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Friday, July 18, 2025

New SRC chair takes office amid controversy

by

KEVON FELMINE
221 days ago
20241209
Ian De Souza receives his instrument of appointment as Salaries Review Commission chairman from President Christine Kangaloo during a ceremony at the Office of the President on Saturday.

Ian De Souza receives his instrument of appointment as Salaries Review Commission chairman from President Christine Kangaloo during a ceremony at the Office of the President on Saturday.

COURTESY: OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

In­com­ing Salaries Re­view Com­mis­sion (SRC) chair­man Ian De Souza says he is not daunt­ed by the task giv­en to him, de­spite the body com­ing un­der heavy crit­i­cism for its re­cent re­port which has rec­om­mend­ed hefty salary in­creas­es for par­lia­men­tar­i­ans.

De Souza had no hand in the re­port that has rec­om­mend­ed in­creas­es to the salaries of the prime min­is­ter, pres­i­dent, op­po­si­tion leader and oth­er high-rank­ing pub­lic of­fi­cials. How­ev­er, he said he un­der­stands the process the SRC us­es to make its de­ci­sions.

Speak­ing with Guardian Me­dia yes­ter­day, De Souza said he ac­cept­ed the ap­point­ment be­cause he al­ways want­ed to do ser­vice to T&T, and the SRC al­lows him to do that in an in­de­pen­dent fash­ion, as it is not a po­lit­i­cal ap­point­ment.

“For me, it is an op­por­tu­ni­ty to give back to Trinidad & To­ba­go, which has treat­ed me and my fam­i­ly very well, and I feel that sense of oblig­a­tion to give back by way of ser­vice, par­tic­u­lar­ly in a ca­pac­i­ty of this na­ture,” De Souza said.

De Souza took the oath of of­fice be­fore Pres­i­dent Chris­tine Kan­ga­loo at a cer­e­mo­ny at the Of­fice of the Pres­i­dent on Sat­ur­day. He re­places out­go­ing chair­man Nicole Fer­reira-Aaron, who served her three-year tenure.

Yes­ter­day, he said he wants to achieve what­ev­er is re­quired of he job, not­ing its work is in align­ment with his cor­po­rate ex­pe­ri­ence, in­clud­ing the eval­u­a­tion of jobs, job pric­ing, and mar­ket prices. Giv­en this is the same method­ol­o­gy the SRC ap­plies, he looks for­ward to con­tin­u­ing this kind of work.

“I can­not be daunt­ed as chair­man of the Salaries Re­view Com­mis­sion, par­tic­u­lar­ly be­cause that process they fol­lowed is a well-known in­ter­na­tion­al process. It is very le­git­i­mate and as you know, I am a banker, and it is that iden­ti­cal process that has been ap­plied in the or­gan­i­sa­tions in which I have and con­tin­ue to work.”

De Souza said for peo­ple to un­der­stand what the SRC does, it calls for the re­moval of emo­tion and a recog­ni­tion that jobs have par­tic­u­lar val­ues.

In the cor­po­rate world, he said these are based on the re­quired qual­i­fi­ca­tions for the of­fice, job con­tents, the im­pact of de­ci­sions made by the of­fice hold­er and the scope of in­flu­ence. He said these de­ter­mine the grad­ing of a job in any or­gan­i­sa­tion­al struc­ture to gen­er­ate a prop­er job de­scrip­tion.

“You are then able to place the job in a struc­ture and once you have done that, you are then able to go to mar­ket to look at com­pa­ra­ble jobs, which they call com­para­tors. Once you have com­para­tors, you then come back to your struc­ture, and you are then able to say, ‘well, based on how the job has been de­scribed and grad­ed, giv­en what per­tains in the mar­ket, this is where this job should be priced, at least in a range.’”

From there, the eval­u­a­tors will de­ter­mine oth­er as­pects dri­ven by per­for­mance rel­a­tive to set tar­gets.

“So you have the fixed part, and you have the in­cen­tive part of it.”

De Souza hopes to meet oth­er com­mis­sion­ers this week and has al­ready had a chat with SRC mem­ber Dr Daryl Din­di­al.

More about De Souza

A state­ment from the Pres­i­dent’s Of­fice stat­ed that De Souza has a wealth of ex­pe­ri­ence in the fi­nance and bank­ing in­dus­try and is the prin­ci­pal ad­vi­sor at Ad­vice Fi­nan­cial Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed.

Af­ter achiev­ing a Bach­e­lor Of Sci­ence in Eco­nom­ics in 1982 from the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies, he went on to gain a diplo­ma in Man­age­ment Stud­ies and an Ex­ec­u­tive MBA in 1999. Af­ter work­ing for two years as vice pres­i­dent, Cor­po­rate and Com­mer­cial Bank­ing at Citibank T&T Ltd, De Souza moved to var­i­ous ex­ec­u­tive po­si­tions in the Re­pub­lic Bank Group, first in the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic and lat­er in Bar­ba­dos, be­com­ing the Group Ex­ec­u­tive Di­rec­tor in 2016.

Hav­ing par­tic­i­pat­ed in the Ad­vanced Man­age­ment Pro­gramme at Har­vard Busi­ness School and hav­ing be­come a Char­tered Pro­fes­sion­al Ac­coun­tant in 2011, a Cer­ti­fied In­sol­ven­cy and Re­struc­tur­ing Ad­vi­sor in 2013 and the hold­er of a Grad­u­ate Cer­tifi­cate in Foren­sic Ac­count­ing and Fraud Ex­am­i­na­tion from 2019, De Souza en­tered the aca­d­e­m­ic world as a Pro­fes­sor of Prac­tice, Bank­ing, and Fi­nance and the Ex­ec­u­tive Di­rec­tor & CEO of the Cave Hill School of Busi­ness & Man­age­ment.

Fol­low­ing a brief stint as in­ter­im CEO of Capi­ta Fi­nan­cial Ser­vices In­cor­po­rat­ed, De Souza is now the Man­ag­ing Di­rec­tor of ANSA Mer­chant Bank Ltd. He is al­so a mem­ber of the board of ANSA Mer­chant Bank (Bar­ba­dos) Ltd and chair­man of the Au­dit Com­mit­tee of the Re­tail Sec­tor Ad­vi­so­ry Coun­cil of ANSA McAL Ltd.


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