Latest update February 18th, 2025 1:40 PM
Feb 15, 2024 Letters
Dear Editor
Budgetary allocations in Guyana over the past years, have failed to improve the living standards, and working conditions of the working poor. The poverty rate, shows the population living below the U.S. equivalent of $5.5 a day, is about 38.8 percent, among the highest in the Caribbean and Latin America, according to the United Nations Development Programme. Adolescent pregnancy is a major issue in Guyana, with more than 20 percent of all pregnancies occurring among adolescent girls aged 15–19 years. In a recent release by the United Nations (UN) report on Regional Overview of Food Security and Nutrition, as published in Kaieteur News dated November 13, 2023, underscores the persistence of ‘wasting,’ a severe form of child malnutrition, with Guyana and Suriname at the forefront. Unemployment in Guyana stands at a staggering 14.83 percent or approximately 118,640 persons; while 39% of all Guyanese citizens currently are residing abroad.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, Budget 2021 was presented with a central focus of establishing ‘A Path to Recovery, Economic Dynamism, and Resilience.’ Yet, public servants, including nurses, teachers, and men in uniform who are excluded from this economic dynamism, are leaving the country in the hundreds. In fact, the UNDP reported that roughly half of all Guyanese with a tertiary education will migrate to places such as Europe, United States, Canada, Trinidad and other Caribbean Islands.
The second Budget enacted in the year 2022 promised the people that the nation will remain “Steadfast Against All Challenges, Resolute in Building Our One Guyana.” At the conclusion of that fiscal year, the nation remained in oneness on only one matter; that is, that all the budgets in 2022 failed to improve the lives of the people, and address their daily needs and alleviate their challenges. Last year (2023), the government presented a Budget of G$782 billion (US$3.75 billion) with the aim of ‘improving lives today, building prosperity for tomorrow’, and also claimed that it was people centered the citizens were their first priority. Sadly, the hefty provisions that were made with a view of improving the business portfolios of those individuals closest to the government. Public Servants, who are among the working poor, had no improvements in their living conditions, and absolutely no hope for a better future in which they could raise and educated their children.
Similarly, budget 2024, the largest in the country’s history of G$1.146 Trillion dollars, is not a projection of good financial planning for development. It is rather a recipe for ‘Staying the course’ which is currently defined by an increasing gap between the very rich, and the working poor. This could be seen massive tax breaks for large corporations, and the sustaining of onerous (burdensome) tax rates such as PAYE, and VAT which are sustained on the backs of mainly public servants who are among the working poor.
The most pressing concern facing Guyanese, are:
The recovery from the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (Covid-19) Pandemic,
These daily trends continue to set a challenging context for Governance, Defense, Socio-cultural balanced Economic Development that emphasize diversification and sustainability. It was against this backdrop that the GPSU examined Budget 2024 and do make the following comments aimed at the Government reviewing Budget 2024 and ensuring allocations are made as recommended, and which hopefully, will impact subsequent budget proposals.
Statement of GPSU’s Position
First, given the turbulence of the trends stated above, (both positive and negative) battering Guyana, it seems self-evident that there would have been a search for consensual problem definitions, solutions and plans on the part of government to engage key stakeholder. Secondly, any economic, social, human recovery and development planning are decades overdue, and must take steps to genuinely achieve the Motto of One People, One Nation, One Destiny – even as we are in the middle of the battle.
The plan should be multi-sectoral, and must include all stakeholders (private-sector, public-sector, Unions, youth, women, indigenous communities, and all other vulnerable populations in Caribbean Society and Guyana, in particular). Despite Guyana has been experiencing significant economic growth due to the discovery of vast oil reserves, and the resulting positive economic impact on other sectors in the traditional economy, this growth has not been evenly distributed, and poverty and income inequality remain persistent, and are affecting the majority of people.
The rising cost of living has also been a concern for many, especially retirees, the poor and vulnerable, as inflation and the increasing prices of essential goods and services have outpaced income (pension), wage growth, and benefits. Guyana’s per capita GDP now stands at USD$ 20,960 more than three times what it was in the year 2020 and even surpasses the per capita GDP of Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, and Jamaica. The per capita GDP is a measure of the average economic output per person in a country. It is calculated by dividing the country’s total GDP by its population. It is often used to assess the standard of living and economic well-being of a nation’s residents. In accordance with the aforementioned one can safely conclude that income inequality remains a sore issue since the nation’s wealth continues to be unevenly distributed. The national minimum wage is amongst the lowest in CARICOM amid Guyana’s expanding landscape and its growing regional influence. In the 2024 budget, to tackle poverty and the rising cost of living the Government of Guyana has outlined certain areas of focus, including infrastructure development, education, healthcare, and social protection. The budget proposes the following measures:
III. A reduction in excise taxes on essential items, in extension to the reduction of excise taxes on oil.
VII. Reviewing and improving the existing Pension Plans
VIII. Cease Politicizing the Public Service. Significantly moving the allocation for contracting employment to recruiting and establishing of the Public Service and filling vacancies on the Permanent and Pensionable Establishment
Conclusion
In conclusion, Guyana’s 2024 Budget will not address poverty nor the rising cost of living through increased social protection, educational needs of the people and teachers, healthcare, infrastructure development, and the energy development, and professional and skilled human resources needed for national development. The budget falls short in several areas, including insufficient allocation for social protection, lack of focus on rural development, weak emphasis on job creation, and inadequate attention to environmental sustainability. To effectively tackle poverty, the rising cost of living, and address a living wage, the Government needs to reconsider its budgetary priorities and allocate more resources to these critical areas.
Having regard to these challenges facing public servants daily, the GPSU proposes the following:
Towards A Recovery and Development Forum and Plan
These sectors are:
Visioning/ Planning Sector
Sovereign Wealth/ Finance Sector
Energy Sector
The Mining Sector
Business/ Labour/ Diversification Sector (Tourism and Emerging Markets)
Forestry Sector
Drainage/Irrigation/Agricultural Sector
National Security Sector
Infrastructural /Communication/ICT Sector
Land Sector
Environmental Sector
Government Machinery (Education, Health, Labor etc.,)
At the political level it is unavoidable that national unity is secured through sincere meaning to our National Motto of One People, One Nation One Destiny and put our collective energy in one direction. There must also be meaningful, inclusive and enlightened development taking all concerns into consideration for the benefit of all.
Regards
Guyana Public Service Union
Feb 18, 2025
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