Whoever is outside of the Parliament on Monday, seasoned Finance Minister Colm Imbert knows that whatever Budget he presents then, he’ll be criticised and called out, as well as commended.
Whichever prevails will be known after Imbert’s several-hour presentation of his most important Budget for Government’s last nine years. It’s a pivotal 2024-2025 make-or-break package beyond election year consideration.
Imbert’s slight frame has borne the brunt of burden-shaping and retooling T&T’s financial management through crises that hit Government from start to finish, budgets reflecting Government’s challenges, plus resolve. Themes from 2016/19 evolved from growth, change to turnaround. Just at the latter point, however, pandemic/post years switched to the need for stability, strength, growth resilience, tenacity and capacity building. A tough road which citizens have commendably tread even amid a crime assault.
In an election year where Government’s main challenge is crime’s effects, Imbert’s Budget must reset T&T and Government’s footing for its campaign—which at the depth of security problems—cannot bank on blaming Opposition infractions.
Incidents within hospital compounds, PNM constituencies, outside kindergartens and schools aren’t the only confirmations of Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley’s Republic Day lament about T&T’s “dark side.” Or President Christine Kangaloo’s observation about people’s pullback from public service.
As Government’s last, pre-election, there’s extra pressure on the Budget, including to ensure a “crunch” doesn’t come after 2025. The supreme test of Imbert’s ability is providing for that pressure and expectant public within the confines of a bleak landscape, which will be required to produce revenue better than 2024.
Witness yesterday’s oil price (US$67/71) and gas (US$2), much lower than the 2024 Budget basis (US$85) and (US$5). Waning energy stocks, Dragon Gas uncertainty pending US election outcome, the need to cut subsidies/transfers and boost local revenue streams.
Demands exceed maxi drivers claiming $4million, PSA’s pending second round of negotiations, other incomplete issues. Budget success may bank on the new mechanism to gauge energy prices, new presentation mode and realistically rooted commitments and plans.
Whatever is delivered will dictate the election’s pace. And expenditure size will reveal T&T’s challenges and extent of freedom.
Amid unknown energy revenue plus election challenge, whether T&T and Government’s demands require a $60B-plus package—similar to the first 2016 Budget ($63B), its largest, when funding was required to meet past obligations—PNM sources estimate levels could remain around the ballpark margin of the current $59B package or just over, once there’s a more realistic energy basis.
While unlikely to be in the low $50B level of 2017/2022, they cited deficit financing risk with high figures, noting projected expenditure would depend on 2025 projected revenue from assorted sectors.
Public interest in the current “live” area of property tax is obviously with expectation the tax remains at the two per cent level “hook.” Election landscape will naturally seek a commitment that it won’t be increased further.
Flavouring’s also expected in the (confirmed) fact that T&TEC’s rate hike won’t be in 2025. It’s a given in election year but will raise queries about after.
With a Petrotrin refinery investor decision “very close”—after discussions with investors in August—it’s understood certain groups have been shortlisted. Bidders included OWTU’s Patriotic Energies, whose offer has differed to their previous (rejected) bid.
Apart from what the Budget telegraphs to the Tobago House of Assembly—which requested $4B—Government’s Tobago voice has been increased in the Senate by Tobago leader Ancil Dennis replacing Laurel Lezama-Lee Sing, who resigned. Her side of certain personal issues is yet to arise. Dennis, who was among defeated PNMItes in the 2021 THA polls, arrives in time to participate in the upcoming conclusion of the Tobago autonomy bills, key to election campaigning.
While the Budget will reflect Government’s competency, including for future administration, so too will Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s reply on Friday preview UNC’s capability as such.
She’ll be challenged to counter Imbert’s presentation—point, project and probe—with her own “Budgefesto,” likely promoting the UNC’s theme of being “better,” including on people-centred issues. Feasibility of her prescriptions, however, will have to fit T&T’s constraints.
Also ahead: what messages the “Independent Opposition bench”—as Government’s dubbed them—will send after Imbert’s 2025 curtain raiser Budget.