NEWS
Canada says covid19 case from Trinidad and Tobago
A Canadian who returned from Trinidad and Tobago recently has tested positive for coronavirus. At a press conference on Monday, Alberta's chief medical officer Dr Deena Hinshaw said the number of confirmed cases of covid19 in the province had doubled to 14. She said all of the cases were travel-related. She named TT as one of 11 destinations that patients had visited. The others were France, the Netherlands, Egypt, Iran, Taiwan, Germany, Malaysia, Panama, the Philippines, and the US. Read more here
$500m never converted to polymer—police probe
Police, the Financial Intelligence Bureau (FIB) and the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) may currently be exploring who has the “missing” $500 million missing in paper $100 notes which haven’t yet been converted to new polymer notes, says Finance Minister Colm Imbert. Imbert spoke about the matter in the Senate yesterday replying to queries. Independent Senator Paul Richards had asked what percentage of the $8 billion in “old” paper notes which had existed, was converted to polymer up to January 31. Imbert said at that date, the value of $7.525 billion in paper $100 bills had been converted. “This would be approximately 94 per cent of the estimated $8b in paper-based bills that were in circulation prior to the demonetisation process,” he said. Richards asked if there was any mechanism envisioned to identify and collect the remaining percentage. Imbert said, “I wish I could find that out too, Senator Richards. I’d love to know who has that missing $500m.” “I assume through a process of auditing in terms of banknotes that would have been sent out to commercial banks it may be possible to discover who has that extra $500m. But it’ll be very laborious. Perhaps the police, the FIB and FIU may be investigating this matter—as we speak. I wouldn’t want to say much more.” Read more here
POLITICS
Imbert: Covid19 has not affected projects'
The coronavirus (covid19) has not affected the progress of government to government projects, said Finance Minister Colm Imbert on Tuesday. Imbert made this statement during a press conference at the Ministry of Finance’s office at the Eric Williams Plaza on Independence Square. “The only thing from covid19 that I see affecting us is the supply of materials.” Read more here
T&T in $3.5B hole
Finance Minister Colm Imbert has revealed that the crash in oil prices and lower projected revenue from natural gas will lead to a budget shortfall of an additional $3.5 billion. “Our calculations tell us that this will result in a loss of revenue somewhere in the vicinity of 3.5 billion dollars,” Imbert told a news conference yesterday at his office at the Eric Williams Financial Centre in Port-of-Spain. Imbert said the shortfall will now result in a budget deficit in excess of $8.5 billion. He also revealed that the Dr Keith Rowley-led administration had revised downward its projection for the price of crude oil and natural gas. Imbert said: “The Government has done its projections and we are now using an average price for the year of forty dollars for oil and a wellhead price for gas. Read more here
BUSINESS
Risk-based supervision: Why it’s important
Financial regulators globally previously utilised traditional supervisory approaches to market regulation which focused on a Rules-Based System of control. Read more here
REGIONAL
Prime Minister warns against neo-fascist plan
Prime Minister, Moses Nagamootoo, has called on all Guyanese to condemn what he described as a rise of neo-fascist views here and tied a divisive group to the People’s Progressive Party. The PPP has since denied the claims and has written the Commissioner of Police complaining about the matter. “I have seen on social media what appears to be an insurrectionary and bloody plan to “shut down the country”, and to cause widespread acts of terrorism and economic sabotage,” Prime Minister Nagamootoo said in a statement. He said the plan was issued by an apparent PPP front calling itself “1953movement” which is advising the PPP/C to “take full control over all six regions they won”. Read more here
$7 Billion For COVID - First Case Confirmed In Jamaica
With Jamaica confirming its first COVID-19 case yesterday, Finance and the Public Service Minister Dr Nigel Clarke has earmarked $7 billion in contingency funding to tackle the SARS-CoV-2 viral threat. In his contribution to the 2020-2021 Budget Debate in Parliament yesterday, Clarke indicated that if the virus became more pervasive, the Government had resources to respond. “We are prepared. We are in a much stronger position today to withstand global shocks than we have ever been before,” Clarke declared. He said that the Government was providing an advance of $2 billion from the 2020-2021 Budget to facilitate immediate preventative and preparatory spending. This amount would be reflected in the First Supplementary Estimates of Expenditure. Clarke said that the funds to be expended would be designed to prevent, control, treat, and contain the virus. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Joe Biden extends lead over rival Sanders in Democratic presidential race
Bahrain evacuates 165 citizens from Iran and 77 test positive for coronavirus
Seventy-seven Bahraini nationals evacuated from Iran have tested positive for coronavirus, according to Bahrain’s Ministry of Health. The 77 were part of a group of 165 Bahraini nationals who were evacuated on a plane from coronavirus-hit Iran on Wednesday. That flight was the first of several repatriation services that will be evacuating Bahrainis from Iran, the ministry said. Read more here
11th March 2020