In the early 1990’s, when I started my career as a business journalist, privatisation meant the sale of state assets and was usually associated with the structural adjustment programmes advanced by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank.
An April 2016 IMF working paper, authored by Kevin Greenidge, Meredith Arnold McIntyre, and Hanlei Yun, and titled Structural Reform and Growth: What Really Matters? Evidence from the Caribbean places privatisation among a general package of structural reforms that underpinned the policy advice and conditionalities of adjustment programmes implemented by the IMF and the World Bank in the 1980s and 1990s.
This reform package included:
* Trade reforms—pursuit of trade liberalisation involved the removal of import quotas, tariff reductions and improved export incentives;
* Exchange rate policy—to ensure a real exchange rate that would improve international competitiveness and restructure economic incentives to expand the production of exports;
* Tax reforms—aimed at neutrality and administrative simplification including a shift from trade taxes to other taxes e.g. VAT;
* Financial liberalisation—set positive real rates to encourage domestic savings and promote investment including through interest rate policy reform;
* Product pricing policies—removal of subsidies (including agricultural subsidies) elimination of price controls; and
* Privatisation—the transfer of public companies to the private sector to improve efficiency and resource allocation.
A 1993 publication by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), entitled Privatisation in Latin America, states in its introduction that one of the structural reforms associated with the successful performance of several Latin American countries was privatisation, which seeks to broaden individual countries’ efforts toward market liberalisation.
“As part of a new development strategy, this process stems from the redefinition of the state’s role in the economy, substituting direct government participation in the productive processes with action primarily related to export promotion and regulation. Privatisation can be accomplished in various ways, the most common being the total or partial sale of the stock in public enterprises, followed by the granting of public service concessions to private companies and the private financing of government infrastructure works.”
So, even in 1993, the IDB was saying that the most common form of privatisation was the total or partial sale of public enterprises, but that the concept included private companies receiving public service concessions and private financing of public infrastructure works, both of which are included in the definition of Public Private Partnerships (PPPs).
Refinery, airline for sale?
Although the Government is likely to deny it, the issue of privatisation is back on T&T’s agenda, as the Government continues to receive expressions of interest for Guaracara Refining Company, the entity that was established by the State in 2018, to hold the assets of the Pointe-a-Pierre refinery.
The current administration has been vague on whether a formal request for proposals process will follow the expressions of interest or if the Government is more disposed to a total or partial sale of the refinery asset or some form of PPP.
The issue of privatisation is also alive at Caribbean Airlines Ltd (CAL) as the last Sunday Guardian reported that at least two of the directors on the board of the airline believe it should either be shut down or sold.
And at some point, the current administration will have to disclose its plans for Clico, the insurance company that collapsed 17 years ago and is still paying pensions and declaring profits from the disposal of its assets, even though it has not written any new business in over a decade.
Through the liquidators of CL Financial, the parent company of Clico, the Government has an interest in Angostura , the Laventille-based rum and bitters company.
Would Angostura, Clico, CAL, and the refinery not be in better hands if these companies were owned by the private sector?
One wonders what Mr Tancoo, our Minister of Finance, thinks?