Trinidad y Tobago celebrará este domingo las elecciones generales

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Trinidad y Tobago celebrará elecciones el próximo 10 de agosto

Trinidad y Tobago celebrará elecciones generales el próximo 10 de agosto, según anunció este viernes el primer ministro de ese país de la Comunidad del Caribe (Caricom), Keith Rowley.

El jefe del Ejecutivo dio a conocer la fecha de los próximos comicios en una intervención ante la Cámara de Representantes de Trinidad y Tobago.

«Le he aconsejado al presidente que disuelva el Parlamento esta medianoche, según nuestra Constitución. El día de la nominación será el viernes 17 de julio y el día de las elecciones el 10 de agosto de 2020», subrayó Rowley, que no dijo nada sobre si se presentará a la reelección.

En las elecciones generales de Trinidad y Tobago de septiembre de 2015 se impuso el Movimiento Nacional del Pueblo (PNM, en inglés) de Rowley, que obtuvo el 52 % de los votos y ganó 23 de los 41 escaños en la Cámara de Representantes.

El Congreso Nacional Unido (UNC, en inglés) obtuvo 17 escaños y el Congreso del Pueblo 1.

Rowley, de 70 años, ocupa el cargo de primer ministro desde el 9 de septiembre de 2015

En octubre de 2019, Rowley, dijo que fueron contratados unos asesinos para matarlo antes de las elecciones generales de 2015 y que se había reunido con el fiscal general, Faris Al-Rawi, después de que se descubriera otra supuesta conspiración para acabar con su vida.

El país ganó presencia mediática después de que un tiroteo el pasado fin de semana provocara tres muertos, causa de violentos incidentes de protesta por esos hechos que provocaron enfrentamientos que la Policía local atribuyó a un presunto plan para desestabilizar el país.

Los enfrentamientos provocaron a su vez tres fallecidos por heridas de bala, un agente de la Policía, otro hombre y una mujer, además de más de 70 heridos.

Trinidad y Tobago es un país de cerca de 1,3 millones de habitantes situado en el extremo sur de las Antillas que se define como una república parlamentaria.

La población está divida principalmente en dos grupos étnicos, el de los descendientes de personas que emigraron de la India (cerca del 40 %) y africanos (39 %), con el resto compuesto de mestizos.

La Estrella de Panamá


The election is on: Don’t be afraid, says PM

“As of today, the postponement of elections is not on the cards.”

These are the words of Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley on Wednesday when addressing how the rise in COVID-19 cases will affect the upcoming General Elections on August 10.

Speaking at a media conference in Port of Spain this afternoon, Rowley said that the threshold for postponement of the elections would be the presenting of large numbers of positive cases throughout the country. This stage he said, has not been met and is not likely to be met before next week Monday.

“The threshold for postponing the election is where the situation is out of control or likely to be out of control in Trinidad and Tobago. That threshold is not met and is not anywhere near us…I see people asking for a postponement of the election. Let me just tell you something I know about my country very well. If I were the person who had asked for postponement of the election, you’d have had crowds exposing themselves to the congregation to oppose that. I made sure I was the last person to even think about that because it was not necessary,” he said.

He added that the increasing virus cases were currently under control. The sources of the majority of these, he said, were identified. Those unknown are being investigated.

“The number by itself is not the whole question, it is where those numbers came from. All that increase from case 139 we’ve been able to identify most of those and the ones we haven’t identified are under active investigation…We are not going to expose ourselves to a situation where it can get out of control and then there are genuine cases for the election to be postponed. We are not there yet and we don’t expect to be there in the next few days,” he said.

Should protocols be followed, he said, the model suggest the country’s position will remain stable post elections. He added that elections are a necessary feature, having been conducted in several countries in the midst of the global pandemic. As such he asked that the pandemic not be used as an excuse to not vote on election day.

“The models say that once we follow the protocols that the EBC has set out and that we set out for the nation the activity of polling is not extraordinary activity. As a matter of fact, taking out half of the public service from coming out to work is more effective than persons in a line five or six feet apart going to vote. So, we are doing our business while the virus is among us but the level of risk. Some business places now will not let you in without sanitizing your hands, you go to a place to eat, you will see it there. We are living with the virus and one of the things you do when you are alive is have an election, very important. I hope you will go out and vote and not use the virus as an excuse for not being a participant.”

“There are a number of countries that conducted their elections and it was not a result of virus or no virus. There are protocols we are supposed to be following and the EBC protocols are followed at the polling stations, once the police enforce the no loitering no congregating in public places,” he said.

According to Rowley, while responsible voting is encouraged, the involvement of at-risk groups, such as persons in elder care facilities, is not necessary. If protocols outlined by the EBC such as mask wearing and avoiding congregation are followed, he said an upsurge in cases can be avoided. However, he added that there are limits on what can be done by the Government to enforce public health measures.

“People choose not to vote for all kinds of reasons. I think the people of Trinidad and Tobago are sufficiently responsible and if we had not taken out one person, lost one person yet from our senior citizens homes. I would be very surprised if anybody goes to those homes to take out those persons to carry them to a polling station, I expect that we will conduct elections without them and the reason being that nobody wants to trample on the rights of the constitution but because they are so exposed, this is a pandemic election.”

“In any case there is a limit to what the state can do. If in your backyard, you and your neighbours gather together to have a party or you sneak away and go to a fete while the rest of us are sleeping, 200 of you irresponsible people, go to have to beer in a fete in an enclosed environment, the most I can think of is a small dose of something in a closed place called a jail. The last thing we want now is to pick up people and have other people to handle and process them, don’t worsen the situation. That is what it is, to prosecute people for not wearing a mask, requires a body of people to carry out the enforcement,” he said.

He ended by appealing to voters to behave responsibly.

“We just have to behave properly, that is why I keep enforcing it is the personal responsibility that is taking us through this situation. and normal people who are ambulatory can go to the polling station and of course do what you normally do. After you cast your vote don’t hang around and when you are there follow the protocols and we will all be relatively safe doing that,” said Rowley.

Trinidad Express


How parties plan to drive TT economy forward

The PNM and UNC, the two political parties which are likely to form the next government after August 10, seemed to have missed the point about what is really needed to develop TT in the face of the ongoing covid19 pandemic, volatile energy prices and other economic challenges. The other political parties contesting the election are offering the population nothing in terms of concrete ideas for national development

This was the opinion of former PNM government minister Mariano Browne. In an interview with Business Day on Monday, Browne said the UNC’S manifesto laid out “very specific and measurable targets but no really clear statements of how they intend to achieve them.” On the other hand, he said, the PNM has set up broad, high-level goals, which are general statements of intent. Some of these statements by the PNM are repetitions from its last (2015) manifesto, with no explanation of where they have reached in terms of its implementation or why they haven’t done so, he added.

In terms of presentation, Browne said the PNM wins the prize because its manifesto “is nice and glossy.” But, “In reality, both of them ( PNM and UNC manifestoes) have some serious deficiencies in terms of moving forward.” Focusing on the PNM, Browne said one has to ask, how goals will be achieved. “At this stage of the game, we don’t know the level of unemployment. We have no idea how far the economy has declined.”

Noting TT’s natural gas production may have declined by as much as ten per cent, Browne argued that “invariably, the economy declines by a similar figure.” He said the question is how to re-dynamise the energy sector, given that it is facing international challenges. Observing the UNC manifesto spoke about achieving $1 billion in revenue annually, Browne said, “The moral of the story is that the foreign direct investment bubble is now subject to questions.”

Even if a company invests $1 million in the energy sector, Browne said, “The question is not how much money is spent in the energy sector but how much of it accrues to TT. That requires very specific policy changes and also implementation capacity being built.” Browne said neither the PNM nor UNC manifestoes speak about this: the PNM and UNC appear to be hoping the economic proposals outlined in their manifestoes will have “enabling decisions to put it into position.”

On the PNM’s proposal for the creation of a technology ministry, Browne said such a ministry “is not going to make the government transform any faster.” He added that the single electronic window (SEW) created under the trade and industry minister under the former Patrick Manning administration “is a substantial change in the way that government does business. Browne said the SEW should be “extended across government” to improve other online services.

He said the PNM and UNC manifestoes are “full of high-sounding objectives” but both parties missed the real issue: getting government to work and getting government to work efficiently. Asked if any of the other parties offered any sound economic proposals to help TT, should any of their candidates be elected to Parliament, Browne said bluntly, “No.” This is a two-horse race, he said, and the other parties are along for the ride. They will make for noise and political theatre but none of the other parties contesting the election will be able to do anything to improve how the government works. The lesson to be learnt from this election, he said, is that citizens must be far more vigilant and demanding of their government.

Performance analysis needed

UWI economist Dr Marlene Attzs said the PNM is trying to continue on what it deems as the way forward “on a particular economic trajectory,” while the UNC is trying “to get a mandate from the people to take over the economic reins in TT.” Attzs said the UNC appears to be looking at the failure of the sitting government to properly manage the economy of TT. Stressing the importance of context, Attzs said there must be an examination of TT’s economy from 2014-2015 (under the UNC-led coalition government) when oil revenues plummeted by about $10 billion to recent times when even more energy revenue was lost as a result of the price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia and exacerbated by covid19.

The PNM, she said, is saying notwithstanding what it met when it assumed office in 2015 and the challenge of covid19, it has managed to keep the country afloat.” She said the PNM seems to be capitalising on its management of the pandemic which “is worthy of mention.” In moving forward, she noted the PNM has identified a couple of things in terms of areas that they want to focus on – including some areas identified by the Roadmap to Recovery team, formed to develop strategies to help TT during and after the pandemic. Attzs said she liked the way the UNC laid out what it will do in its first 90 days (such as repealing property tax legislation, removal of other taxes), and then its macroeconomic strategy. She noted the UNC’s comment on working with the Central Bank to “transition to a more balanced exchange rate.”

“Some economists, myself included, have long suggested that our rate needs to be adjusted to reflect our economic reality. That statement by the UNC suggests that there will in fact be serious considerations to a re-balancing of the exchange rate by way of a depreciation.” Attzs also noted the PNM and UNC were both discussing the allocations of foreign exchange to different groups in TT.

On the UNC’s proposal to remove the seven per cent online tax, Attzs said that tax has been “a significant revenue generator” for Finance Minister Colm Imbert. “One of the questions that I have around the UNC’s macroeconomic policy, if and when they assume government on the night of August 10, when we remove all of these taxes, how is it going to affect fiscal revenue?” Especially, she noted, since TT has lost a significant stream of income from the energy sector and it doesn’t look like oil and gas prices are going to rebound any time soon.

Attzs asked when moves are made to further reduce revenue to the Government by either removal of taxes or downward adjustment of taxes, “from whence cometh the money to manage the economic affairs of TT?” While the UNC seems to have a more transparent budget, Attzs said, “We have heard this all before.” Under the current system in TT, Attzs said the budget is only known when the finance minister presents it in Parliament. She said she would welcome a more transparent budget process at some time in the near future.

On the UNC’s proposal to return to the sugar industry, Attzs said she understood “the sweet spot” the party has for that industry but wondered, in the context of how TT needs to develop “whether a return to the sugar industry at this time is in the best interests of the country.” She said the PNM’s manifesto has a welcome conversation around a more technologically advanced approach to boost the agricultural sector in TT. The challenge, though, remains to generate interest in agriculture amongst young people to move the sector as a real sustainable form of economic diversification for TT, she said.

“In both plans, the UNC and the PNM manifestoes, a stark omission for me was what I consider to be a commensurate transformation of the education system to provide the human capital that will help propel these policies forward,” she said. While noting conversations from both parties about biotechnology, boosting tourism and restructuring the energy sector, Attzs observed, “You need a commensurate human capital base.” She said TT’s education system has to be moving in tandem with the direction with those areas the country wants to identify as niche areas or areas to be moving forward.” This was important, she said, in order to achieve the kind of economic growth and development necessary for TT. She was not aware of any significant economic or developmental policies advanced by other parties contesting the election.

WHAT PARTIES PLAN FOR TT

PNM

In its election manifesto, the PNM identified various economic proposals in the diversification section of its manifesto: agriculture; manufacturing; energy and energy industries, sports tourism, local tourism and recreation.

PNM political leader Dr Keith Rowley observed, “The last five years have been very challenging … Under very difficult economic circumstances, my government has led a strong transformative effort to rebuild our economy and to restore a system of good values and faith in our public institutions.”

While he noted TT now has to grapple with a double shock of an oil and gas price collapse caused by a price war among the world’s largest producers and a global recession caused by the worldwide public health restrictions arising from covid19, Rowley said, “This country has demonstrated time and time again that when it is under pressure, it rallies and overcomes its problems, however insurmountable they may appear.”

Agriculture

In terms of agriculture the PNM said, “Building resilience requires insulating the economy against the impact of shortages and supply chain disruptions by having an adequate food supply.” Having made agriculture a tax-free industry in last year’s budget, the PNM promised to allocate $500 million in fiscal years 2021-2022 to stimulate and incentivise “all aspects of the sector.” Poultry, aquaculture, cocoa, African Hill Rice/Upland Rice, honey and forestry were identified as agricultural sectors for immediate attention.

Manufacturing

The PNM proposed to address bureaucratic bottlenecks in the manufacturing sector. The party identified the implementation of an electronic funds transfer framework “to allow all payments to Government, such as taxes and customs duties, to be made electronically” and the automation of all government services where practicable, as two ways to deal with those bottlenecks.

Energy

With respect to energy, the PNM proposed to increase the threshold for the imposition of supplemental petroleum tax (SPT) for small onshore producers to $75 per barrel for fiscal 2021 and 2021 in the first instance. The PNM said revenue lost by removing SPT is expected to be small and “will be offset by increased drilling activity and greater oil production leading to employment generation and the associated increased taxes paid by contractors and their workers.” It added that a typical onshore development well costs around $40 million and creates up to 200 direct jobs for a month, with a total wage bill of $3.3 million per well. This, the party said, “represents a significant injection of income into the community for each new well drilled.”

The PNM also promised to develop the energy services sector (which comprises 720 firms that employ approximately 40,000 people) and focus on renewable energy initiatives such as promoting the use of hybrid vehicles “through appropriate concessions.”

Diversification

The PNM said covid19 has “shown us that we can no longer afford to put all our eggs on one basket or pay lip service to economic diversification.” The party has identified manufacturing for domestic consumption and export; export of energy services; non-oil industry (aluminium, steel, chemicals), recycling and technology (software, mobile applications, electronic transactions, cyber security, ICT et cetera) as industries to be included in its diversification thrust.

The PNM also identified sports tourism as a potential source of revenue for and promised to develop a sports master plan if re-elected on August 10. Earmarking Tobago as a green tourism destination, promoting a staycation campaign with package deals for Trinidad residents visiting Tobago and promoting a Tobago Homecoming campaign focused on the TT diaspora, were some of the PNM proposals to boost tourism.

UNC

Revenue

The UNC’s election manifesto is taken from party leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s October 2019 budget contribution in Parliament. Persad-Bissessar said the plan “lays out a comprehensive suite of policy initiatives and programmes to resurrect the economy.” Through these initiatives, Persad-Bissessar promised to create 50,000 new jobs by 2025. She said the UNC will increase domestic revenues from $4.5 to $7.5 billion per year by improving the efficiency of the tax system through institutional reforms, without a revenue authority. Persad-Bissessar predicted the budget will be balanced by 2025, through these initiatives.

Agriculture

In terms of agriculture, she said 25,000 acres of Caroni lands will be leased to registered farmers and private sector investors to create agricultural parks. A steelpan manufacturing industry in Laventille, a Trini Creative Arts Street in West Port of Spain and a “Carnival in a box” franchise, are some of the UNC’s cultural proposals. Persad-Bissessar said these initiatives could generate US$50 million in foreign exchange for TT and contribute to one per cent of GDP.

Tobago

In Tobago, the UNC proposed to work with the Tobago House of Assembly to establish an international cruise ship complex in Plymouth. PDP leader and Tobago East candidate Watson Duke has promised the same thing. Like the PNM, the UNC also focuses on renewable energy. Its proposals include a solar-tech park in Tamana and to incentivise the purchase of new and used hybrid vehicles.

Technology

In terms of technology, Persad-Bissessar said the UNC will invite private investors to establish a digital innovation park in Sevilla in Central Trinidad. She said this park will attract local and foreign entrepreneurs “to create a cluster of world-class export companies in selected areas of innovation/technology.” The UNC also sees recycling as part of its economic diversification plans. Persad-Bissessar predicted that through initiatives such as industrial recycling parks, there would be 7,000 new jobs created by 2025. The UNC also proposed a national infrastructure development fund which will use cash reserves from the Unit Trust Corporation (UTC) and the National Insurance Board (NIB). To implement its plans. Persad-Bissessar said the UNC will establish an economic strategic council in the Office of the Prime Minister.

MSJ: Pro-worker

In its election manifesto which was launched on July 30 in Fyzabad, the Movement for Social Justice (MSJ) spoke about creating jobs with decent pay and proper conditions of work, the establishment of a living wage and an end to short term contract employment, among its economic proposals. The MSJ did not say how it planned to achieve these proposals.

PEP: Medical marijuana

The Progressive Empowerment Party (PEP) in its election manifesto, advocated the growing of medicinal marijuana for export, start-up support for small businesses, renewable energy and regulation of the financial sector as some of the economic proposals it would advance if any of its candidates are elected to Parliament on August 10.

News Day


PM’s warning if TT goes back into lockdown: No more billion$

Imploring people to behave responsibly in their daily lives, the Prime Minister said TT simply cannot afford the financial cost of a second lockdown against the covid19 pandemic.

At a briefing at the Diplomatic Centre, St Ann’s on Wednesday, Dr Rowley warned that people liming in bars were a major source of viral spread whom the police now need to curb.

“We don’t want to go back to a situation where the numbers are such that the response to a health crisis is another lockdown.”

The country’s first lockdown lasted about three months.

“The last lockdown cost us billions of dollars,» said the PM.

“I could tell you now, if we have to go back to another lockdown such billions are not available. So let’s understand that.

“And the jobs we have saved surviving that lockdown may not be salvageable in the next round.”

Rowley said in the US, because of the pandemic, some 25 per cent of restaurants may never re-open – a sector worth US$13 trillion.

“You could imagine the effect that may have on the jobs of people who work in, what is in effect, the largest employment area in the country of America outside of the United States Government.

“These are not joke things. These are serious things.

«All you are required to do is to be responsible. If you are going out for a drink, be alert as to who is close to you and in what crowd you stand. Because if you are in a crowd of more than ten, you may have to talk to the police because you are breaking the law and loitering.”

Economist Gregory Maguire told Newsday the Government had previously announced the budget deficit being pushed to almost $16 billion owing to the lockdown. Asked if any economic modelling has been done on the likely fallout of any second lockdown, he said he has not done this, but reckoned someone had – probably in the Ministry of Finance.

However, Maguire said even more fundamentally, the Government would likely have a pretty keen sense that the public purse was now empty. Reflecting on the cost of the first lockdown, Maguire said, “No country could sustain that for any length of time.” He said any second lockdown would be a difficult proposition, just as for the first.

In April, Finance Minister Colm Imbert told the House of Representatives that the lockdown had tripled the budget deficit from an initial pre-covid $5.3 billion up to $15.5 billion.

Imbert blamed the $10.2 billion in extra deficit on $9.2 billion in lost state revenues owing to less economic activity during the lockdown, plus $1 billion in extraordinary costs chiefly comprised of social support and business support.

He said the revenue loss included $3.8 billion in lost tax on income and profits, $2.5 billion in lost royalties and production sharing with oil/gas companies, $1.2 billion lost in state enterprise profits, $750 million lost in business levy and $600 million lost in taxes on goods and services and trade.

Imbert had listed social and business support provided during the lockdown as including $25 million for food cards, $200 million in income support for people in the informal sector, $400 million in income support for workers registered for tax and national insurance, $30 million to religious bodies and $100 million to credit unions.

He had said US$300 million was being borrowed from international agencies such as the World Bank, Inter American Development Bank (IADB) and Development Bank of Latin America (CAF.) Another US$500 million was being sought from external sources, while $500 million had been raised locally for the health sector

News Day


Trinidad and Tobago closes primary schools over COVID fears

The Trinidad and Tobago government on Wednesday announced the closure of primary schools but insisted the country was not facing an outbreak of the coronavirus.

Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley, speaking at a news conference, said following discussions with health experts, it was agreed to shut down the schools from Thursday, after some students came in contact with positive cases.

This resulted in the closure of at least nine schools for contacting tracing and cleaning.

Dr. Rowley said he was disappointed in an earlier statement by the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers Association calling for all members to stay away from classes until schools reopen next month.

He said while he understood the position of the teachers, unilateral decisions by unions representing workers, some of whom are on the frontline, would defeat the Government’s COVID-19 response.

Radio Jamaica News


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