Latest update February 16th, 2025 7:49 PM
Oct 27, 2021 Letters
Dear Editor,
I was pleasantly surprised to learn that the Guyana dollar was doing well versus the American dollar. The going rate loosely speaking, is US$1: GY$200. The trouble started when I found out that 200 Guyana dollars do not buy what 210 or 205 used to make possible. So much for local currency appreciation and purchasing power.
Editor, I am aware that the oversupply of U.S. dollars is a contributory factor to this rate saga. But I look at where prices are, and see the usual citizens, (criminals, to be candid) taking advantage of sleazy corners and circumstances. By citizens, I single out price realities (a euphemism) in the agricultural sector, and with regards to goods, mostly imported.
As we all know, the massive floods wreaked havoc on produce availability, with the expected effects on prices in the marketplace. Guyanese feel the pinch, but I understand it. So, I give farmers, middlemen, and sellers a pass, even as I admit to discerning that some hustles are present. There are grounds to give some leeway, and with the October rains – they have never truly stopped in earnest – the December-January rainy season suddenly takes on ominous complexions. We are in for some price turbulence for a while to come, but there is limited justification for what is paid for greens and veggies.
On the other hand, I unleash my Patriot missiles and take aim at the private sector-the nasty, dirty, slimy businesspeople – that seize every opportunity to gouge Guyanese consumers. My first stop is at the pump. The PPP Government eased up on the excise, so what the hell is going on at the gas stations? They can’t have so much ‘old’ stock. If they do, then Guyana’s gas stations have more petroleum equivalents that is out there in those oil blocks. Their inventories are never ending, from the price that vehicle operators are forced to pay. I give the PPP Government a partial pass on this one. Partial only, because the private sector is a powerful part of its constituency, and the Government should take its members to task for undercutting its efforts and profiteering at the people’s expense. Weren’t these the fine upright citizens, who were all so pure in their pursuit of democracy during the last elections? They have to stop being the commercial brigands they are today, when they sabotage the government they back, and criminalise business.
Criminalise Presidential relief is what the private sector is doing. The President announced considerable reductions in freight charges, something I lauded as good. But only if the benefits (lower prices) reached consumers. Those benefits have not, because Guyanese businesspeople claim to have more inventory (‘old stock’) than Amazon. These demented private sector operators should be put in stocks and flogged publicly. Word was that the President has provided a subsidy to a supportive constituency. I don’t believe that even he can be so low. I place those charges on the heads of local businesspeople. Sometimes, I wish that Guyana was Afghanistan.
Sincerely,
GHK Lall
Feb 16, 2025
Kaieteur Sports-Guyana’s Junior Golden Jaguars delivered a remarkable performance Friday evening, securing a 2-2 draw against Costa Rica at the Costa Rica National Stadium. The result is a...Peeping Tom… Kaieteur News- I have an uncle, Morty Finkelstein, who has the peculiar habit of remembering things with... more
By Sir Ronald Sanders Ambassador to the US and the OAS, Sir Ronald Sanders Kaieteur News-Two Executive Orders issued by U.S.... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: [email protected] / [email protected]