Ashworth Azille Floats 6-Month ABST Cut to Ease Cost of Living

As the April 30 general election campaign in Antigua and Barbuda heats up, cost-of-living struggles have emerged as the defining issue for competing political parties, with United Progressive Party (UPP) St. John’s Rural East candidate Ashworth Azille floating a targeted temporary cut to the Antigua and Barbuda Sales Tax (ABST) to deliver meaningful relief to squeezed households. While Azille stressed that the idea is still in exploratory stages and not yet an official, binding party platform commitment, he laid out the framework of the proposal during a recent “Know Your Candidates” interview, noting widespread public demand for immediate, tangible support for consumers.

Azille’s proposal would slash the current 15% ABST rate to 10% for a six-month period, a window he says is long enough to ease ongoing financial strain on families purchasing groceries and other essential goods. He emphasized that household budgets across the country are already stretched thin by relentless price hikes for basic necessities, leaving many unable to keep up with monthly expenses.

Unlike the sporadic, one-off measures rolled out by the current administration — such as limited tax-free shopping days — Azille argued that a six-month temporary cut would deliver far more meaningful relief, framing the proposal as a bridge toward longer-term, sustained support for working families. “One-off, sporadic reduction or removal of the ABST may not necessarily serve the purpose… we want to provide long-term relief,” he explained.

The candidate pushed back against concerns that the tax cut would devastate public revenues, noting that the government has multiple avenues to offset potential losses through fiscal adjustments. He called on the government to follow the same belt-tightening advice it often gives to citizens, pointing to opportunities to cut wasteful public spending, root out bureaucratic inefficiencies, and reevaluate large tax waivers currently granted to private investors as viable ways to balance the government’s books after a temporary tax cut.

Pressed on whether the proposal could hold up amid ongoing global inflation and volatile international fuel prices, Azille rejected claims that the plan is reckless, noting that a broad cross-functional policy team within the UPP has been refining the proposal and will release a full, detailed cost-benefit analysis before any final decision is made. “We are not being reckless… there is a broad-based policy team that has been working on these proposals,” he said.

Azille’s proposal lands as cost-of-living issues dominate election discourse, with both major parties rolling out competing policy agendas to win over voters struggling with rising prices. The candidate added that his regular outreach to constituents has made clear just how urgent relief is, but reiterated repeatedly that the plan remains under active review and has not been formally adopted by the UPP. “I do not want persons to walk away… thinking that the United Progressive Party has made a determination to reduce the ABST from 17 to 10%,” he said, emphasizing that all final policy commitments will be grounded in rigorous financial analysis.