fbpx
  • Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Opinions
  • Features
  • Letters
  • Videos
  • Editorials
  • Columns
Guyana-map

Guyana is Rich but Guyanese Remain Poor

November 18, 2024
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Guyana & Caricom Must unquestionably support India in battle against Terror

May 26, 2025
Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

May 23, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Do Guyana Governments respond to Objective, fair, balanced editorials? The attack on Hindus and Hinduism in Guyana

May 21, 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Guyana must Seek American Assistance to deter Venezuela’s Aggression & Halt May 25 Election

May 21, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Exxon, Liability, and Guyana’s Growth

May 21, 2025
Dool Hanomansingh

Why the Hindu community remains weak despite personal achievements?

May 17, 2025
English rendering of PM’s interaction with the brave air warriors and soldiers at the Adampur Air Base

English rendering of PM’s interaction with the brave air warriors and soldiers at the Adampur Air Base

May 17, 2025
Ashook-Ramsaran

THE INDIAN DIASPORA COUNCIL CONVENES CONFERENCE SESSION AT ST. JOHN’S UNIVERSITY

May 17, 2025
Leyland-Chitlall-Roopnaraine

A CHILD’S DEATH PLUNGES A COUNTRY INTO CRISIS

May 17, 2025
Vassan Ramracha

PPP/C GOVERNMENT MUST CONCEDE ITS INDIAN ARRIVAL DAY

May 17, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Prosecute Hate Speech and Racial Attacks against Indians in Guyana

May 17, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Indian Caribbean Diaspora Support Surgical Strikes against terrorists; backs PM Modi’s tough response

May 17, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Condition
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
  • Login
Indo Caribbean Diaspora News
  • Home
  • Columns
    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Guyana & Caricom Must unquestionably support India in battle against Terror

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Do Guyana Governments respond to Objective, fair, balanced editorials? The attack on Hindus and Hinduism in Guyana

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Guyana must Seek American Assistance to deter Venezuela’s Aggression & Halt May 25 Election

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Indian Caribbean Diaspora Support Surgical Strikes against terrorists; backs PM Modi’s tough response

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Will Azruddin and Glenn Team up in Guyana?

    Dr. Jerry Jailall

    The Adrianna “scrapehead” riots must be a wake-up call to Indo-Guyanese as we race towards the 2025 elections

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Racial Unity in Grief over death of Afro Child in Guyana; divided by racial attacks on Indians; call for an inquiry

    Indian Arrival Day celebrations were held at Better Hope Mandir compound Friday May 5 afternoon.

    The Struggle for Indian Arrival as a Holiday in Guyana

    Vassan Ramracha

    CIVILITY IN TRINIDAD ELECTIONS

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Racial Attacks Divided Guyanese nation united in grief

  • Letters
    Guyana Rohee’s mocking of Illegal Guyanese & Green Card Holders in America

    Guyana Rohee’s mocking of Illegal Guyanese & Green Card Holders in America

    Charles Sugrim

    Authenticating Dr Bisram’s Poll in Guyana

    Gary Griffith

    United We Stand, Divided We Fall

    Ravi Balgobin Maharaj

    Democrats More Dangerous to Dragon Gas than Republicans

    Ravi Balgobin Maharaj

    Who Really Lost in the Junior Sammy Matter in Trinidad?

    Jai Lall

    A challenge to become the rainbow in Leonora’s cloud

    Rabindra-Moonan

    The opposition UNC led by Kamla Persad Bissessar has gone into meltdown mode.

    Jai Lall

    Residents of Leonora, Guyana are ashamed and embarrassed

    Kamla Persad Bissessar

    Trinidad & Tobago REPUBLIC DAY MESSAGE 2024 OF LEADER OF THE OPPOSITION

    Ravi Balgobin Maharaj

    Crime has reached a high level in Trinidad and Tobago

  • Community News
    Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

    Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Exxon, Liability, and Guyana’s Growth

    English rendering of PM’s interaction with the brave air warriors and soldiers at the Adampur Air Base

    English rendering of PM’s interaction with the brave air warriors and soldiers at the Adampur Air Base

    Indian-Caribbeans Observe Hanuman Birth Anniversary

    Indian-Caribbeans Observe Hanuman Birth Anniversary

    Ram Navami 2023 Observed

    Indo Caribbean Americans Observed 2025 Ram Naumi or Navami

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Gowtam Maharaj: “Phagwa is much more than gulal and abeer; it is building family love and strong communities.”

    Queens Boro President hosts 2025 Holi (Phagwah) Celebration

    Queens Boro President hosts 2025 Holi (Phagwah) Celebration

    Indian-Caribbean Americans in 2025 Phagwah (Holi) Spirit

    Indian-Caribbean Americans in 2025 Phagwah (Holi) Spirit

    Indo-Caribbeans Spellbound by the Maha Kumbh in India

    Indo-Caribbeans Spellbound by the Maha Kumbh in India

    Indo-Caribbean New Yorkers Observe Shivratri

    Indo-Caribbean New Yorkers Observe Shivratri

  • Editorials
    cliff-rajkumar

    VANISHING FOOTPRINTS

    Kamla Persad Bissessar

    Trinidad and Tobago OPPOSITION LEADER addresses TOWN HALL MEETING ON EDUCATION IN SAN FERNANDO WEST

    Jai Lall

    Guyana Leonora’s villagers are inseparable

    Dr. Vishnu Bisram

    Indo-Caribbean to speak on India’s Soft Power in Delhi

    Jai Lall

    Empty vessels make the most noise – politics in Guyana

    Ashook-Ramsaran

    In Commemoration of the 23rd Anniversary

    Kamla Persad Bissessar

    Hope for UNC of Trinidad?

    Ravi Balgobin Maharaj

    Is there No Other Musical Instrument Indigenous to T&T?

    Guyana-map

    October 2024 Hindu Conference bring back memories of Humiliation of Indians in Guyana

    Jai Lall

    Is Kamala Harris the “Trump” card for the Democrats?

  • Opinions
    Dool Hanomansingh

    Why the Hindu community remains weak despite personal achievements?

    Leyland-Chitlall-Roopnaraine

    A CHILD’S DEATH PLUNGES A COUNTRY INTO CRISIS

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Pakistan has always been a puppet nation

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Never too late for Dinesh to redeem himself!

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Bhadase and Sat were successful in so many ways

    Dool Hanomansingh

    The UNC is a Bullet Train Today

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Why is the EU Grant for Ex-Cane Farmers Not Paid?

    Dool Hanomansingh

    PNM hates Poor Black People

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Why whites are fleeing South Africa?

    Dool Hanomansingh

    Crime and the Hindu Community

  • Videos
    Dool-Hanomansingh-003

    US Congress woman Tulsi Gabbard condemns the ongoing genocide of Hindus and other minorities

    Geeta-Vaahini

    Geeta Vaahini, President of the  Hindu Prachaar Kendra speaks on the social significance of Ganga Dhara Festival.

    Geeta-Vaahini

    Geeta Vaahini, President of the Hindu Prachaar Kendra speaks on the Hindu view of the environment.

    swami-brahmadeo

    Swami Brahmadeo – Hindus are top CEOs and Medics in North America and Europe

    Gowtam-Maharaj

    Gowtam Maharaj, a farmer of Barrackpore, South Trinidad, shares his challenges being a farmer.

    BAMBOO #1 Flooding – Frustrated Residents

    BAMBOO #1 Flooding – Frustrated Residents

    NATIONAL-LOTUS-THEATRE

    NATIONAL LOTUS THEATRE – Performance of Niyantran

    radica-jairam

    Story of RADICA JAIRAM from Orange Valley

    fisherman-trinidad

    Families of Orange Valley felt neglected by PNM Government

    Dr Subramanian Swamy

    Dr Subramanian Swamy – Dharma Rising London April 2015

  • Features
    ravi-ratiram

    Trinidad MP Ravi Ratiram Condemns Government’s Failures Amidst Rising Crime in Central Trinidad and Calls for Immediate Action to Protect Citizens

    Pandit Ramdular Singh

    Pandit Ramdular Singh on Guyana’s Dharmic Sabha

    Vassan Ramracha

    PNM bent on Africanizing Trinidad

    Baldeo_Chanderpaul-3

    West Indian cricketers must strive to emulate Shiv Chanderpaul of Guyana

    Jai Lall

    Who in Guyana will ever buy the PNC/AFC/APNU “honesty, integrity and decency” pitch again?

    cliff-rajkumar

    Non Indians Embracing Sanathan Dharma

    Mr. Rudranath Indarsingh

    INDARSINGH ON RELOCATION OF PRINCES TOWN FIRE OFFICERS

    Vassan Ramracha

    TRIBAL AFRICANS DO NOT CONDONE INTERRACIAL MARRIAGES

    Jai Lall

    Guyana President Ali and Cabinet Ministers Engaged West Coast Supporters

    Dr Jerry Jailall

    PPP Government responds quickly to changing “Negro” on Government forms, will they also add “Indian” to Arrival Day?

No Result
View All Result
Indo Caribbean Diaspora News
No Result
View All Result

Guyana is Rich but Guyanese Remain Poor

by Staff Reporter
November 18, 2024
in Uncategorized
0
Guyana-map

Guyana

485
SHARES
4.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Dr. Ramesh Gampat
14 November 2024

Suppose I tell you, dear reader, that Guyana is rich but Guyanese are relatively poor. What would be your reaction? I’ll get to my arguments shortly but it is first necessary to gaze at the economic landscape. Prior to 2020, Guyana was largely an unknown, backwater country and foreigners often confused with Ghana, which is located in Africa.  Guyana’s economic growth was lackadaisical at best, averaging 2.1 percent over the sixty years from 1960 to 2019. That changed in 2020, when Guyana became the world’s newest petro-state.  While the amount of oil discovered is unknown, the figure generally accepted is in excess of 11 billion barrels. The export of crude oil delivered a much-needed boost to growth, averaging 38.8 percent from 2020 to 2024. Growth reached as high as 63.4 percent in 2022, an incredible performance that is probably unparalleled in the Americas.  Not only is Guyana the world’s fastest growing economy today, but it is also much more widely known and several airlines now fly into and out of CBJ.  Quite a few pieces on the country have appeared in Bloomberg and other western media, while the inflow of FDI has surged, rising from US$573.1 million in the first quarter of 2020 to US$4,595.7 million in the second quarter of 2024, which is more than twice as large as non-oil GDP.

 

From around 2014, a dual economy began to emerge: an oil economy and a non-oil economy.  The former is a highly capital-intensive, technologically advanced, skill-intensive, high-productivity economy. It is essentially a foreign-owned export enclave devoted to a single commodity thus far, crude oil.  Oil GDP was G$9.9 billion in 2019 or more than twice the previous year.  Oil GDP reached G$180.20 billion in 2020, amounting to 15.8 percent of the total economy (oil + non-oil). The oil economy grew rapidly and it was more than half of the overall economy two years later and is expected to reach about 60 percent in 2024.  The rapid growth of the oil economy, 67.4 percent in real terms, annually, from 2021 to 2024, buoyed up growth of the non-oil economy, which averaged 10.1 percent during these same four years. The upshot is that the total economy expanded by 37.6 percent annually.  Incredibly, real GDP in 2023 was 2.6 times as large as 2020 (real GDP data for 2024 is not yet available). 

 

Oil exports rose from US$1.1 billion in 2020 to US$11.6 billion in 2023 (it was US$9.4 billion at the end of the first half of 2024).  As a share of total exports, oil increased from 19.5 percent to 69.7 percent during the same period. Oil exports comprised 56.9 percent of cumulative GDP during these four year.  Given the country’s huge oil reserves, the surge in economic growth caused by the  export of oil and the current spending spree about a third of which is funded by drawdowns from the Natural Resources Fund, mainly on much-needed infrastructure, and  a population of less than 800,000, there is only one conclusion: Guyana is a very rich country.

 

If the country is rich by the criteria presented in the above paragraphs, it is also rich by another widely used indicator: per capita income. Per capita income is normally calculated as GDP divided by population (in Guyana’s case GDP = Oil GDP + Non-oil GDP) and expressed in USD to facilitate international comparison. Income per person rose from US$5,600 in 2013 to US$7,100 in 2020 (rounded to the nearest 100), which is an increase of 28.1 percent. Three years later per capita income reached US$21,400 and is expected to climb to US$24,000 in 2024.  The phenomenal “wealth” performance means that income per person in 2024 is 3.4 times as large as in 2020.  In the Americas, excluding the US and Canada, only Puerto Rico, The Bahamas, Barbados, and St. Kitts and Nevis were richer than Guyana in terms of per capita income in 2023.  By my calculations, only the US, Canada, The Bahamas and Puerto Rico are richer than Guyana in 2024.  Income per person, too, portrays Guyana as one of the richest countries in the Americas, but the truth is revealed once the data supporting that perception is put under the microscope.

 

The problem with the above analysis is that the bulk of oil GDP does not belong to Guyana and should not, therefore, be used to calculate income per person.  GDP = private consumption + private investment + government investment + government spending + Net exports (exports – imports).  There is comparatively little government spending or investment in the oil economy so that its GDP is largely made up of private consumption, private investment and net exports. The extent to which each of these three components contribute to oil GDP is unknown because the requisite data are not available. However, given the size of oil exports, which was 1.2 times as large as oil GDP from 2020 to 2023, it is clear that most of the revenue from oil export is captured by oil companies. Spending on consumption and investment are mostly done by the foreign oil companies.  In effect, the oil economy is a foreign-owned economy and, therefore, most of its GDP is foreign-owned and thus does not benefit Guyanese as much as it should.  Looks, that is, can be deceiving: our total GDP is huge but only about 54 percent belongs to us.

 

Let’s redo the arithmetic so that income per person is based on non-oil GDP rather than total GDP.  The computation shows that per capita income rose from US$5,600 in 2013 to US$9,300 in 2023, which is an increase of 66.8 percent.  Of the 33 countries in the Americas for which data are available, there were 17 countries with per capita income larger than Guyana’s in 2023. In other words, Guyanese remain some of the poorest people in the Americas. Income per person in Barbados, St. Kitts and Nevis was 2.4 times as large as Guyana’s, while Trinidad’s was twice as large.  Per capita income in Brazil and Grenada was larger than Guyana’s, while that of Jamaica and Suriname was around two-third of Guyana’s. The enormous difference between income per person based on total and non-oil GDP exposes what I call the “Fantasy Gap” or the perception of wealth, which began from around 2019 and grows larger yearly. The Fantasy Gap, the split in economic fortune, is readily evident from the accompanying chart.

 

Income Per Person: Total GDP and Non-oil GDP
Note: Fantasy Gap = Per capita income based on Total GDP minus per capita income based on Non-oil GDP.  In effect, the Fantasy Gap exists because of the oil economy (Oil GDP), which is foreign owned, does not belong to Guyanese, and hardly benefits Guyanese

Source of data: 2013-2023: BoG 2024.  Annual Report 2023; BoG 2024.  Half Year Report 2024.  GDP for 2024 estimated by author; BoS website for population data

Concluding, Guyana is a rich country but Guyanese are either some of the richest or some of the poorest people in the Americas depending upon how income per person is measured. The idea that Guyanese are rich is an erroneous arithmetical idea; there is no substance to it. The error stems from dividing total GDP (oil + non-oil = total income) by the population, which produces a very high income per person.  Since oil-GDP, at least most of it, is neither owned nor enjoyed by Guyanese, it should be excluded from the calculation so that appropriate numerator in the division is non-oil GDP. By the “oil” metric, Guyanese are rich, but by the “non-oil” metric Guyanese are poor.  

 

To give you an idea of the magnitude involved, non-oil income per person was only about 42 percent of total income (oil + non-oil) during the last three years, including this one. The inclusion of oil GDP in the per capita income metric creates the perception that Guyanese are rich, about 58 percent richer than they actually are. Many years ago, an Australian forestry professional working in Guyana told me that you cannot eat what you do not have.  That’s still the case as far as I know – we are producing plenty of oil but only the crumbs gets routed to our tables.  Hence, the oil economy does not benefit the average Guyanese much even though it enriches the well-connected.

Facebook Comments Box
Tags: carribeanGuyanaGuyaneseindian cultureIndian diasporaIndian GuyaneseIndiansIndo Caribbean diasporaindo-caribbeanIndo-Caribbean communityIndo-GuyaneseTrinidadTrinidad and Tobago
Share157Tweet98Share39
ADVERTISEMENT
Staff Reporter

Staff Reporter

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Dr. Jerry Jailall

The Adrianna “scrapehead” riots must be a wake-up call to Indo-Guyanese as we race towards the 2025 elections

May 10, 2025
Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

May 23, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Guyana & Caricom Must unquestionably support India in battle against Terror

May 26, 2025
Guyana-map

Tracing the Rambalak’s Family in Indentureship in Guyana

October 13, 2021
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Guyana & Caricom Must unquestionably support India in battle against Terror

May 26, 2025
Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

Remembering Aunty Betty of Port Mourant, Guyana

May 23, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Do Guyana Governments respond to Objective, fair, balanced editorials? The attack on Hindus and Hinduism in Guyana

May 21, 2025
Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Guyana must Seek American Assistance to deter Venezuela’s Aggression & Halt May 25 Election

May 21, 2025

The most important world news and events of the day.

Get ICDN daily newsletter on your inbox.

ADVERTISEMENT
Indo Caribbean Diaspora News

© 2024 Indo-Caribbean Diaspora News. All rights Reserved

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Condition

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Columns
  • Letters
  • Community News
  • Opinions
  • Videos
  • Features
  • Editorials

© 2024 Indo-Caribbean Diaspora News. All rights Reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In