Any removal of the fuel subsidy at this time, with oil prices trending to $80 per barrel will result in increases at the pump. I’m not sure this is the time to do that given the economy’s condition due to COVID.”
“I’d like to hear too how Government plans to tackle ease of doing business. We’re failing badly in this area while Jamaica has made it a national priority. I expect the Minister to report a bump in revenue in 2022 on account of increased oil production thanks to the new BHP Ruby production and higher oil prices.”
“We’ll get an increase in natural gas production in 2022 but this shouldn’t mask the fact that in the medium term we’re in decline and Train 1 and the four plants in Point Lisas that are down will remain closed. While there’ll be more natural gas in 2022 compared to 2021 it’ll be insufficient and we won’t get to where we were in 2015. The economy lost was $TT30 billion in real GDP since 2015 mainly because of energy sector contraction. Unless we diversify the economy and become more efficient we’ll keep contracting in the medium - long term.”
Stanford Callender
Tobago PNM chairman Stanford Callender:
“After all that we’ve gone through with COVID and the additional problems it’s caused us if I were the Finance Minister I would deliver a Budget on the theme ‘Road to Recovery’.’’
Gerald Aboud
Starlite Group of Companies CEO Gerald Aboud:
“It’s obvious that in 2022 T&T has to start entering recovery after the 2020 genesis of COVID-19 and 2021 continuation of pandemic issues. Therefore recovery may be the Budget’s theme or part of its theme. But the theme should really be reform of the entire system needed over three to five years - we can’t recover from this situation in one year.’’
“The global economy, energy sector and trade changes demand a complete change for T&T including mindset. We also need to aggressively promote and market our country after this period of COVID-enforced ‘seclusion’. People are leaving T&T in droves. We need to find ways to attract investment here. Aboud said deep analysis of T&T’s problems is needed and change over formulas should include tourism, agricultural incentives, shedding stifling bureaucratic systems and public/private partnerships.”
Rajiv Diptee, President of the Supermarkets Association of T&T (SATT).
Supermarkets Associations’ President Rajiv Diptee:
“The Budget’s theme is likely to be ‘Consolidation, Digital Transformation and Recovery.”
Peter George
Businessman/Restaurateur Peter George:
“The Budget needs to be creative, innovative, encouraging and enabling.”
George proposed plans which should be part of the Budget’s theme, including an innovative plan for revenue that doesn’t fall heavily on fiscal measures, the opening of T&T to blockchain-based businesses, meaningful incentives/tax holidays for new business startups, tax holidays/further incentives such as donating of land to stimulate local food production, privatisation of state enterprises, allowing boroughs to raise their own funds, cultural transformation, and zero vat /duty on electric vehicles.
“Once we don’t face our reality and continue along as a woefully inefficient and beholden political economy we will sink further into becoming irrecoverable, irrespective of any utterance from government,” George added.
Greater San Fernando Chamber of Commerce President Kiran Singh.
KRISTIAN DE SILVA
Greater San Fernando Chamber President Kiran Singh:
“We suggest the Budget’s theme be premised on the very elusive diversification. For far too long, the energy sector has been the national economy’s backbone. A robust diversification plan’s needed urgently to boost financial and commercial activity. However, since the population is faced with extreme financial distress the Chamber urges the government to not use fiscal systems as tools to increase revenue. We’re pleading for delay of the very topical Property Tax at this time. This additional financial burden would be very difficult for citizens.”
Singh said the Budget’s theme should encompass greater fiscal and monitory incentives for the Small/medium sector, completion of the Petrotrin refinery sale, improvements for ease of doing business, VAT refunds for businesses, harnessing underutilised agricultural resources, development of the recyclables sector, development of the La Brea Dry Dock facility, rectifying Port shipping deficiencies and expediting Salary Relief payments.
Trade Union Federations:
“A people-centred Budget - without new taxes, property tax and further privatisation - but with business incentives and a roadmap of how Government will discharge its debts to workers.”
Minister Imbert will read the Budget in today’s sitting of Parliament which begins at 1.30 pm.