An important contributor to T&T’s economy, the construction industry accounted for an estimated 5.2% of GDP in 2014 and 15.6% of the labour force, according to T&T’s Central Statistical Office. 2014 was a particularly good year for the sector, which grew by 7.1%, outperforming the wider economy for a second consecutive year. In 2015, the energy-related construction sector is expected...
Chapter | Construction & Real Estate from The Report: Trinidad & Tobago 2015
Articles & Analysis | Trinidad and Tobago's new procurement law aims to prevent collusion and corruption from The Report: Trinidad & Tobago 2015
The construction industry, along with other trade groups, has campaigned for years to reform procurement procedures, as a way of combatting corruption, ensuring greater transparency and achieving greater value for money. The long process of political discussions on the subject came to a conclusion in December 2014, when both houses of parliament passed the Public...
Articles & Analysis | Conditions could become tougher for owners of office space in Trinidad and Tobago from The Report: Trinidad & Tobago 2015
As of mid-2014, there were four class A office buildings under construction in Port of Spain, with a total of 250,000 sq feet of usable space, according to Terra Caribbean, a leading real estate agency. At the time, Terra Caribbean argued that this was a positive development, given a shortage of high-quality office space in the city. The shortage was the result of the...
Articles & Analysis | Trinidad and Tobago's real estate sector is guaranteed more than enough opportunities due to pent-up demand for housing from The Report: Trinidad & Tobago 2015
The broadly defined real estate sector of Trinidad and Tobago is dominated by three aspects. First, land is scarce, and perhaps of equal importance is that the perception of scarcity is ever-present. Trinidad has an area of around 4800 sq km and most of the country’s population of 1.34m is concentrated on the western side of the island, from Chaguaramas to Point Fortin...
Articles & Analysis | Civil infrastructure work is expected to be strong into 2015 in Trinidad and Tobago from The Report: Trinidad & Tobago 2015
An important contributor to Trinidad and Tobago’s economy, the construction industry was estimated to account for 5.2% of GDP in 2014. There are 12 locally based companies with a turnover of TT$25m ($3.85m) or more, 200 firms with turnover in the TT$5m-25m ($771,00-3.85m) range and a larger number of smaller companies below that, many of them operating informally. The...