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Tuesday, June 10, 2025

NCC gets lion’s share of

Ministry of Tourism’s allocation

by

Geisha Kowlessar-Alonzo
243 days ago
20241010
Machel Montano performs his calypso, Soul of Calypso, during the Dimanche Gras Calypso Final at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port-of-Spain, on Carnival Sunday this year. Dimanche Gras is hosted by the National Carnival Commission.

Machel Montano performs his calypso, Soul of Calypso, during the Dimanche Gras Calypso Final at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port-of-Spain, on Carnival Sunday this year. Dimanche Gras is hosted by the National Carnival Commission.

ABRAHAM DIAZ

Tourism con­tin­ues to be a crit­i­cal pil­lar in this coun­try’s di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion thrust.

In his 2025 bud­get, Fi­nance Min­is­ter Colm Im­bert stat­ed T&T’s tourism in­dus­try is ex­pe­ri­enc­ing a re­mark­able resur­gence, with air­lines tak­ing the lead in this post-pan­dem­ic re­vival.

He said there was a 36 per cent surge in air ar­rivals in 2023, with pro­jec­tions for 2024 to ex­ceed these num­bers.

In 2024/2025, $354.71 mil­lion was al­lo­cat­ed to the Min­istry of Tourism, Cul­ture and the Arts, com­pris­ing $315.71 mil­lion in re­cur­rent ex­pen­di­ture and $39 mil­lion in cap­i­tal ex­pen­di­ture.

Some of the mea­sures in­clude set­ting an am­bi­tious tar­get of 500,000 an­nu­al vis­i­tors by 2026. Im­bert at­trib­uted this goal to strate­gic mar­ket­ing and sig­nif­i­cant in­fra­struc­ture in­vest­ments, in­clud­ing a $56.6 mil­lion ren­o­va­tion of the Mag­dale­na Grand and a $400 mil­lion mod­erni­sa­tion of the Hilton Trinidad.

“These up­grades are key to stay­ing com­pet­i­tive and cre­at­ing jobs,” he as­sert­ed, pro­ject­ing hun­dreds of new po­si­tions in hos­pi­tal­i­ty as a di­rect re­sult of these ini­tia­tives.

Ad­di­tion­al­ly, both Caribbean Air­lines and Fron­tier Air­lines have ramped up op­er­a­tions, in­tro­duc­ing new routes from Puer­to Ri­co and the British Vir­gin Is­lands, while strate­gic part­ner­ships with British Air­ways and KLM are ex­pand­ing the na­tion’s glob­al con­nec­tiv­i­ty.

“These ef­forts are es­sen­tial to en­hanc­ing our ac­cess to North and South Amer­i­can mar­kets,” Im­bert not­ed, men­tion­ing on­go­ing plans to ac­quire ad­di­tion­al air­craft.

The Busi­ness Guardian took a deep­er dive in­to the monies al­lo­cat­ed to the Min­istry of Tourism, Cul­ture and the Arts for the 2025 fis­cal year, which in­di­cat­ed that the min­istry’s al­lo­ca­tion in­creased by 5.6 per cent to $315.71 mil­lion over the re­vised es­ti­mate for 2024 of $298.83 mil­lion.

Per­son­nel ex­pen­di­ture un­der both gen­er­al ad­min­is­tra­tion and cul­ture di­vi­sion es­ti­mat­ed at $9,410,200 and $3,521,000 re­spec­tive­ly in 2023, moved to an es­ti­mat­ed $9,158,000 and 3,995,900 re­spec­tive­ly in 2024.

Mi­nor equip­ment pur­chas­es that was es­ti­mat­ed at $199,000 in 2024 saw a de­crease in 2025 to $139,000.

In 2025, the trans­fers and sub­si­dies al­lo­ca­tion to the Min­istry of Tourism, Cul­ture and the Arts to­tal $267.63 mil­lion, com­pared to the re­vised es­ti­mat­ed of $268.91 mil­lion in 2024. Trans­fers and sub­si­dies com­prise cur­rent trans­fers and sub­si­dies and cur­rent trans­fers to statu­to­ry boards and sim­i­lar bod­ies.

A fur­ther ex­am­i­na­tion showed that in 2023, 83.9 per cent of to­tal re­cur­rent ex­pen­di­ture went to trans­fers and sub­si­dies. In 2024 that fig­ure was 85.23 per cent and in 2025 it slight­ly de­creased to 84.77 per cent.

In the last three years, the Na­tion­al Car­ni­val Com­mis­sion (NCC) re­ceived the largest share of the min­istry’s al­lo­ca­tion to dis­charge its le­gal man­date in the plan­ning and ex­e­cu­tion of Car­ni­val.

For 2025, NCC re­ceived an al­lo­ca­tion of $140.54 mil­lion to run its op­er­a­tions for the fis­cal year, which ac­counts for 46.3 per cent of the min­istry’s to­tal re­cur­rent ex­pen­di­ture.

Ac­cord­ing to 2024 re­vised es­ti­mates, the NCC got $146.10 mil­lion while in 2023 that fig­ure was $146.37 mil­lion.

In the mid-year re­view in fis­cal 2024 the NCC was pro­vid­ed sup­ple­men­tal fund­ing in the amount of $5.3 mil­lion and its chair­man, Win­ston ‘Gyp­sy’ Pe­ters com­plained pub­licly about the need for greater al­lo­ca­tion for the host­ing of Car­ni­val,

The fig­ures for the Tourism Trinidad Des­ti­na­tion Man­age­ment Com­pa­ny re­mained more or less the same.

Tourism Trinidad Ltd, whose man­date is to mar­ket the coun­try as a tourism des­ti­na­tion, re­ceived a re­cur­rent ex­pen­di­ture al­lo­ca­tion of $17 mil­lion for 2025. The com­pa­ny re­ceived an ac­tu­al al­lo­ca­tion of $17.84 mil­lion in 2023 and a re­vised es­ti­mate of $17 mil­lion for 2024.

The Busi­ness Guardian reached out to Tourism Min­is­ter Ran­dall Mitchell on his thoughts about this year’s bud­get al­lo­ca­tion.

The min­is­ter de­scribed it as ad­e­quate, hav­ing re­gard to all the cir­cum­stances.

“While it’s ex­pect­ed that we could al­ways do with more, and that our stake­hold­ers will al­ways de­mand more, on bal­ance, we will make do with what we will re­ceive in the ap­pro­pri­a­tion and seek to max­imise our re­turns and sec­toral im­pact in 2025,” Mitchell added.

Econ­o­mist Pro­fes­sor Roger Ho­sein al­so shared his per­spec­tives on this coun­try’s tourism sec­tor while speak­ing on CNC3’s Morn­ing Brew Pro­gramme on Tues­day.

Stat­ing that the gov­ern­ment needs to do “much more work” in pro­mot­ing tourist ar­rivals to both Trinidad and To­ba­go, Ho­sein said, “Our tourism in­flows have not been do­ing well. We are prob­a­bly at the bot­tom on the ta­ble in the top three in the Caribbean in terms of tourism in­flows to T&T and how it has changed since 2019 and the lev­el of tourism in­flows.

“That’s a low hang­ing fruit in terms of overnight tourism and cruise ship tourism...we saw the sit­u­a­tion in To­ba­go with the taxi dri­vers not com­ing out to work. We can’t have that again,” Ho­sein ad­vised as he em­pha­sised that tourism is an im­por­tant ve­hi­cle in bring­ing in much need­ed for­eign ex­change.

An­oth­er area, he not­ed, was boost­ing the di­as­po­ra, an­oth­er means of ob­tain­ing much need­ed forex.

“We need to cre­ate link­ages with our di­as­po­ra and in­crease for­eign ex­change in­to the coun­try both for the pur­pose of help­ing fam­i­lies with­in T&T who have fam­i­lies abroad and al­so for in­vest­ment pur­pose. We need to tar­get the di­as­po­ra for in­vest­ment funds with­in T&T,” Ho­sein added.

In Feb­ru­ary this year, Mitchell not­ed that for the Car­ni­val pe­ri­od ac­cord­ing to da­ta of­fered by the Air­ports Au­thor­i­ty, there was a sig­nif­i­cant in­crease in the num­ber of seats made avail­able on flights to T&T.

“For the pe­ri­od Jan­u­ary to Feb­ru­ary, in terms of the max­i­mum seat ca­pac­i­ty com­ing in, from the var­i­ous des­ti­na­tions, we are see­ing a 47 per cent in­crease in 2024 for the pe­ri­od Jan­u­ary to Feb­ru­ary, over the same pe­ri­od in 2023.

“So by way of hard num­bers in 2023, we had a to­tal seat ca­pac­i­ty for the pe­ri­od Jan­u­ary and Feb­ru­ary of 122,760 seats in 2024 for the pe­ri­od Jan­u­ary and Feb­ru­ary. We have seen that in­crease to 180,900 seats that are avail­able com­ing in­to the des­ti­na­tion of Port-of-Spain and To­ba­go Crown Point In­ter­na­tion­al Air­port. We have seen an in­crease of 47 per cent,” the tourism min­is­ter said.

Mitchell al­so con­firmed that last year for Jan­u­ary and Feb­ru­ary, 784 air­craft ar­rived in this coun­try while 1,350 are ex­pect­ed in the coun­try for the cal­en­dar year, an in­crease of 72 per cent.

Cul­tur­al tourism is al­so gain­ing mo­men­tum, with the Na­tion­al Mu­si­cal In­stru­ment Bill recog­nis­ing the steel­pan and a $120 mil­lion in­vest­ment planned for Pan Trin­ba­go’s new head­quar­ters.

While these ef­forts are laud­able, Ho­sein said ad­vance­ment in tourism can­not be made if this coun­try’s mur­der rate con­tin­ues to re­main wor­ry­ing.

“This year we are on route to hav­ing the high­est mur­der rate ever record­ed,’ Ho­sein said adding, “And so the min­is­ter of na­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty has to be­come like a ju­nior min­is­ter of fi­nance be­cause bring­ing the mur­der lev­el un­der con­trol where the busi­ness com­mu­ni­ty would have much more con­fi­dence is a mech­a­nism in help­ing change in the fi­nan­cial sit­u­a­tion.”


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