The 2026 economic reality

The team at The Timely Entrepreneur Resource and Research Centre met recently to discuss the Economic Outlook for 2026. Here is a direct, unsentimental assessment for 2026, written for people who actually have to survive in the Trinidad and Tobago economy.

Stripped of comfort language

The outlook for 2026 is fragile and deteriorating beneath the surface. The headline numbers still lean on energy, but the underlying economy is showing classic late-cycle stress. Growth is narrow, costs are sticky, foreign exchange remains structurally constrained, and the State’s room to cushion shocks is shrinking.

Energy revenues may hold up on paper, but gas supply constraints, maintenance downtime, and global price volatility mean cash flows will be uneven. Non-energy growth is weak because domestic demand is under pressure and operating costs are rising faster than incomes. See more below:-

Why non-energy growth in Trinidad and Tobago is weak

1. Real household income is falling

Wages in the non-energy economy have not kept pace with cumulative increases in food, utilities, rent, transport, insurance, and education costs. When real income declines, discretionary spending contracts. Non-energy sectors depend heavily on domestic consumption, so lower purchasing power translates directly into weaker sales volumes.

2. Domestic demand is narrow and concentrated

Consumption is concentrated in essentials. Spending on non-essential goods and services is being postponed or reduced. This limits growth in retail, hospitality, personal services, creative industries, and discretionary manufacturing.

3. High operating costs compress margins

Non-energy businesses face rising electricity charges, logistics costs, rent, security, insurance, and compliance expenses. These costs increase faster than revenues, forcing firms to scale back operations, delay expansion, or exit markets.

4. Foreign exchange constraints restrict supply

Non-energy sectors are import-dependent for inputs, equipment, raw materials, and inventory. FX shortages delay restocking, raise supplier prices, and reduce production capacity. Firms cannot scale output without reliable access to foreign exchange.

5. Limited access to affordable credit

Tighter bank lending standards, higher interest rates, and stricter documentation requirements reduce financing for expansion, working capital, and technology upgrades in non-energy sectors.

6. Weak productivity growth

Capital investment outside energy is limited. Many firms operate with outdated equipment, inefficient processes, and limited automation. Productivity gains are insufficient to offset rising costs, keeping unit costs high.

7. Public sector consolidation dampens spillovers

Fiscal restraint limits public-sector driven demand and procurement spillovers that historically supported non-energy activity. Delays in State payments further constrain cash flow for contractors and suppliers.

8. Small market size limits scale

Trinidad and Tobago’s domestic market is limited. Without consistent export expansion, non-energy firms face saturation quickly, capping growth potential.

9. Business confidence is fragile

Uncertainty around taxes, compliance enforcement, energy prices, and economic policy timing reduces private investment. Firms postpone hiring, capital spending, and market expansion.

10. Structural dependence on energy revenues

Non-energy activity remains indirectly tied to energy through public spending, FX availability, and liquidity. When energy performance softens or becomes volatile, non-energy sectors slow even if their fundamentals are unchanged.

These factors operate simultaneously. The result is low volume growth, thin margins, and limited expansion capacity across the non-energy economy.

Inflation is no longer the sudden spike of previous years. It is now embedded. Food, utilities, insurance, logistics, rent, compliance costs, and financing charges are resetting at higher levels and staying there. That is more dangerous for small businesses than short bursts of inflation, because it erodes margins quietly and continuously.

The foreign exchange situation remains a structural problem. It is not a temporary shortage. Import-dependent businesses will face delays, higher supplier demands for prepayment, and periodic inability to restock. This will worsen as global credit tightens and correspondent banking becomes more conservative.

Government Policy Impacts

Government policy in 2026 signals restraint, not rescue. Here is what this really means in concrete, observable terms.

1. No broad stimulus spending

The 2026 fiscal stance is not expansionary. There is no large-scale injection of new spending designed to boost demand across the economy. Capital expenditure is selective and controlled, not wide-ranging. This means the State is not stepping in to lift consumption or offset private-sector weakness.

2. Tight control over recurrent expenditure

Government is focused on containing wage growth, transfers, and subsidies. Any increases are targeted and limited. This signals that protecting fiscal balances is a higher priority than cushioning households or businesses broadly.

3. Rationalisation of subsidies and concessions

Energy, utility, and social subsidies are being reviewed and narrowed. The direction is toward reducing fiscal leakage, not expanding relief. Businesses should expect less price buffering from the State and more exposure to real market costs.

4. Emphasis on compliance and revenue collection

Policy focus has shifted from accommodation to enforcement. Tax compliance, NIS contributions, fees, and penalties are being tightened. This raises revenue without stimulating activity and increases operating pressure on firms that are marginal or informal.

5. Cost-shifting rather than cost-absorption

Instead of absorbing rising costs, government policy increasingly passes them through to users and businesses. Examples include higher fees, utility adjustments, and reduced concessions. This is a restraint signal because it prioritises fiscal sustainability over short-term relief.

6. Limited intervention in distressed sectors

There is no clear framework for widespread bailouts, debt relief, or emergency support for struggling industries or MSMEs. Assistance is conditional, case-by-case, or indirect. Firms cannot assume the State will step in if conditions worsen.

7. Conservative fiscal assumptions

Budget projections rely on cautious spending paths rather than optimistic growth-driven revenue expansion. This reflects risk aversion and a desire to preserve buffers, not deploy them aggressively.

8. Protection of fiscal buffers over economic stimulus

Foreign reserves, the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund, and debt metrics are being preserved. The State is signalling that these buffers are for systemic crises, not for sustaining weak growth or propping up businesses.

What this means in plain terms

The Government’s posture in 2026 is one of containment and discipline, not economic rescue. It is managing downside risk to public finances rather than attempting to reignite growth through spending or relief.

For businesses and households, this means:

  • Do not expect sweeping relief measures.
  • Do not rely on subsidies to stabilise costs.
  • Do not assume government intervention if cash flow tightens.

The burden of adjustment is being shifted to the private sector and households. 

Subsidies are being rationalised, compliance is tightening, and social spending is being re-targeted. Small businesses should assume less tolerance for arrears, less flexibility from State agencies, and more scrutiny, not more support. Click the link to read more on this here: Build Wealth, Don’t Depend on NIS

Hard truths small businesses must accept now

First, revenue instability is the new normal. If your business requires steady monthly sales just to survive, it is already at risk.

Second, cost increases will not reverse. Electricity, rent, shipping, and insurance costs in Trinidad and Tobago are structurally higher, not temporarily elevated. They are driven by fuel pricing, utility cost recovery, insurance risk re-pricing, global logistics costs, crime exposure, and tighter regulatory requirements. None of these drivers are reversing in the near term.

Businesses that delay price adjustments, cost restructuring, or operating changes in the hope that these expenses will fall are basing decisions on expectation rather than evidence. Since revenues are not rising at the same pace, waiting erodes margins, drains cash, and weakens the business each month.

In practical terms, hoping costs will fall postpones necessary action and increases the risk of failure.

Third, access to finance will tighten further. Banks will lend, but only to businesses that can show discipline, documentation, and predictable cash flows. Informality will be punished quietly simply through denial. In 2026, informal businesses are unlikely to be shut down publicly or aggressively. Instead, they will be excluded. They will be denied access to bank financing, government contracts, corporate clients, digital payment platforms, insurance coverage, and formal partnerships because they cannot meet documentation, compliance, or reporting requirements. No warning is required for this to happen.

The punishment is quiet because the business is not confronted or prosecuted. It simply finds that doors stop opening, opportunities disappear, and growth becomes impossible.

Fourth, customer behaviour has changed permanently. Households are trading down, delaying purchases, sharing services, and questioning value more aggressively. Loyalty is thinner. Price sensitivity is higher. Households and businesses have less discretionary income and tighter cash flow. Customers compare prices more closely, trade down to cheaper alternatives, reduce quantities, or stop buying altogether when prices rise. This means small price increases now trigger stronger reactions than in the past, directly affecting sales volume and customer retention.

Fifth, compliance is no longer optional camouflage. Businesses that “fly under the radar” will struggle to scale, access credit, or partner with corporates and institutions.

What small businesses must do immediately to survive 2026

1. Ruthless financial control

You must know, weekly, not monthly:

  • Which products or services actually generate cash.
  • Which ones only generate activity.
  • Your true break-even point with current costs, not last year’s.

Cut offerings that drain cash, even if they are popular or emotionally attached. Popular does not pay bills.

Move from annual thinking to rolling 90-day cash forecasting. If you cannot see three months ahead, you are already late.

2. Rebuild pricing around reality, not fear

Many small businesses are underpricing out of fear of losing customers. In 2026, underpricing is more dangerous than losing low-value customers.

You must:

  • Separate price-sensitive customers from value-driven ones.
  • Create tiered offerings, not one price for everyone.
  • Be explicit about what costs more and why.

If customers cannot accept price increases, then reduce scope, not margins.

3. Reduce dependency risks

If your business relies on:

  • One supplier.
  • One major customer.
  • One income stream.
  • One location.
  • One platform.

You are exposed.

Diversify suppliers locally where possible, even at slightly higher unit cost. Reliability beats cheap in unstable conditions.

Build at least one secondary income line that is not dependent on imports or long credit chains.

4. Formalise selectively but properly

You do not need excessive bureaucracy, but you do need:

  • Clean records.
  • Up-to-date filings.
  • Basic management accounts.

This is not about pleasing the State. It is about surviving when cash tightens and only disciplined businesses can negotiate, borrow, or pivot.

5. Shift from growth obsession to resilience

2026 is not about rapid expansion. It is about endurance.

That means:

  • Smaller, stronger operations.
  • Fewer fixed costs.
  • More variable cost models.
  • Leasing instead of buying where possible.
  • Partnerships instead of solo scaling.

Practical income generation and diversification paths that make sense now

Not all diversification is smart. Many small businesses fail because they chase everything. The following directions reflect actual economic pressure points:

1. Service over product where possible

Services:

  • Require less foreign exchange.
  • Adjust prices faster.
  • Carry lower inventory risk.

Knowledge-based services, maintenance, training, compliance support, repair, and local logistics will outperform imported retail over the next two years.

2. Recurring income models

One-off sales are unstable in a tightening economy.

Think in terms of:

  • Retainers.
  • Subscriptions.
  • Maintenance contracts.
  • Memberships.
  • Bundled service periods.

Predictability is power in uncertain conditions.

3. B2B over B2C where feasible

Households are under pressure. Businesses still need services to operate.

Target:

  • SMEs that must remain compliant.
  • Corporates outsourcing non-core functions.
  • Schools, NGOs, and institutions with budgeted spending cycles.

Margins may be tighter, but payments are more predictable.

4. Local substitution niches

Import friction creates opportunity.

Look for:

  • Products or services businesses importing simply because “that’s how it’s always been.” Many businesses continue importing certain products or services out of habit rather than necessity. The original reasons may have been quality, availability, or cost advantages that no longer exist. In the current environment, import dependence driven by routine rather than analysis increases exposure to foreign exchange shortages, shipping delays, and higher costs, even when local or regional alternatives could meet the need adequately.
  • Small-batch local alternatives – this refers to locally produced goods or services made in limited quantities that substitute for imported products. They reduce foreign exchange exposure, shorten supply chains, and allow faster price and product adjustments. They may not match large-scale imports on volume or unit cost, but they offer reliability, flexibility, and resilience in a constrained economic environment.
  • Hybrid models where part of the value is local. Hybrid models are business arrangements where some components are imported, but a significant portion of the value creation happens locally. This can include local assembly, customization, servicing, packaging, or distribution. These models reduce foreign exchange exposure, lower logistics risk, and allow businesses to maintain functionality and quality while adapting to supply constraints and cost pressures.

You do not need to replace imports entirely. You only need to reduce dependency.

5. Regional and digital income streams

TT is a small market with limited growth.

Digital services, remote consulting, content-based products, online training, and regional service delivery reduce dependence on local demand alone. Foreign currency income is a buffer, not a luxury.

The uncomfortable conclusion

2026 will not reward hope, optimism, or hustle alone. It will reward discipline, realism, and adaptability.

Small businesses that survive will not be the loudest or most visible. They will be the ones that:

  • Control cash tightly.
  • Price honestly.
  • Cut early rather than late.
  • Diversify carefully, not emotionally.
  • Accept that the environment has changed and act accordingly.

This is not an economic collapse where all businesses fail at once. Economic activity continues, but under tighter conditions. It is a sorting phase where businesses with weak finances, poor pricing, high dependency, or low discipline are pushed out, while those that are well-managed, adaptable, and resilient remain and gain market share.

Businesses that adjust now will still be standing when conditions improve. Those that wait for things to “go back to normal” will quietly exit.

What Small Businesses in Trinidad and Tobago Should Be Concerned About Right Now

Running a small business in Trinidad and Tobago has never been easy, but 2025 has brought a unique mix of economic, political, and social shifts that are making the environment even more challenging. While the entrepreneurial spirit remains strong across the country, small businesses need to approach the next 12 to 18 months with sharper awareness, stronger risk management, and more adaptive thinking. As an economist watching regional trends closely, here’s what I believe every small business owner in Trinidad and Tobago should be paying attention to right now.

Foreign Exchange Scarcity and Cost Pressures

One of the most immediate and frustrating realities for small businesses is the ongoing shortage of foreign exchange. Accessing U.S. dollars and other foreign currencies is increasingly difficult, with many businesses waiting weeks or months for allocations. Banks actually have businesses on a waiting list, and not just for U.S. dollars, but even Euros as well. This delay forces some to resort to the parallel market, where exchange rates are significantly higher, eroding already thin profit margins.

For businesses that rely on imported goods, raw materials, or equipment, this poses a serious risk. Cost planning becomes unpredictable, pricing strategies are harder to maintain, and in some cases, operations can be disrupted entirely. Companies should be exploring alternative sourcing options, negotiating more flexible supplier terms, or holding higher inventory levels if cash flow allows.

Energy Dependence and Macroeconomic Volatility

Trinidad and Tobago’s economy remains heavily tied to the energy sector. Oil, gas, and petrochemicals still account for a large share of GDP and export earnings. While the sector continues to generate revenue, it also exposes the country to external shocks. Fluctuations in global energy prices, production disruptions, or changes in global demand can all ripple into slower economic growth, tighter public finances, and weaker domestic demand.

For small businesses, this means heightened uncertainty. Government spending, consumer spending power, and business confidence are all linked to the fortunes of the energy sector. The pace of economic diversification remains slow, so businesses should anticipate cyclical ups and downs and plan accordingly.

Bureaucracy, Regulation, and Business Friction

Despite efforts to improve the business environment, regulatory delays, bureaucratic red tape, and inconsistent enforcement continue to frustrate small business owners. Licensing, permits, and tax compliance processes remain slow and often unpredictable. Legal disputes can take years to resolve, and government procurement processes are still viewed as opaque and overly complex.

This environment raises costs, lengthens lead times, and makes growth planning more difficult. Small businesses should build realistic timeframes into their operations, ensure they are fully compliant, and consider collaborating with business associations to advocate for regulatory reform.

Inflation, Consumer Spending, and Cost of Living Pressures

Inflation remains a real concern, especially when combined with foreign exchange challenges. Even with relatively moderate headline inflation, the cost of imported goods continues to climb. At the same time, rising food prices and cost-of-living pressures are eating into household budgets.

For many consumers, non-essential spending is the first to go. Businesses in retail, services, and lifestyle sectors may feel the pinch as demand softens. To stay resilient, small businesses should focus on value-driven offerings, flexible pricing strategies, and products or services that remain relevant even in tighter economic conditions.

Financing Constraints and Higher Credit Risk

Access to finance has always been a challenge for small businesses, and the current environment may tighten lending conditions further. Banks are likely to remain cautious, especially with weaker consumer demand and slower economic growth. For entrepreneurs without strong collateral or a solid credit history, accessing loans for growth or even working capital can be difficult.

Now is the time to strengthen financial records, improve cash flow management, and explore alternative financing models such as supplier credit, co-operative lending, or investment partnerships.

Policy Shifts and Fiscal Pressures

The recent change in government introduces another layer of uncertainty. Policy priorities, tax measures, and regulatory approaches could all shift as the new administration seeks to address fiscal pressures and social demands. With public debt rising and revenue challenges persisting, there is a real possibility of new taxes, reduced subsidies, or increased enforcement.

Small businesses must stay alert to policy announcements, budget statements, and legislative changes. Being proactive rather than reactive can help you adjust your business model ahead of regulatory changes rather than scrambling after the fact.

Crime, Security, and Social Instability

Rising crime rates continue to affect both the cost and safety of doing business. Security systems, insurance premiums, and operational risks all add to the expense of running a small enterprise. Beyond that, protests linked to economic frustration or service delivery can also disrupt transportation, supply chains, and customer traffic.

Factoring security into your cost structure and continuity planning is no longer optional. It’s essential!

Climate Vulnerability and Infrastructure Gaps

Finally, climate-related risks and infrastructure limitations should not be ignored. Severe weather events, flooding, and drainage issues can disrupt operations or damage assets, particularly for businesses in manufacturing, logistics, or retail. Weak infrastructure, such as inadequate roads or unreliable utilities, also adds hidden costs.

Businesses should assess their physical vulnerabilities, insure critical assets, and develop contingency plans for disruptions.

What Small Businesses Can Do Now

While these challenges are significant, they’re not insurmountable. Small businesses that adapt early and plan strategically can still thrive. Here are a few practical steps:

  • Conduct stress tests on your cash flow to see how you’d manage under cost increases, supply delays, or reduced sales.
  • Diversify your revenue streams to avoid relying too heavily on one market or product.
  • Build local supplier relationships and explore nearshore sourcing to reduce foreign exchange exposure.
  • Manage debt conservatively and avoid overleveraging in uncertain times.
  • Monitor government policy closely and adjust your business plans quickly when changes occur.
  • Strengthen collaboration with industry associations to amplify your voice on policy issues.

The road ahead for small businesses in Trinidad and Tobago is not without obstacles, but it’s also full of opportunity for those who are agile, informed, and prepared. The current state of affairs demands more than just optimism; it calls for strategic action, sound financial management, and a deep understanding of the forces shaping the economy. With the right approach, small businesses can continue to be the engine of growth and innovation that the country needs.

Strategies for Small Businesses and SMEs to Thrive Amid Global Trade Uncertainties

In today’s interconnected economy, tariffs and taxes are powerful tools that governments, use to influence trade policies. For Micro, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (MSMEs), navigating the complexities of tariffs can be challenging but essential to safeguard their businesses. Let’s take a comprehensive look on how to tariff proof your business, ensuring resilience in an ever-evolving global trade landscape.

TARIFF TAX

A tariff is a type of tax charged on imports (or sometimes exports).

A tax is a general charge by the government on income, goods, services, or property.
It’s used to control trade and protect local industries.

It’s used to raise revenue for public services (like roads, schools, hospitals).

Only applies to international trade. Applies to individuals, businesses, or domestic sales.
Example: A 10% tariff on imported cars. Example: Income tax, VAT, sales tax, property tax.

NOTE: All tariffs are taxes, but not all taxes are tariffs.

Understanding Tariffs and Their Impact on Small Businesses

What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect the Economy?

Tariffs are taxes imposed by governments on imported goods, making them more expensive. They aim to protect domestic industries but can inadvertently increase costs for small businesses that rely on imported materials or products. During the Trump administration, tariffs on goods from countries like China created significant ripple effects across the economy, affecting prices, supply chains, and profit margins.

Why Small Businesses Need to Pay Attention

Unlike large corporations, MSMEs often operate with tighter margins and less bargaining power. An increase in tariffs can lead to:

  1. Higher procurement costs
  2. Delayed shipments
  3. Reduced competitive edge
  4. Potential layoffs or downsizing

Proactively understanding and managing tariffs is crucial to maintaining profitability and growth.

Strategic Approaches to Tariff Proofing Your Business

Diversify Your Supply Chain

Source Locally When Possible

Example: A small furniture manufacturer relying on imported wood can explore local suppliers to mitigate tariffs. Local sourcing not only reduces exposure but also supports the local economy.

Explore Multiple Suppliers

Engaging with multiple suppliers across different regions minimizes reliance on a single source vulnerable to tariffs, ensuring more stable supply chains.

Adjust Pricing and Contracts

Incorporate Tariff Adjustments

Include clauses in supplier or customer contracts that account for potential tariff fluctuations to prevent unforeseen expenses impacting profit margins.

Dynamic Pricing Strategies

Regularly review and adjust pricing to reflect changing costs due to tariffs, helping micro and small businesses stay resilient.

Invest in Innovation and Product Development

Developing unique, locally-produced products can reduce dependence on imported components, shielding your business during tariff increases.

Example: A small electronics firm developing in-house components can reduce vulnerability to external tariffs.

Monitor Policy Changes and Engage with Policy Makers

Stay informed about taxes and tariffs policies—especially those enacted during administrations like Trump—and participate in industry associations to voice concerns and influence policy decisions.

Additional Tips for Small Business Tariff Resilience

Financial Planning and Risk Management

  1. Maintain cash reserves to absorb cost fluctuations.
  2. Use hedging strategies where applicable to lock in costs.
  3. Review insurance policies to cover supply chain disruptions.

Leverage Government Resources and Support Programmes

Many governments offer SMEs support programmes during trade disputes, including grants, loans, and advisory services.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q1: How can small businesses determine if tariffs will affect their supply chain?

Answer: Small businesses should conduct a supply chain audit, identify imported components, and stay updated through trade news and government announcements regarding tariffs.

Q2: Are there tax incentives or relief programmes available for SMEs impacted by tariffs?

Answer: Yes, some governments provide relief programmes. Consult local commerce chambers or industry associations for tailored support options.

Q3: Can diversification fully protect my business from tariff impacts?

Answer: While diversification reduces risk, it cannot eliminate it entirely. Combining diversification with strategic planning offers the best protection.

Tariffs are a significant factor influencing the economy and small business operations. Micro and SMEs must adopt proactive tariff proofing strategies—such as supply chain diversification, dynamic pricing, innovation, and policy engagement—to safeguard their businesses against unpredictable trade policies.

Remember, being informed and adaptable is the key to maintaining resilience amid global trade uncertainties. Start implementing these strategies today to future-proof your small business and turn challenges into opportunities for growth.

Take the first step toward tariff resilience! Review your supply chain, explore local sourcing options, and stay informed about trade policy updates. Your business’s future depends on proactive planning.