The matter concerning the Port-of-Spain Waterfront Development Ltd (POSWDL), a subsidiary of the Urban Development Corporation of T&T (UDeCOTT), as outlined in the Auditor General's Report, has surfaced as a significant point of contention regarding the transparency of sovereign debt.
Central to the issue is a US$500 million (approximately TT$3.37 billion) financing arrangement that seems to have been structured to "obscure" the government's true financial exposure.
Under the administration of the People’s National Movement (PNM), POSWDL secured a 15-year financing arrangement with UMB Bank NA (Kansas City, Missouri).
The arrangement was anchored by a 30-year sublease agreement executed on February 19, 2025, between the subsidiary and the Office of the President.
The report, which was laid in Parliament last Friday, highlighted that rather than a traditional government guarantee, POSWDL’s assets—specifically the high-value waterfront properties—were pledged as security.
Contacted yesterday, Joint Consultative Council (JCC) president Fazir Khan told Guardian Media the transaction appeared structured so that the borrowing did not formally sit on the Government’s balance sheet as direct debt, yet the repayment stream is ultimately being funded by public money through lease payments.
"That creates a long-term fiscal obligation for the State, whether or not it is labelled a sovereign guarantee or booked as public debt. This is precisely the type of arrangement that can obscure the State’s true exposure if not reported fully and transparently,” Khan said.
"If the lease payments are effectively matched to debt repayment amounts under the secured notes, and if the State is the ultimate source of the revenue stream used to service that financing, then the public is entitled to know the full economic reality of the arrangement. The concern here is not only legality, but transparency, accountability and whether the form of the transaction was used to avoid the appearance of increased public debt," he explained.
Good governance, Khan further stated, requires that governments disclose not only direct debt, but also material contingent liabilities, off-balance-sheet commitments and long-term payment obligations that bind future administrations and taxpayers.
On the question of whether President Christine Kangaloo acted within office regarding the loan issue, the JCC president cautioned, "We have to be careful based on the material quoted; the President was a party to the sublease in the capacity of the office representing the State, not necessarily as a personal or independent decision-maker exercising unilateral financial authority."
He added that the transaction may still raise legitimate questions about whether the constitutional and financial architecture was used properly, whether the arrangement should have been more transparently treated as a public liability, and whether Parliament and the public were given a full and fair picture of the State’s obligations.
If, however, proper approvals existed, Khan said the President’s role may have been formal and regular.
Meanwhile, sources close to the transaction suggested that the manner in which the process was conducted "crippled" the subsidiary by saddling it with long-term liabilities that do not reflect the State's true fiscal position.
"That is not in keeping with how government loans should be because a government loan is supposed to reflect the true status of the debt of the government. So what they decided is to hide the debt, right, in one of UDeCOTT’s subsidiaries," sources further noted.
The sources added that the involvement of the President in signing the sublease has raised questions about propriety. They said while the President acts on the advice of the Cabinet, the use of the executive’s office to anchor a multi-billion-dollar private financing deal is viewed by some as an overreach or a tactical manoeuvre to provide a "sovereign-like" security to lenders without Parliamentary oversight.
Wading in on the issue, economist Mariano Browne clarified that any perceived impropriety regarding President Kangaloo’s signature on the UDeCOTT loan documents is a misunderstanding of the T&T Constitution.
As the Port-of-Spain Waterfront is situated on State land, the President’s approval is a legal requirement for leveraging the asset, he said.
Browne emphasised that the President acts as a "mere functionary" in this capacity.
"The way the Constitution is written, she (president) has to sign off. She doesn't have any say, she doesn't have any freedom of option," he added.
The Office of the President responded to the matter on Saturday, rejecting any suggestion that the President was “the author, architect, or wrongdoer in respect of any transaction involving the State,” adding that presidential functions are carried out in accordance with the Constitution and the laws of T&T.
Guardian Media also contacted former minister of public administration and digital transformation Allyson Weston on the issue.
West, in a WhatsApp response, issued a robust defence regarding the transparency of the state-run enterprise’s financing, dismissing allegations of "surreptitious" borrowing as fundamentally misleading.
Addressing recent critiques concerning UDeCOTT, West clarified that the agency’s financial manoeuvres were not only legally sound but subject to rigorous Parliamentary oversight.
West pointedly noted that the current Opposition benches in both the House of Representatives and the Senate include two former ministers of finance and a former minister in the Ministry of Finance.
"You do realise that there are two former ministers of finance and a former minister in the ministry of finance currently sitting on the opposition benches in the HoR and the Senate who would be much better placed to address this issue, as they would have been directly involved in arranging these transactions," she said.
West explained that under Section 28 of the Urban Development Act of 2005, the corporation is explicitly granted the authority to borrow funds for its operations.
This authority, she noted, is exercised with the concurrence of the Minister of Finance and has been utilised throughout the company's history to fulfil its developmental mandate.
"There are several State agencies, including UDeCOTT, which have been granted authority by the acts under which they were created to borrow funds for their operations (reference S.28 of the Urban Development Act of Trinidad and Tobago 2005). UDeCOTT simply, with the concurrence of the Minister of Finance, exercised this authority. It would have done this several times since its creation to fund the fulfilment of its mandate," she said.
Addressing the specific concern of why certain multi-billion-dollar loans do not appear directly in the national accounts, West explained that since the Government of T&T is not the "borrower on record" for these specific transactions, the debt is appropriately reflected on UDeCOTT’s internal books rather than the central government's ledger.
She cited the construction and outfitting of the International Waterfront and the Government Plaza as prime examples of this financial structure.
"But to claim or insinuate that the loans are surreptitious is completely false and misleading, as all state agencies are required to submit audited accounts in which such loans would have been reflected. And the Parliament, through the mechanism of the Joint Select Committee process, has oversight authority of the activity of those State enterprises," West said.
West added that to claim those loans crippled the company is also incorrect, as the loan obligations were fully covered by a sublease between UDeCOTT and the Ministry of Public Administration, under which the later assumed responsibility for making annual lease payments which covered the obligations under the loan.
"Those payment obligations were always fully funded in MPA’s annual budget allocation on which, as minister, I was usually questioned in the annual budget Standing Finance Committee process. There was no subterfuge intended or involved. And further to seek to malign the good name and character of the President of our great Republic is truly reprehensible," she added.