Government’s mid-year review will be delivered on May 13 when Government will also present a financial bill to facilitate payments to suppliers and contractors.
Finance Minister Colm Imbert yesterday announced the date for the performance review which Government has routinely done six months after the presentation of each annual budget. Upcoming review will examine the performance of the 2018/2019 budget presented last October.
Imbert added that review day will include the presentation of a Supplementation Appropriation Bill.
He said this was to allow funding for ministries to “deal with long-standing payments to suppliers and contractors.”
He said review statements will also include a date for the launch of Government’s Housing Bonds.
Imbert’s review will examine the performance for the first six months of the budget’s $51 billion expenditure level. In the last budget statement, he said there has been a “genuine economic turnaround.”
Yesterday, Imbert stuck by this saying, “The economy has turned around and I’m very satisfied that’s so. I’m completely satisfied it’s turned around. And the World Bank agrees with me now.”
The Bank, IMF and Fitch had given negative statements on growth recently.
Public attention in his review— set against the backdrop of an increasing election landscape— will be on whether his budget plan to slow de-regulation of gas prices remains intact. Also, whether 2018/19 revenue estimates ($47.7 billion) including non -oil and fiscal measure streams are succeeding.
Status of property tax collection— projected by September— is expected plus status of Clico debt repayment issues.
His review is also expected to update progress on Government’s six “game changers” now minus the Sandals Resort plan and the TT/Venezuela Dragon Field gas, delayed by Venezuela’s worsening political climate.
The review is also expected to pronounce on possible 2019 budget programme revision. In January, Imbert said this would be done following oil price volatility.
He’d revised the budget oil price basis to the US($55) after initially being pegged on (US)$65.
He said Government’s 2019 programme will be revised via the deficit rather than cutting since he didn’t want to stop economic momentum.
The review is also expected to deliver updates on Petrotrin’s post-restructuring status including refinancing of its US$850million bond, future of company assets, and developments with the three subsidiaries which replaced Petrotrin.
The restructuring was pegged as a “game changer.” One company, Heritage Petroleum, has sustained a start-up loss and another, Paria Fuel, a profit.
Yesterday, Communication Minister Stuart Young said the second phase of seeking a lease/sale partner for the Point a Pierre (PAP) refinery has started and the initial 70 parties , which expressed interest in the refinery, have narrowed to 24.
Young said the first phase by the Trinidad Petroleum Holdings Company— which succeeded Petrotrin, involved the receipt of the 70 expressions of interest. Parties signed non-disclosure agreements and were expected to view refinery assets via a data room at PAP.
He said the third phase will narrow down contenders even further as Government seeks to find the most serious potential parties on which recommendations can be made.