Profile
Official name Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
Form of government multiparty republic with two legislative houses
(Senate [311]; House of Representatives [41])
Chief of state President
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Port of Spain
Official language English
Official religion none
Monetary unit Trinidad and Tobago dollar (TT$)
Population estimate (2008) 1,305,000
Total area (sq mi) 1,990
Total area (sq km) 5,155
1All seats are nonelected.
Main
island country of the southeastern West Indies. It consists of two
main islands—Trinidad and Tobago—and several smaller islands. Forming
the two southernmost links in the Caribbean chain, Trinidad and Tobago
lie close to the continent of South America, northeast of Venezuela and
northwest of Guyana. Trinidad, by far the larger of the two main
islands, has an area of about 1,850 square miles (4,800 square km). It
is 7 miles (11 km) from the Venezuelan coast at its nearest point and is
separated from it by the Gulf of Paria and two narrow channels, where
there are several small islands and rocks. Tobago, much smaller with an
area of about 115 square miles (300 square km), lies 20 miles (30 km) to
the northeast of Trinidad. Extending diagonally from southwest to
northeast, Tobago is about 30 miles (50 km) long and more than 10 miles
(16 km) across at its widest point. Little Tobago lies about a mile off
Tobago’s northeastern coast. Also called Bird of Paradise Island, Little
Tobago was once noted as the only wild habitat of the greater bird of
paradise outside of New Guinea; however, the bird is no longer found
there.
Trinidad and Tobago achieved independence from the United Kingdom in
1962 and obtained membership in the Commonwealth and the United Nations
that same year. It became a republic in 1976. The capital of Trinidad
and Tobago is Port of Spain, located on the northwestern coast of
Trinidad.
Land
Relief and drainage
Physiographically, the islands represent an extension of the South
American mainland. The outstanding physical feature of the island of
Trinidad is its Northern Range, a continuation of the coastal ranges of
the Andes Mountains in Venezuela. The range runs east-west at an average
elevation of about 1,500 feet (460 metres), rising to 3,084 feet (940
metres) at Mount Aripo (El Cerro del Aripo), the country’s highest peak.
The Northern Range is the site of a large number of waterfalls, the most
spectacular of which are the Blue Basin Falls and the Maracas Falls,
both 298 feet (91 metres) high. On the southern side of the range,
foothills with an elevation of approximately 500 feet (150 metres)
descend to the Northern Plain.
Running across the centre of the island, from southwest to northeast,
is the Central Range, the highest point of which is Mount Tamana (1,009
feet [308 metres]). A third row of mainly low hills, the Southern Range,
adds further variety to the mostly flat or undulating surface of
Trinidad.
The three mountain ranges determine the island’s drainage pattern.
Rivers are numerous but short, the longest being the Ortoire in the
south and the Caroni in the north. In low-lying areas swamps can be
found; among them are the Caroni Swamp in the northwest and clusters
along the eastern (notably the Nariva Swamp) and southern coasts.
An oil-bearing belt occupies the southern one-fourth of the island,
extending west into the Gulf of Paria and east into the Atlantic Ocean.
Gas and water seepages give rise to mud volcanoes of various types, the
best-known of which is called the Devil’s Woodyard. In the southwest of
the island is the deep asphalt deposit known as Pitch Lake.
The island of Tobago is physiographically an extension of the
Venezuelan coastal range and the Northern Range of Trinidad. Its
dominant feature is the Main Ridge, which runs from northeast to
southwest, rising to heights of about 1,800 feet (550 metres). The ridge
slopes more gently to the southwest onto a coral plain. The coral
formation has given rise to a number of reefs, one of which, Buccoo
Coral Reef, is known for its marine life and is popular for scuba diving
and snorkeling. Over the years, the reef and its marine life have
suffered serious damage from pollution and tourist activity. Tobago has
only a few short streams.
Climate
The climate of Trinidad and Tobago is tropical, with high relative
humidity. The coolest months are January and February, when the average
minimum temperature is about 68 °F (20 °C). The warmest months are
April, May, and October, which have an average maximum temperature of
about 89 °F (32 °C). In general, mean temperatures range between 77 °F
(25 °C) in February and 85 °F (29 °C) in April. Temperatures vary
significantly between day and night, and the climate along the coast is
tempered by sea breezes.
There is a main dry season from January to May and a lesser dry
season (Petite Carême, or Indian Summer) in September and October. The
prevailing winds are the northeast trades. The islands are outside the
main hurricane zone, but Tobago occasionally is struck by disastrous
hurricanes (e.g., in 1847 and 1963).
Plant and animal life
Vegetation zones are well defined on both islands. In general, the
highest areas coincide with the most luxuriant tropical rainforest
vegetation. Cultivated estates or small settlements are established in
clearings on the hills. In the dry season the hills are dotted with the
orange flowers of the mountain immortelle, a large flowering tree that
grows to a height of about 80 feet (25 metres), and the flowers of the
pink poui and yellow poui trees. Sugarcane, the main agricultural crop,
is grown on Trinidad’s Central Plain.
The Caroni Swamp, a bird sanctuary, is frequented by flocks of white
flamingos and egrets as well as populations of scarlet ibis—a national
bird. Despite its protected status, the sanctuary’s bird population,
including that of the scarlet ibis, has declined markedly since the
1970s, the result of illegal hunting and of pollution. The Nariva Swamp,
which has a varied bird and mammal population including the manatee, has
similarly come under threat despite its protected status, especially
from illegal rice farms. The greater bird of paradise was introduced to
the island of Little Tobago, a bird sanctuary, but had disappeared by
the early 21st century.
The forests on both Trinidad and Tobago are hunting grounds for small
game, the most-sought-after being the paca, or lappe. Other animals
include the agouti (a short-haired, short-eared, rabbitlike rodent),
quenck (collared peccary; a wild hog), tattoo (an armadillo),
prehensile-tailed porcupine, and iguana. Four main groups of reptiles
are present on the islands: snakes, lizards, turtles, and crocodiles
(one kind, the caiman, related to the alligators). Trinidad’s other
indigenous animals include howler monkeys and ocelots, but the latter
have disappeared from the wild and the former are rare. In general, the
island’s fauna has come under severe stress from rapid urbanization and
industrial development.
People
Ethnic groups
The original inhabitants of Trinidad migrated from the Orinoco River
delta region of northeastern South America and probably spoke an
Arawakan language. It seems likely that by the time the Spanish
established a presence there in the 16th century there was also a
population of Cariban speakers, mostly on the north coast. Today a group
called the Santa Rosa Caribs of Arima claims partial descent from the
original inhabitants and seeks to keep their heritage alive. Tobago was
settled by Cariban-speaking Indians when Europeans first arrived there.
The ethnic makeup of Trinidad is dominated by two groups, roughly
equal in size: blacks, descended from slaves brought in to work on
cotton and sugar plantations beginning in the late 18th century, and
Indo-Trinidadians, or East Indians, whose ancestors were primarily
labourers who immigrated from the Indian subcontinent as plantation
workers after the abolition of slavery in the mid-19th century. Migrants
from Spain and other European countries, Africa, East and Southeast
Asia, and the Middle East have all contributed to the ethnic composition
of the islands’ population. Although English is the official language,
most people speak Trinidad English, a creole language. A few people,
mostly in rural areas, speak a French-derived creole, Spanish, or Hindi.
Religion
Under the Spanish, Roman Catholicism was the official religion, and
it was strengthened by French immigration during the French and Haitian
revolutions. Anglicanism and Protestantism gained a foothold in various
forms with the advent of the British. People from the Indian
subcontinent brought with them their languages and their Hindu and
Muslim religions. Both Sunni and Shīʿite Muslim groups are present.
Further diversification followed with the immigration of Syrians and
Lebanese. African-influenced religious sects include the Shango, or
Orisha, faith, derived from the Yoruba culture of modern Nigeria, and
the Spiritual Baptists, a syncretic Protestant-African church. In the
late 20th century there was a striking increase in the adherents of
Hinduism and of various fundamentalist, Evangelical, or Pentecostal
churches, mainly of U.S. origin.
Settlement patterns
Soils, climate, and vegetation all have influenced the pattern of
local settlement. Villages stretch ribbonlike along the major roadways.
In Trinidad, though not in Tobago, villages are so diverse in plan that
it would be difficult to call any typical. Even in the sugar belt of the
Central Plain, with its mainly (though not exclusively) East Indian
population, patterns vary. Kinship tends to be the important structural
element in the life of the traditional East Indian village in Trinidad;
caste may also have a localized influence. Traditionally, multiple
generations of a family tended to live together or in close proximity,
although the extended-family system began giving way to a nuclear-family
structure in the late 20th century. Religious rites and festivals, such
as Diwali (the Hindu Festival of Lights) and various forms of puja
(ceremonial offering), are important events. Houses vary in size and
architecture from the simple wooden hut to the well-built two- or
three-story dwelling, brightly painted and roofed with corrugated-iron
sheeting or clay tiles.
A somewhat different lifestyle prevails in villages inhabited by
people predominantly of African descent, though many villages have both
East Indian and African characteristics. The family unit is nuclear
rather than extended and may be based upon marriage or upon a stable
extralegal relationship. Families headed by women are common.
These different rural cultural streams converge on the capital, Port
of Spain. This city, with its mixed population and European influence
(seen particularly in its architecture and its French Creole heritage),
is notably cosmopolitan. The large city of San Fernando, located south
of Port of Spain on the west coast, has a significant East Indian
population. Scarborough, the chief town in Tobago, is an administrative
centre and market town.
Demographic trends
The first census of Trinidad and Tobago, in 1851, recorded a
relatively small population of roughly 70,000. By 1921 that figure had
more than tripled. However, by the late 20th century the population
growth rate was moderating, the result of increased use of
family-planning methods—with resulting declines in fertility and birth
rates—and emigration from the islands. This was offset somewhat by
considerable immigration to Trinidad from the Lesser Antilles and
Guyana.
Economy
The petroleum industry dominates the economy, which is thus
subject to fluctuations in the global energy market. Tourism and
manufacturing are of great importance. Privatization of some state-owned
enterprises was undertaken during the 1980s and ’90s. In Tobago tourism
is by far the largest sector of the economy.
Agriculture
Agriculture’s contribution to the economy is negligible.
Traditionally important agricultural export commodities included sugar,
cocoa, and coffee; however, the sugar sector experienced a steep decline
in the early 21st century when estate-based production of sugar was
ended with the closure of the state-owned sugar-producing company. Other
agricultural products include coconuts, citrus fruits, rice, poultry,
and vegetables. Indo-Trinidadians dominate food production and comprised
the majority of sugar workers. In Tobago agriculture declined markedly
after a disastrous hurricane in 1963.
Resources
Commercial petroleum drilling began in the early 20th century on
Trinidad, and oil production subsequently expanded to offshore
exploration as well. Large natural gas reserves off the coasts of
Trinidad and Tobago are also exploited. Although oil production has
declined from its peak in the late 1970s, both oil and natural gas
contribute substantially to the country’s economy. Liquefied natural gas
is a major export commodity. In addition to the large quantity of
natural asphalt in Pitch Lake, Trinidad also has deposits of coal,
gypsum, limestone, sand and gravel, iron ore, argillite, and fluorspar.
Manufacturing
Oil production and refining and the production of liquefied natural
gas (LNG) are the major industries, but government policy has encouraged
economic diversification to reduce dependence on imports and on
petroleum and LNG production. Industrial plants are engaged in the
manufacture of chemicals and iron and steel products and in the assembly
of consumer durables, including motor vehicles and radio and television
receivers. Trinidad has chemical and fertilizer plants and a steel mill.
The large-scale production of liquefied natural gas began in the 1990s.
The government started fostering intensive industrial development in
several areas in the late 20th century, notably in the central and
southern area.
Services and taxation
While petroleum and natural gas continue to make the most
substantial contributions to the national economy, services are a growth
area, especially in the tourist sector. Tourism is based particularly in
Tobago and on Trinidad’s northwestern peninsula. The beaches and the
annual Carnival celebration are tourist draws. Yachting is expanding
rapidly, with several marinas and related service activities, especially
in the Chaguanas area. Income and other taxes make up about one-third of
government revenues.
Transportation
The islands are served by a fairly well-developed network of
highways and main and local roads, but there is heavy congestion in
urban areas. State-owned shipping lines and airline services connect
Tobago to Trinidad. Piarco International Airport in Trinidad and Crown
Point International Airport in Tobago have interisland connections and
links to elsewhere in the Caribbean, North and South America, and
western Europe. Port of Spain is the chief commercial port; petroleum
exports are handled in ports in the south, such as Point Fortin,
Pointe-à-Pierre, and Brighton. There are extensive port facilities at
Point Lisas.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
The first constitution of independent Trinidad and Tobago,
promulgated as a British Order in Council (1962), provided for a
governor-general appointed by the British monarch, a cabinet, and a
bicameral Parliament, consisting of a Senate and a House of
Representatives. Under the constitution adopted in 1976, Trinidad and
Tobago is a republic. The head of state is the president, who is elected
by the Parliament; the prime minister is the head of government. The
president appoints the prime minister from the House of
Representatives—almost always the leader of the majority party.
The members of the House of Representatives are elected by universal
adult suffrage every five years; the members of the Senate are appointed
by the president on the advice of the prime minister and the minority
party leader, except for a number of independent senators appointed at
the president’s sole discretion. Senators serve until the dissolution of
Parliament or upon the request of the president that they vacate office.
The voting age is 18.
Since 1980 Tobago has had a separate House of Assembly consisting of
12 members elected by district at a primary election, four appointed
councillors, and a presiding officer, who may or may not be a member of
the assembly. In January 1987 Tobago was granted full internal
self-government, insofar as such self-government does not conflict with
the unitary state as provided by the constitution. The legislation
provides for a measure of devolution of executive powers in areas such
as revenue raising and collection, agriculture, industry, tourism,
environmental conservation, and social services.
Trinidad is divided into 14 local government authorities: 2 city
councils (Port of Spain and San Fernando), 3 borough councils (Arima,
Chaguanas, and Point Fortin), and 9 counties.
Health and welfare
Demand for housing in the urban areas is high, but construction has
been hampered by population movement, high construction costs, shortage
of land, and inadequate long-term financing. State provision for social
security consists of noncontributory old-age pensions, noncontributory
government employee pension plans provided out of public revenues, and
workers’ compensation compulsorily paid by employers. A national health
insurance program has been established. There is a network of public
clinics and hospitals where treatment is free or low-cost, but concerns
about the quality of the care they offer have led to a proliferation of
private, fee-paying hospitals and clinics.
Education
Education is free at the primary and secondary levels and
compulsory between the ages of 6 and 12. A campus of the University of
the West Indies, offering courses in engineering, business
administration, law, medicine, social science, natural science,
education, agriculture, and humanities, is located in St. Augustine,
about 10 miles (16 km) east of Port of Spain. The University of Trinidad
and Tobago (established 2004), with campuses throughout the islands,
provides technical and professional training in the sciences,
technology, education, and other fields. The University of the Southern
Caribbean (1927; Seventh-day Adventist) is a private degree-granting
institution near St. Joseph, Trinidad. There are also technical and
vocational institutes and several nonuniversity tertiary-level
institutions, both public and private.
Cultural life
The islands of Trinidad and Tobago have produced writers of
international stature, including Samuel Selvon, Earl Lovelace, and Nobel
Prize for Literature winner V.S. Naipaul, as well as the noted cultural
historian and cricket writer C.L.R. James. The islands are known for
steel-band and calypso music and for the dance known as the limbo.
Derived from African music and dance forms, these are important features
of the annual Carnival celebration, which to many represents the
ultimate creative expression of the islands. Indo-Trinidadian music and
dance underwent a renaissance beginning in the 1970s and are an
important part of the country’s cultural scene. Cricket and football
(soccer) are the most popular sports.
Arthur Napoleon Raymond Robinson
David Watts
Bridget M. Brereton
History
Colonial period
When Christopher Columbus reached Trinidad in 1498 on his third
voyage, the island was inhabited by Arawakan-speaking tribal groups
originally from the Orinoco River delta region and a smaller number of
Cariban speakers. In the 16th century many of these Trinidadian Indians
were captured by Spanish slave traders and sent to work in other Spanish
possessions, but there was no effective Spanish presence on the island
until 1592. In that year Antonio de Berrio came in search of Eldorado
(the mythical land of gold); he took official possession of the island
and founded St. Joseph, which served as the capital until 1784. Even
after 1592 the development of the island proceeded slowly. Few Spaniards
emigrated to Trinidad, only a handful of African slaves were imported,
and there was little production or export. In the 17th and early 18th
centuries, tobacco and, later, cacao were cultivated using Trinidadian
Indian labour, but after a disastrous failure of the cacao crop in the
1720s the industry declined. The island remained undeveloped until the
late 18th century.
From 1776 the Spanish government encouraged Roman Catholics from the
other Caribbean islands to settle in Trinidad with their slaves. This
immigration became significant after the cedula (decree) of 1783, which
offered generous land and tax incentives to settlers, and transformed
Trinidad’s population, economy, and society. Most of the settlers were
French, and French influence became dominant. Many slaves were brought
in from the other colonies and from Africa. Plantations were
established, production of cotton and sugar began, and trade increased
markedly. By 1797, when Britain seized the island from Spain, Trinidad
had begun its development as a plantation economy and a slave society.
Trinidad was formally ceded to Britain in 1802. Under British rule,
Trinidad’s development as a sugar colony continued, although in 1806–07
the slave trade was completely prohibited. Slavery was abolished in two
stages between 1834 and 1838, and the sugarcane planters were unable to
secure the steady, tractable, and cheap labour they wanted. In 1845 the
immigration of indentured workers from the Indian subcontinent began; it
continued until 1917. As early as 1870, about one-fourth of the total
population consisted of Indo-Trinidadians. The original Trinidadian
Indian inhabitants had by then virtually disappeared. Other immigrants
came to Trinidad after 1838 from the smaller British Caribbean colonies,
Africa (as free settlers rescued from foreign slave ships), Madeira,
China, Syria, Lebanon, Venezuela, and the United Kingdom. Trinidad’s
population became one of the most heterogeneous in the Caribbean.
Tobago, also sighted by Columbus in 1498, did not have any permanent
European settlement until the 18th century. Its development as a sugar
colony began when it was ceded to Britain in 1763 and continued
throughout the period from 1763 to 1814, during which time Tobago
changed hands between Britain and France several times. Tobago’s sugar
production peaked in the 1790s but began an irreversible decline after
1807. Tobago was ceded to Britain for the last time in 1814, but by then
its importance as a sugar-exporting colony had already begun to wane.
Tobago had its own bicameral legislature until 1874. In 1889, with the
island’s economy in shambles as a result of the collapse of its sugar
industry, Tobago was amalgamated with Trinidad, while retaining a
subordinate legislature and separate taxes. In this way the united
colony of Trinidad and Tobago was created. In 1899 Tobago became a ward
(administrative district) of Trinidad and Tobago.
Unlike most of the other British West Indian colonies, including
Tobago, Trinidad was never granted a bicameral legislature with an
elected assembly. Instead, it was governed as a crown colony, with a
governor and (from 1831) a legislative council consisting of top
officials and so-called unofficial members nominated by the governor.
The constitution of the crown colony underwent no significant
modification until 1925.
During the British colonial period, many activists sought to change
the constitution to allow the inclusion of some elected members on the
Trinidad and Tobago Legislative Council. In 1925 a constitutional reform
did that, adding seven elected members. Further agitation—especially an
islandwide series of strikes and riots in 1937 under Grenadan-born
labour leader Uriah Butler—led to the grant of universal suffrage in
1945 and other constitutional reforms that provided for a measure of
self-government. For about 10 years after universal suffrage, politics
in the colony were characterized by individualism and confusion, but in
1956 the People’s National Movement (PNM) won a victory at the polls and
formed the first party-based cabinet government, under the PNM’s founder
and leader, Eric Williams. Trinidad and Tobago attained independence in
1962 and became a republic within the Commonwealth in 1976.
Independent Trinidad and Tobago
The PNM won six consecutive elections and held power from 1956 to
1986. This continuity and stability in government were accompanied by
economic problems and social unrest, which broke out in widespread
disturbances in 1970–71. The oil boom in 1973–81 brought sudden
prosperity to most sections of the population, and Trinidad and Tobago
entered a period of rapid development and industrialization. A
substantial state sector and fairly comprehensive social welfare
programs were created from the petroleum profits, while the private
sector expanded rapidly. A collapse in oil prices, along with the PNM’s
failure to win support from most Indo-Trinidadians and deep-seated
corruption, led to a marked decline in the party’s popularity after
1981, the year of Williams’s death.
In December 1986 the National Alliance for Reconstruction (NAR), a
coalition party led by A.N.R. Robinson, won the majority of seats on a
program calling for divestment of most state-owned companies,
reorganization of the civil service, and structural readjustment of the
economy in the light of shrinking oil revenues. Although the NAR
government succeeded somewhat in stimulating economic growth while
keeping inflation low, its policies were widely resented, and the party
was damaged by splits and defections. In July 1990 a small radical
Muslim group attempted a coup, in which several ministers, including
Robinson, the prime minister, were held hostage for six days. The NAR
was defeated in elections in December 1991, and the PNM returned to
power.
The PNM government of 1991–95 continued most of the economic and
social policies inaugurated by its NAR predecessors. In 1995 the prime
minister called an early general election. The result was a tie between
the PNM and the main opposition party, the United National Congress
(UNC), which was supported chiefly by Indo-Trinidadians; the two Tobago
seats went to the NAR, led by Robinson. The latter gave his support to
the UNC, whose leader, Basdeo Panday, thus became prime minister. Panday
was the first Indo-Trinidadian prime minister, and his government was
the first in Trinidad and Tobago to be controlled by a party whose
electoral base was the Indo-Trinidadian population. After leaving
office, Panday was charged in 2002 with having failed to declare assets
to the parliamentary Integrity Commission.
The UNC government pursued economic and social policies generally
similar to those of the NAR and PNM governments of 1986–95. There was
considerable new investment, especially in tourism, petrochemicals, and
natural gas. Since the beginning of the 21st century, Trinidad and
Tobago has continued its rapid pace of industrial development, which
included building liquefied natural gas plants and steel smelters. The
state-owned sugar producer and refiner, Caroni Ltd., was closed down in
2003, but some independent cane farmers continued production for the rum
industry. Others turned to the cultivation of alternative crops such as
cassava and fruits, and a compensation plan was offered to former
sugar-industry workers.
Bridget M. Brereton