Latest update July 3rd, 2026 12:35 AM
Jul 02, 2026 Letters
Dear Editor,
During the past 15 months we have conducted a careful and thorough survey of the long delays and time consuming at Guyana’s leading banks, Republic Bank, Citizens Bank, The Bank of Novia Scotia, Guyana Bank of Trade and Industry (GBTI) and Demerara Bank to determine the length of time spent by their customers in each bank. As most of us know, every bank at some point and time during the day, especially at peak hours, will have people waiting very long in lines to complete routine transactions such as deposits, withdrawals, account inquiries, customers services, and special assistance, among others.
It is with great disappointment that our survey found that the two banks with the most ridiculous and excessive long lines in every service area and at every branch throughout the country are the Republic Bank and the Citizens Bank. On multiple occasions, we have observed that customers must wait in line for approximately four hours or longer on any given day and an average of another 40 minutes would be spent at the teller or with customer service personnel. Regrettably, this means that each customer spends an average of between four and a half to five hours per day at these two banks. And even though there are special sections with seating available for the elderly, parents with small children, pregnant mothers and people with disabilities, the delay is about the same. There are also long lines at each of the branches of ATM outlets throughout the country.
While we understand that the banks must follow security, compliance and standard operating procedures, the current waiting times are unreasonable and disheartening for customers who have become acclimatized to the situation. In fact, they have become so accustomed to the unusually and exceptionally long lines and lengthy delays that they do not complain because they have concluded that nothing would change. In their opinion, banking delays at almost every bank are common throughout the country. During the last fifteen months, our interviews with more than 2648 bank customers have revealed that the current waiting time of roughly five hours has affected their mental health, disrupted their daily chores and customer trust, but most of all, it has severely impacted productivity in the country. In the survey, we found that eight out of every ten customers are full-time employees, and this has resulted in the country losing more than 1.3 million of production hours every week or the equivalent of 5.2 million per month or 62.4 million per year.
Losing over 60 million production hours per year is unacceptable and is highly impossible for Guyana to develop. We are living is a digitized world, but where is the digitation that the government talks about. The time has come for the banks to digitize and modernize the banking system to reduce such a huge loss in production. Tellers and customer service personnel continue to use the old-fashioned system of writing information obtained from computers on three or four banking and deposit slips to be signed by them and the customers which are completely backward and a waste of time. If the information exists in the computer, then why rewrite it on the slips. This nonsensical act proves that banks do not rely on computers, which suggest backwardness and redundancy by the banks in the 21st century. Simply put, it is a waste of the consumers’ time and a loss of unnecessary production, which has never been the focus of the banking executive. Their focus is not on customers suffering but on huge profit margins for the parent companies overseas
Efficient and modern digitized service are a core expectation in banking, and we believe that the delays are the result of poor staffing, inept process, mediocre training, inadequate qualification, incompetent management and an ineffective and hopeless system riddled with problems that need urgent attention. We have witnessed that out of the dozen or more tellers’ windows available, only two or three are used most of the time to attend to more than three hundred customers daily. And the delay time is further increased when the tellers and customer service personnel who would constantly leave their windows or desks to seek advice from supervisors when serving a customer. We have seen more personnel walking around the office in the banks than those serving the customers.
Both Republic and Citizens Banks and all the other banks are respected financial institutions, but most senior management are not only insensitive to the needs of the people, but they are also disrespectful to them. Addressing these unwanted, needless and annoying delays at the banks will help to restore customer confidence, and credence and uphold the standard of service Guyanese citizens deserve from the banking establishments. All senior banking officials should heed this profound and superlative advice.
Sincerely,
Dr. Asquith Rose
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