Port of Spain, February 18, 2026: Former Finance Minister Colm Imbert said the work that led to Trinidad and Tobago’s removal from the European Union’s non-cooperative tax jurisdictions list was completed under the People’s National Movement (PNM) administration before the 28 April 2025 general election.
In a detailed statement, Imbert outlined the steps taken to meet international standards, noting that shifting global rules required continuous strengthening and adjustment of local laws. “The Government had to satisfy the European Union’s five delisting criteria, each of which required rigorous assessment and evidence, not talk,” he said, adding that several key pieces of legislation, regulations, guidance notes, and administrative measures were passed and implemented to demonstrate compliance.
He highlighted that the EU’s criteria evaluate not only the existence of laws on paper, but their effectiveness in practice, often requiring two to three years of implementation, audits, enforcement activity, and measurable outcomes. Imbert said the PNM’s progress was slowed by opposition resistance, including attempts to delay legislation through a Joint Select Committee process.
Among the Government’s key achievements, Imbert pointed to the Global Forum’s Second Round Phase Two onsite examination from 21–25 October 2024, which assessed the country’s ability to meet international standards for exchanging tax information. He said the Government demonstrated a functioning compliance programme, including annual audit plans, compliance improvement initiatives, audit statistics, and practical audit strategies.
Following the assessment, the Minister of Finance met the evaluation team on 25 October 2024 to confirm full political and administrative support, and travelled to Paris the following week to continue high-level engagement. Trinidad and Tobago subsequently secured an overall “Largely Compliant” rating, a key step towards delisting.
On 7 November 2024, the Minister signed the OECD Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters, expanding the country’s exchange network from about 15 treaties to 148 partners. Imbert said this demonstrated measurable action sought by international bodies and the EU.
He also noted that timing of assessments and reports often lags behind implementation, meaning that current reports reflect work carried out well before the 2025 election. “The core actions that made delisting possible were executed before the 2025 election under the PNM administration, they were not achievements delivered after the election by the UNC,” he said.
Trinidad and Tobago first joined the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes in 2011 and was listed as a non-cooperative tax jurisdiction by the EU in 2017 for failing to meet standards including information exchange, harmful tax regimes, and Base Erosion and Profit Shifting reporting.
