More than nine years ago, on December 4, 2015, former Central Bank governor Jwala Rambarran was co-hosted by the Downtown Owners and Merchants Association at the Fifth Monetary Policy Forum.
At the time, there was significant public disquiet about the availability of foreign exchange and concern by several sectors of society that the distribution of mostly US dollars was neither fair nor equitable.
Perceiving he was under pressure to bring more transparency to an issue that had been shrouded in secrecy, Mr Rambarran named the top five users of foreign exchange by sector and the amount they had used for the previous three years.
In a news release on December 8, 2015, the Central Bank acknowledged that Mr Rambarran had been subjected to “widespread criticism” for what was perceived by some to be a breach of confidentiality. The bank described the criticisms as highly prejudicial and misconceived, arguing that it had weighed a variety of competing interests, including “the public’s right to be duly informed of the use of a limited national financial resource, against private sector interests, desirous of privacy in such matters.”
About two weeks later, on Christmas Eve, Mr Rambarran’s position as governor was revoked by the then-acting President Christine Kangaloo, who took the action based on advice from the Cabinet, which acted on the recommendation of the Minster of Finance Colm Imbert.
On Tuesday, T&T’s Court of Appeal upheld, to a large part, the judgment of High Court judge Devindra Rampersad delivered in June 2022, that the decision to revoke Mr Rambarran’s appointment was unfair and a breach of his constitutional right to protection of the law.
Justice of Appeal Nolan Bereaux, in the majority judgment, said the Minister of Finance had a duty to act fairly in dealing with Mr Rambarran.
“Anything less rendered the decision to terminate unfair, illegal, null, void and of no effect. That duty was plainly not discharged,” Justice Bereaux said then.
The two Court of Appeal judgments in the matter of Jwala Rambarran v the Attorney General of T&T come at a time when the disquiet over the distribution of foreign exchange is today even more acute than it was in December 2015.
At the heart of the issue, then and now, is Mr Imbert. After meetings with the T&T Chamber of Commerce and the Bankers’ Association to discuss ways and means of making foreign exchange available to local small and medium enterprises (SMEs), Mr Imbert issued a news release on September 23, 2023, in which he said “it is expected that a meaningful solution to the challenges faced by SMEs in accessing foreign exchange can be developed and implemented over the next six months.”
Seventeen months later, the country is still waiting for the “meaningful solution” to the foreign exchange situation.
And only last month, the T&T Chamber of Commerce issued a report entitled “Challenges in Accessing Foreign Exchange: Business Insights,” in which 111 companies were surveyed, indicating that 62.2 per cent of respondents faced delays in paying suppliers and 69 per cent identified favouritism in foreign exchange distribution as being a serious concern.
It is unimaginable that the Ministry of Finance, along with the Central Bank, are not able to devise a foreign exchange distribution system that is more equitable and does not entail the slow depletion of T&T’s foreign reserves and the increase of its foreign debt.