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Mohit: T&T’s poverty line has increased

24 May 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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The pover­ty line in Trinidad and To­ba­go has in­creased and these high­er fig­ures for des­ti­tu­tion and vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty ac­knowl­edge the painful re­al­i­ty that life has be­come more ex­pen­sive for or­di­nary cit­i­zens, says Min­is­ter of the Peo­ple, So­cial De­vel­op­ment and Fam­i­ly Ser­vices Van­dana Mo­hit.

“But most im­por­tant­ly, these re­vised thresh­olds mean that more gen­uine­ly vul­ner­a­ble house­holds will now qual­i­fy for as­sis­tance in­stead of be­ing un­fair­ly ex­clud­ed un­der out­dat­ed cri­te­ria. Un­der this Gov­ern­ment, so­cial de­vel­op­ment will nev­er be treat­ed as an af­ter­thought. The poor and vul­ner­a­ble will nev­er be in­vis­i­ble,” Mo­hit added in the House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives on Fri­day.

She made the com­ment while de­liv­er­ing a state­ment on a re­view of the Stan­dard Means Test (SMT) meant to strength­en pro­tec­tion for the poor and vul­ner­a­ble. The re­vised SMT be­gins on June 1.

Mo­hit said for far too long, many vul­ner­a­ble cit­i­zens had felt alien­at­ed by sys­tems that ap­peared rigid, out­dat­ed and dis­con­nect­ed from the re­al­i­ties of in­fla­tion, ris­ing liv­ing costs and chang­ing so­cial con­di­tions.

“This Gov­ern­ment made a com­mit­ment to change that. In March 2018, the Stan­dard Means Test, com­mon­ly re­ferred to as the SMT, was in­tro­duced to stan­dard­ise el­i­gi­bil­i­ty cri­te­ria for sev­er­al so­cial as­sis­tance pro­grammes, in­clud­ing the Food Sup­port Pro­gramme, the Pub­lic As­sis­tance Grant, the SEED Pro­gramme and se­lect­ed Gen­er­al As­sis­tance Grants,” Mo­hit told the House.

“How­ev­er, while the frame­work it­self re­mained im­por­tant, the pover­ty line un­der­pin­ning the sys­tem had not been sub­stan­tive­ly up­dat­ed since 2016. That meant that for al­most a decade, vul­ner­a­ble fam­i­lies were be­ing as­sessed us­ing bench­marks es­tab­lished be­fore dra­mat­ic in­creas­es in food prices, trans­porta­tion costs, hous­ing ex­pens­es, util­i­ties and health­care bur­dens and most im­por­tant­ly, the ef­fects of the pan­dem­ic.”

Mo­hit said in Ju­ly 2025, an In­ter-Min­is­te­r­i­al Com­mit­tee was es­tab­lished to com­pre­hen­sive­ly re­view the SMT in an ev­i­dence-based re­view process. The Cab­i­net ap­proved the com­mit­tee’s rec­om­men­da­tions in Feb­ru­ary 2026.

Mo­hit added, “One of the most sig­nif­i­cant re­forms ap­proved un­der the re­vised SMT frame­work is the up­dat­ing of the pover­ty in­di­ca­tors them­selves.”

She said the pover­ty line has moved from $1,439.02 to $2,044.23 per adult equiv­a­lent per month, an in­crease of 42.1 per cent. The in­di­gence (ex­treme pover­ty or des­ti­tu­tion) line has in­creased from $553.47 to $783.23 and the vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty line has al­so in­creased from $1,798.78 to $2,555.29, she said.

Not­ing Gov­ern­ment’s pol­i­cy re­form and so­cial jus­tice thrust to deal with the in­creas­es, Mo­hit said an­oth­er trans­for­ma­tive re­form ap­proved by Cab­i­net is the in­tro­duc­tion of a weight­ed in­come con­tri­bu­tion mod­el. Pre­vi­ous­ly, house­hold in­come cal­cu­la­tions of­ten over­es­ti­mat­ed the true fi­nan­cial ca­pac­i­ty of fam­i­lies, the min­is­ter not­ed.

“Un­der the re­vised frame­work, the high­est in­come earn­er con­tributes 100 per cent of in­come to the as­sess­ment, the sec­ond high­est earn­er con­tributes 75 per cent, and all oth­er earn­ers con­tribute 50 per cent. This re­form recog­nis­es the re­al­i­ties of de­pen­den­cy with­in house­holds and al­lows as­sess­ments to bet­ter re­flect ac­tu­al liv­ing con­di­tions,” Mo­hit said.

“An­oth­er pro­gres­sive re­form emerg­ing from this re­view is the in­tro­duc­tion of an In­ter­net con­nec­tiv­i­ty de­duc­tion of up to $316 per house­hold per month be­cause in 2026, In­ter­net ac­cess is no longer a lux­u­ry. It’s a ne­ces­si­ty.

“Chil­dren re­quire con­nec­tiv­i­ty for ed­u­ca­tion. Cit­i­zens re­quire In­ter­net ac­cess for em­ploy­ment op­por­tu­ni­ties, health­care in­for­ma­tion, Gov­ern­ment ser­vices, bank­ing, and com­mu­ni­ca­tion.”

Mo­hit added, “Im­por­tant­ly, for a sin­gle-in­come house­hold as­sessed at the re­vised pover­ty thresh­old, the com­bined ef­fect of the up­dat­ed pover­ty line and In­ter­net de­duc­tion may re­sult in up to $921.21 in ad­di­tion­al dis­pos­able in­come when de­ter­min­ing el­i­gi­bil­i­ty. That ad­just­ment alone may now al­low a vul­ner­a­ble fam­i­ly to qual­i­fy for the Pub­lic As­sis­tance Grant where pre­vi­ous­ly they would have been ex­clud­ed.”