Senior Political Reporter
With a $9 billion deficit looming for the 2024 Budget, Opposition UNC Finance spokesman Dave Tancoo is demanding that Finance Minister Colm Imbert, in his mid-year review today, provide full disclosure on the true state of T&T’s economy—including the loss of $5B in revenue and its effects on citizens.
“Citizens are demanding that Imbert today tells the whole truth about the crisis he’s brought upon our national economy, including the new deficit and $5 billion loss, how this affects T&T’s economic health and what it means for the average person who’s already battling crime for their life,” Tancoo said yesterday.
Imbert will this afternoon present Parliament with the mid-year review statement on the 2024 Budget of $59.209B.
On Monday, the Government sought to supplement the Budget by $2.3B for 12 divisions. The supplementation and Imbert’s review will be debated today.
Yesterday, Tancoo noted that Imbert’s 2024 Budget had projected a deficit of $5.197B. However, an affidavit that Imbert gave to the court in Tuesday’s case by the Public Services Association—which is seeking to halt the operationalisation of the T&T Revenue Authority—stated the deficit expected may be around $9B and there would be a $5B revenue loss.
Tancoo said in documents he had seen, there had been a major collapse of government revenue for the current fiscal year 2024.
He said, “This has significant impact on the level of borrowing to finance government expenditure as the government will now have to finance an expected 100 per cent hike in the budget deficit. This is grave cause for concern and amazingly the Minister hasn’t made a single statement to the public on the issue—not even a tweet about this significant development.”
He added, “After nine years of state corruption, simultaneous over-taxing of the population and underfunding the growth and development of T&T, the truth of Imbert’s incompetence is now being revealed for all to see. I call on the Minister to stop his arrogant distractions and come clean with the population; tell us the true state of our economy.
“His reaction of backtracking on recent statements about social expenditure including for things like free services, CDAP etc has arisen because of public pushback—people want the truth, not election-year candy coating.”
Tancoo said it was clear Imbert had crashed the economy.
“T&T’s lost billions in foreign direct investment and thousands of small/medium businesses have closed as a result of Government’s failure to create an attractive investment climate.
“Imbert has blamed ‘international events and Kamla’, but while the rest of the world is registering a resurgence of post-pandemic economic growth, Imbert’s mismanagement has decimated whatever economic/natural resource advantages T&T held as an investment destination.”
Imbert’s statement today follows a positive review from the International Monetary Fund.
But the PSA’s statement after Tuesday’s court success noted the following points which Imbert stated in his court affidavit regarding the need for the TTRA:
• The fall in oil and gas prices and lower-than-expected production of oil and gas has had a profound impact on T&T’s petroleum revenues, leading to a projected shortfall in revenue for 2024 of TT$5 billion. When this significant shortfall is added to the initially estimated budget deficit of TT$5 billion for 2024, even with additional one-off revenues from asset sales, the country’s deficit for 2024 is now expected to be as high as TT$9 billion.
• The international price for oil and gas is not expected to increase significantly in the near future. Further, T&T is a mature energy province, having produced oil for over 100 years, and is challenged by natural declines in oil and gas production. In fact, oil production in this country is half of what it was 15 years ago, and gas production is 35 per cent less than what it was ten years ago. Such production is not expected to improve until 2027 when it is expected that gas from Venezuela should become available to the country.
• Accordingly, the next three years will be very challenging for T&T from a revenue perspective. In fact, unless additional tax revenue can be collected through the improvements in tax administration that will come with a fully operational Revenue Authority, the Government will soon be faced with very difficult choices in terms of maintaining the current levels of subsidies, grants, free services and social programmes. Notably, as the Government grapples with significantly reduced revenues, there are demands for more and more Government expenditure on infrastructure and social programmes.