Business View Caribbean - October 2015    65
        
        
          The TTMA divides its members into several
        
        
          manufacturing sub-sectors:
        
        
          • Assembly-type and related industries
        
        
          • Chemicals and non-metallic materials
        
        
          • Food, beverage and tobacco
        
        
          • Household products
        
        
          • Printing, publishing, and paper converters
        
        
          • Steel products
        
        
          • Textiles and garments
        
        
          • Wood and wood-related products
        
        
          So, while the country’s main source of income (and
        
        
          80 percent of its exports) still comes from the petro-
        
        
          chemical industry, which takes advantage of the is-
        
        
          lands’ plentiful oil and natural gas reserves, over the
        
        
          last several decades, its manufacturing sub-sectors
        
        
          (particularly the Food, Beverage and Tobacco, and
        
        
          the Chemicals and Non-Metallic Minerals industries),
        
        
          have greatly contributed to an economy that helps
        
        
          make Trinidad and Tobago the third richest country,
        
        
          per capita, in the Americas after the United States and
        
        
          Canada.
        
        
          How does the modern TTMA “promote, encourage and
        
        
          assist the growth and development of manufacturing
        
        
          industries in Trinidad and Tobago?”  According to Ma-
        
        
          hindra Ramdeen, the Association’s Chief Executive Of-
        
        
          ficer, one major way is by lobbying the government
        
        
          
            Mahindra Ramdeen, CEO
          
        
        
          
            Dr. Ralph Balgobin, President