X

Vous n'êtes pas connecté

Rubriques :

Maroc Maroc - NEWSDAY.CO.TT - A la Une - Hier 08:09

Great budget expectations

WHAT IS likely to be the last budget before the next general election is to be unveiled on September 30. Expectations are high. Minister of Finance Colm Imbert will have to achieve several goals. At the forefront will be the need to account symbolically for government expenditure since 2020, in which spending projections totalled $218.9 billion. Budgets in recent years have steadily increased (2020: $49.57 billion, 2021: $52.43 billion, 2022: $57.69 billion and 2024: $59.21 billion). All eyes will be on whether the coming package will return the country to the days when allocations crossed the $60 billion threshold. In the process of his accounting, Mr Imbert will have to address bread-and-butter issues affecting the pockets of ordinary citizens. For instance, the Regulated Industries Commission in 2023 recommended a whopping 15-64 per cent hike in electricity rates. The Cabinet has remained mum on this matter, but Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales’ statement this week that the rate review is “not a priority for the Government” at this time suggests it may be dead in the water. It will be for the Minister of Finance to say, and to clarify, as well, the situations relating to water rates and the future of TSTT. It is tempting to expect “election goodies,” but they are not a foregone conclusion. A government confident of its return may wish to temper expectations. Additionally, depending on the timing of the poll, there could be a final opportunity to engage with fiscal matters at a mid-year review; a supplementation or variation would be at the discretion of the Cabinet. Nor should we expect the old definition of “goodies” to hold in the current uncertain global landscape. A hallmark of the Rowley administration, as it relates to budgetary matters, has been to focus more on the making of “tough decisions,” as opposed to dangling carrots before voters. Even when emphasis has been placed on new incentives, allowances or grants, these have sometimes seemed artificial or been one-off. The challenge for Mr Imbert will be to bridge the gap that has too often arisen between the once-a-year flood of fiscal measures and the feeling of the person in the street. Crime and the Auditor General issue loom uneasily over the proceedings. As does the property tax. A report by the TT International Financial Centre launched in August found that between 2017 and 2023, a lower percentage of the population held bank accounts. Of those who did not, 41 per cent said the reason was simple: they didn’t have enough money to merit one. Such statistics push against grandiose narratives of economic resurgence and challenge the Government to come good on September 30 by balancing prudent management with service to the people. The post Great budget expectations appeared first on Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.

Articles similaires

Budget Day is September 30

newsday.co.tt - 18/Sep 22:37

THE 2024/2025 national budget will be presented on Monday, September 30, said a statement on the evening of September 18 from Finance Minister Colm...

UNC MPs: Budget will be more lies, ‘mamaguy’ and blame game

newsday.co.tt - 19/Sep 22:41

FOUR Opposition MPs expressed their very low expectations for budget 2024/2025 to be read by Finance Minister Colm Imbert on September 30. They spoke...

Imbert: Mark beating a ‘dead horse’ over Clico bailout

newsday.co.tt - 09/Sep 18:26

FINANCE Minister Colm Imbert says Opposition Senator Wade Mark is asking questions he already knows the answers to. Imbert was responding to a...

Imbert: New ways to pay property tax in the works

newsday.co.tt - 17/Sep 21:25

FINANCE Minister Colm Imbert says solutions are being worked on to address the challenges people are experiencing in paying their residential...

Imbert: Bill will get Trinidad and Tobago off of EU’s blacklist

newsday.co.tt - 14/Sep 07:32

FINANCE Minister Colm Imbert urged the Opposition to support a bill to get Trinidad and Tobago off of a European Union (EU) blacklist and so make...

Imbert: Bill will get Trinidad and Tobago off of EU’s blacklist

newsday.co.tt - 14/Sep 07:32

FINANCE Minister Colm Imbert urged the Opposition to support a bill to get Trinidad and Tobago off of a European Union (EU) blacklist and so make...

The Ministry of Defense of Germany expects to receive additional hundreds of millions of euros for Ukraine

eng.uatv.ua - 18/Sep 16:58

German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius hopes the Federal Government of Germany will allocate additional funds for arms supplies to Ukraine This...

The Ministry of Defense of Germany expects to receive additional hundreds of millions of euros for Ukraine

eng.uatv.ua - 18/Sep 16:58

German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius hopes the Federal Government of Germany will allocate additional funds for arms supplies to Ukraine This...

Imbert corrects record on Global Forum Bill

newsday.co.tt - 16/Sep 06:16

FINANCE Minister Colm Imbert says in TT’s 13 double taxation treaties, some of which go back 50 years, the finance minister is named as the...

Imbert corrects record on Global Forum Bill

newsday.co.tt - 16/Sep 06:16

FINANCE Minister Colm Imbert says in TT’s 13 double taxation treaties, some of which go back 50 years, the finance minister is named as the...

Les derniers communiqués

  • Aucun élément