Finance Minister Colm Imbert said Government's decision to increase the number of basic food items from which value added tax (VAT) was removed was done very scientifically.
Addressing a virtual PNM post-budget meeting in Belmont on Friday night, Imbert said, "After a lot of consultation, you will have seen a list published over the last few days of 45 of the most commonly used food items by people at the lowest income level." He reiterated the removal of VAT on those items takes effect on November 1.
In his budget presentation in the House of Representatives on Monday, Imbert proposed to expand the list of basic food items exempted from Value Added Tax (VAT). In a subsequent statement on Wednesday, Imbert said the list of food items from which VAT will be removed includes instant coffee, peanut butter, cereals, canned beans, fresh juice, chicken lunch meats and bottled water.
Imbert also observed incorrect comments by some people about certain foods which were not VAT free. As an example, he said corned beef is the only canned meat which does not attract VAT. "Only a rich man would quarrel about that because he doesn't understand that poor people have challenges with refrigeration. Not everybody has two fridges and a freezer in their house."
Ordinary people, Imbert continued, stock up on non-perishable goods.
"These people are not connected to the ground at all. That is why, we have to assist people with canned food." He said included in the list of 45 soon to be VAT-free basic food items are "basic items that a child would take in their lunch box to go to school... that a construction worker would take in his bag to go to work on construction site..or that a factory worker would take to go to work on the factory floor."
"We have carefully selected the basket of the most common and the most basic food that people will use."
He recalled hearing complaints about ham and cheese slices being VAT free. "What is the most common sandwich in Trinidad and Tobago? It's a slice of ham, a slice of cheese and two slices of bread. People foolish yes."
Imbert slammed the Opposition and others for misleading people into believing the budget will not help them. Referring to Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar's contribution to the budget debate in the House on Friday morning, Imbert said, "I spoke for four hours. She barely spoke for two hours. I expected a little better than that."
He added, 'In that two hours, she just rambled and rambled. There was no substance. What I find with this current opposition, they seem to be in a time warp. They don't understand that things that the voters have already discredited and discounted and rejected are no longer relevant. They are a spent force."
He said all the UNC MPs who followed Persad-Bissessar had weaker contributions than hers. To those claiming the budget is pro-business, Imbert asked, "To make sure that as many ordinary people are in jobs...are employed...have a salary at the end of the month..fortnight as the case may be...what's the solution to that?"