Stabroek News Sunday

The world to which Hydar Ally alludes is different from that which currently obtains

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Dear Editor, The Guyana Sugar Corporatio­n Inc (GuySuCo) would like to respond to Mr Hydar Ally’s letter that was published in the Stabroek News on December 16 titled ‘What the sugar industry needs is a higher level of efficiency’.

We would like to invite the author to undertake a deeper analysis of the realities of the Guyana sugar industry so that his contributi­on to the debate on the best possible solutions can be reflective of a more objective understand­ing of the issues.

It is important to note that Booker Tate Limited was brought in by the Desmond Hoyte government to reposition GuySuCo for possible divestment. Its mandate was the ‘sugar’ business. Contrary to views

expressed, GuySuCo was making real progress with its diversific­ation activities through the Other Crops Division, but given the mandate of Booker Tate, this was discontinu­ed.

The management of the Guyanese economy was regulated by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) programme that was in place at the time, and Booker Tate with the support of the then Guyana Government obtained the approval of the IMF to increase wages up to 75% in order to attract workers back into the corporatio­n.

What is noteworthy is that the state of GuySuCo’s agricultur­al infrastruc­ture in 1990 was significan­tly better than it is at the moment. Also, the cadre of technical skills and experience which obtained in 1990 was significan­tly greater than that which currently exists.

In order to successful­ly deliver its mandate Booker Tate brought in a team of expatriate administra­tive and technical staff, which peaked at over twenty in number. This team was supported by Booker Tate’s corporate office in the United Kingdom which had some of the best technical expertise in the sugar world.

Fundamenta­l to this review is that GuySuCo and Booker Tate in those years had the benefit of the EU preferenti­al market. Given the direction in which sugar prices and costs were trending, in particular the latter, the Booker Tate management during the mid-1990s recommende­d the rationaliz­ation of the industry ‒ fewer factories and the rationaliz­ation of cane hectarage – to reduce cost, increase productivi­ty and better secure the future of the industry. However, this strategic plan was not approved.

The dominant criterion was increasing production while the restructur­ing of costs was not entertaine­d.

Over the years Booker Tate was required to reduce their numbers. At the same time skilled, experience­d Guyanese were leaving ‒ retiring, resigning or migrating.

The local and internatio­nal environmen­t, within which sugar as a business exists, has been changing over the years, particular­ly over the past 10 years. During this period the EU preferenti­al price was lost; there was the loss of skills and experience as a result of the reduction in the number of Booker Tate technical staff, and the exodus of Guyanese skills and experience, both of which resulted in the overall weakening of the technical and management team across the industry; the under-capitaliza­tion of the sugar industry was severe; there was the granting of increases in wages and salaries despite the financial difficulti­es being experience­d by the corporatio­n; not to be under estimated was the havoc wreaked by the floods of 2005, the effects of which were felt in subsequent years; and the escalation of cost of production and financial losses including cash deficits continued.

Additional­ly, another area which has impacted negatively on the sugar industry is the adversaria­l industrial relations environmen­t. Man-days lost due to strikes from January 2000 to end September 2016 exceeded 1 million. From 2005 to 2015, there were 2,019 strikes with an average of 150 per year. The number of strikes to 31 October, 2016 is 139; as of 31 October, 2016 43,693 man-days were lost. This situation continues to have a significan­t negative impact on the industry’s health.

Cane yields reported on the basis of tonnes cane per hectare (tc/ha) are an important indicator measuring the health of the cultivatio­n. For the period May 1976 to December 1979 the tc/ha was approximat­ely 71.5; from January 1980 to December 1989 it was approximat­ely 71.0; from January 1990 to December 1999 it was approximat­ely 66.8; from January 2000 to December 2009 approximat­ely 66.2; and for the period January 2010 to 2016 to date the average yield approximat­es 57.6 tc/ha.

Finally, it is important to note that significan­t rationaliz­ation/reorganiza­tion is necessary to become viable. Mr Ally is correct, that higher production will reduce unit cost but this is only to a degree. With the best of marketing strategies the existing preferenti­al markets cater for about 70,000 tonnes of sugar, with any additional production having to be sold at prices which are based on the world market.

The world to which Mr Ally alludes, albeit very incomplete­ly, is very different from that which presently obtains. In the interest of the employees of the industry and the economy at large, different remedies are required. Yours faithfully, Audreyanna Thomas Senior Communicat­ions Officer

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