business@tribunemedia.net
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2017
$4.20
Moody’s: Bahamas deficit will exceed $300m this year By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net Moody’s yesterday forecast that the Bahamas’ fiscal deficit will remain above $300 million for this current Budget period, with Hurricane Matthew blowing it slightly higher than the prior year. The international credit rating agency, in its latest quarterly assessment of the Bahamas’ sovereign creditworthiness, gave an insight into the extent of Matthew’s impact on the Government’s finances by projecting a deficit equivalent to 3.6 per cent of GDP for 2016-2017. “We estimate that the fiscal balance in fiscal year 2017 will deteriorate to -3.6 per cent of GDP from -2.8 per cent the previous year, due to the negative impact from the damages caused by Hurricane Matthew last October,” Moody’s said. “As the Government will incur additional borrow-
Rating agency: Matthew blows it to 3.6% of GDP Forecasts ‘debt trend stabilisation’ by 2018-2019 More upbeat on economy; sees 2% growth in 2018 ing to cover reconstruction spending for public infrastructure, we now expect the central government debt-to-GDP ratio to reach 70 per cent by end of fiscal year 2017.” While Moody’s estimates are not surprising, its projections for the 20162017 fiscal deficit are more than triple what the Government has forecast last May, prior to the unanticipated $600-$700 See pg b5
Developer’s fear of ‘housing shortage’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A Bahamian developer has warned that a looming shortage of quality housing in western New Providence could impact the ability of projects such as Baha Mar to attract essential expatriate management. Jason Kinsale, Aristo Development’s president, told Tribune Business that the situation was brought home to him when his company was unable to find a property for a new staff member. The developer of projects such as Balmoral, ONE Cable Beach and Thirty|Six on Paradise Island, said western New Providence’s rental
Balmoral ‘at 100% occupancy for first time’
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Govt in ‘back handed’ Hawksbill change move By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
New incentive regime seeks 80% licensee ‘consent’
A prominent QC yesterday agreed that the Government’s call for Freeport businesses to seek renewal of their tax breaks was a “back handed” attempt to amend the Hawksbill Creek Agreement, with the move representing “the worst formula for business”. Fred Smith QC, the Callenders & Co attorney and partner, told Tribune Business that the March 6 deadline for Grand Bahama Port Authority (GBPA) licensees to apply for key tax exemptions had only created “confusion and uncertainty” in Freeport. He argued that GBPA licensees now faced being treated “worse than investors anywhere else in the Bahamas”, who were not being subjected
Tax break uncertainty ‘worst formula for business’ QC: Licensees exposed to ‘ministerial diktat’ City being treated ‘worse than anywhere in Bahamas’ to “a statutory regime as demanding as this”. Despite not having gazzetted the accompanying regulations to give them effect, the Government on Monday moved to implement its Grand Bahama (Port Area) Investment Incentives
Act 2016 by demanding that the GBPA’s 3,500 licensees apply to it for the granting of renewed tax breaks. A newspaper advertisement on February 20 FRED Smith QC called on licensees to obtain, complete and submit an application form for continuation of the real property tax, income and capital gains tax exemptions that expired on May 4, 2016, last year. They were given just two weeks until March 6, 2017, to accomplish this, the date having been chosen because it corresponds to the 10-month application deadline set out in the Act (see See pg b4
Freeport tax deadline ‘heartless and cruel’
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
The Government was yesterday slammed as “absolutely heartless and cruel” for giving Freeport businesses just two weeks to seek the renewal of key tax breaks in an economy that is “on its belly”. K P Turnquest, the FNM’s deputy leader, told Tribune Business that the
Grand Bahama (Port Area) Investment Incentives Act 2016 and accompanying regulations were “the most ridiculous piece of legislation that has hit Grand Bahama in decades”. Mr Turnquest, himself a Freeport business owner, said the “tax and bureaucratic burden” facing the Grand Bahama Port Authority’s (GBPA) 3,500 licensees would only increase as a result of having to apply
to the Government for the grant of key investment incentives. Many observers believe tax breaks, such as the real property tax, income and capital gains tax exemptions that now have to be approved by Nassau, already belonged to the GBPA’s licensees by right through the Hawksbill Creek Agreement, Freeport’s founding treaty. See pg b5
Two weeks to apply for breaks in economy ‘on belly’ FNM deputy slams ‘most ridiculous Act in decades’ Tax breaks lost, clawed back if firm downsizes
Principal: Tight market an issue with Baha Mar Hard to find quality accommodation for expats market was especially tight between the $2,500-$3,500 per month price points, a trend that was now migrating higher. “It’s really amazing,” Mr See pg b6
‘Much rides’ on Bahamas closing 27 EU tax deals By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
Europe drops ‘low or no tax’ haven criteria
A former Bahamas Financial Services Board (BFSB) chairman yesterday said “a lot is riding” on this nation’s ability to negotiate automatic tax information exchange agreements before the European Union (EU) publishes its threatened ‘blacklist’.
Ex-BFSB chair says auto exchange deals now ‘key’
Michael Paton told Tribune Business that while it was “helpful” that the EU had dropped ‘low or no’ corporate and income tax rates as criteria for whether a nation was automatically considered a so-called ‘tax haven’, “the key” was now for the Bahamas to deliver on its commitments.
EU finance ministers, following their recent meeting in Malta, said the level of tax co-operation and information exchange with its 28 (soon to be 27) members would be a key determinant of whether countries end up on the ‘blacklist’ it is currently preparing. See pg b6
Must be seen as ‘cooperative’ to dodge ‘blacklist’
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