Latest update March 20th, 2026 12:59 AM
Mar 20, 2026 Letters
Dear Editor
Guyana today stands at one of the most extraordinary moments in its history.
Within the span of a decade, the country has moved from quiet economic potential to becoming one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. Vast offshore oil discoveries have transformed Guyana almost overnight into a major energy producer. The revenues now flowing into the country promise opportunities that few generations of Guyanese could have imagined. But history offers an important lesson about natural resource wealth. Oil can build nations. It can also weaken them.
The difference lies not underground, but in institutions.
Countries that convert natural resource wealth into broad national prosperity tend to share several characteristics: transparent public finances, competent public administration, independent courts, active civil society, and a press that is free to investigate and criticise. Where those institutions are weak, resource wealth often leads instead to corruption, inequality, and political division.
Guyana today faces precisely this institutional test.
The recent closure of Stabroek News after four decades of publication therefore carries meaning beyond the loss of a single newspaper. For many years, Stabroek News served as one of Guyana’s most respected independent voices. It helped bring public scrutiny to questions of governance, economics, and accountability. Like all newspapers, it sometimes provoked disagreement. But it also helped sustain the public debate that healthy democracies require.
As an avid reader of the paper over many years, I often admired its willingness to tackle difficult questions. Its reporting and editorial pages contributed to a national conversation about development, governance, and the rule of law. In a country undergoing rapid transformation, that kind of scrutiny becomes even more important. Guyana’s oil sector will bring immense revenues in the coming years. Decisions about how those revenues are managed—how they are invested, how benefits are distributed, how environmental risks are managed—will shape the country’s future for generations. Such decisions deserve the fullest public discussion possible. Independent journalism is one of the institutions that makes that discussion possible. This is not simply a Guyanese issue.
Across the world, countries that have managed natural resource wealth well—Norway is the most famous example—have done so within systems of strong democratic accountability. Public debate, investigative reporting, and institutional transparency have played central roles in ensuring that national wealth benefits the public. Guyana has every opportunity to follow such a path. The country possesses enormous strengths. It has a vibrant civil society, talented public servants, a dynamic diaspora, and a democratic tradition that has grown stronger in recent decades. Its leadership today faces the difficult task of guiding a small country through an economic transformation that larger nations would find challenging.
In this moment of rapid change, public debate becomes a national asset. Independent media help citizens understand complex policy choices. They ask difficult questions about contracts, revenues, environmental protection, and public investment. They provide a forum where competing ideas about Guyana’s future can be openly discussed.
No single newspaper carries that responsibility alone. Guyana continues to benefit from multiple media voices, both traditional and digital. Yet the closing of a long-standing publication such as Stabroek News is a reminder that the institutions supporting democratic accountability require constant renewal. Oil wealth can build roads, schools, hospitals, and modern infrastructure. But the foundations of lasting prosperity remain institutional: good governance, transparency, and an informed citizenry. As Guyana’s economic transformation accelerates, those foundations will matter more than ever. The country’s future will be shaped not only by the resources beneath its waters, but by the strength of the institutions that guide how those resources are used. Among those institutions, a vigilant and independent press has always played an essential role.
Regards
Steven E. Hendrix
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