Lloyd Best first attended the
Tacarigua Anglican School. He then won a Government Exhibition Scholarship to
Queen's Royal College, in
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. From here, he won a Trinidad and Tobago Island Scholarship to pursue higher studies, thence to graduate from the
University of Cambridge and
Oxford University in Great Britain. In 1957, he joined the Faculty of the
University of the West Indies in
Mona, Jamaica, as a Research Fellow. He continued to serve as a Professor in Economics here until 1976, when he resigned to work full-time with the
Tapia House Movement, a political, social and economic organisation based in Trinidad and Tobago. As a political party, Tapia House was unsuccessful in gaining seats in the
1976 elections, but some of the party's members helped to form the
National Alliance for Reconstruction, that won the
1986 General Elections. Lloyd Best served as the Leader of the Opposition in the
Senate from 1974 to 1975 and then from 1981 to 1983. During this period, he was also the founder of the
Trinidad and Tobago Institute of the West Indies (known since 2007 as the
Lloyd Best Institute of the West Indies). Even though he was in failing health, during the last two weeks before his death, Lloyd Best was hard at work with his colleague and fellow Tapia house member Eric St Cyr, completing his newest work, titled
Economic Policy and Management Choices: A Contemporary Economic History of Trinidad and Tobago, 1950-52. ==Death==