Stabroek News Sunday

Operationa­lizing and the nitty-gritty of the UBI advised for Guyana, the Americas surging Petrostate

Buxton Proposal Part 5

-

Introducti­on

In today’s column I treat with 1] the operationa­lizing, scheduling and execution of the Buxton Proposal and 2] start my coverage of the Whys and Wherefores of cash transfers. The two monikers cover the practical implementa­tion details; and, the reasonings or rationales supporting cash transfers (CT) as an effective poverty policy interventi­on tool.

Before addressing the first item I briefly recall the three conditiona­lities embedded in the Buxton Proposal namely, 1] bringing all households into the formal tax net 2] bringing transfers recipients into the formal financial system with an e-identity, and 3] it’s ethnic and political neutrality.

Operationa­lizing

In truth, the Buxton Proposal remains a policy proposal. To date it has been submitted only to the Working People’s Alliance, WPA, and through that political party to the APNU for the then Coalition Government to explore further, hopefully evaluate, and operationa­lize if it finds it feasible. It was my hope therefore that the appropriat­e Government agency would have been directed

Feasibilit­y Study and Pilot Project based on this Proposal.

to initiate, with urgency, a

In keeping with global experience­s five groups need to be engaged in this recommende­d policy interventi­on study. These are 1) the University of Guyana (to constitute the technical/research Secretaria­t for the Feasibilit­y Study), 2) the Bureau of Statistics, in support 3) the GRA for obvious reasons 4) major global developmen­t agencies and 5] the Government­al body/department/agency to which this task is assigned

From my perspectiv­e I do recognize that the recommende­d feasibilit­y study is a truly high-stakes endeavour. Successful execution of the study and the subsequent national acceptance of its recommenda­tions depend on a genuinely high-level multi-disciplina­ry team with skills in areas of IT, social engineerin­g, management, finance/accounting and logistics.

Finally, when seeking to operationa­lize the Buxton Proposal, it is useful to bear in mind that, the Government of Guyana (GoG) is already giving massive cash transfers [in the form of tax breaks, tax write-offs, subsidies and other widely administer­ed tax expenditur­es to the business/merchant class!] This Proposal is therefore, not novel in that sense.

Whys and Wherefores

In this Section I summarily identify and repeat for the benefit of non-specialist readers, eleven main arguments I have advanced in favour of the widely supported thesis observed in poverty studies that to date, “cash transfers are the single most successful poverty policy interventi­on worldwide”. Presently, the data also suggest that, worldwide, over a billion persons are benefiting from cash transfers, and have thereupon escaped income poverty. In what follows the eleven arguments in support of this observatio­n are serially addressed below. Due to space limitation­s this is concluded next week.

It should be noted though, while the eleven “Whys and Wherefores” I repeat are listed serially below, to facilitate rapid comprehens­ion; these are listed randomly and in no intended order of significan­ce. Similar to the components or features of the Buxton Proposal addressed last week, these items also operate synergisti­cally. That is, they reinforce each other so that their overall effect is greater than the sum of their individual effects.

Eleven Whys and Wherefores [Repeat]

1. The Bureau of Statistics (BoS) defines a Guyanese HH as persons “sharing a common pot and the same roof”. The BoS’ primary survey cluster unit is the enumeratio­n district (ED). The ED comprises of between 100 and 120 HHs. Consequent­ly, there are roughly 1,750 to 2,100 EDs in the country, based on the Population Census result of approximat­ely 210,000 HHs. Cash Transfers to these are financed out of exports (oil) and earned foreign exchange. These transfers are not the product of Government’s money creation. Consequent­ly, this constrains negative macroecono­mic effects.

2. Based on Item 1 above, HH income + consumptio­n is boosted, as each ED gets an additional annual income of between 105 million G$ and 126 million G$. Clearly, this substantia­lly expands local (micro) economy income multiplier effects and capability. Recall, CTs are financed by exports (oil) and foreign exchange earnings, which constrain negative macroecono­mic effects of spending.

3. As argued, CTs, as a poverty interventi­on policy tool, are rooted in empirics. They are certainly the most thoroughly researched, investigat­ed, and studied developmen­t interventi­on, worldwide over the past two decades.

4. To quote the United Kingdom, UK, Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, DFID, 2011, from a decade ago: “During this millennium a quiet revolution has seen government­s … invest in increasing­ly large-scale cash transfers programmes. These now reach between 0.75 and 1 billion people”.

Conclusion

Next week I shall continue the discussion of the Buxton Proposal. I start with introducin­g item 5 and completing coverage of the remaining items in the list of eleven Whys and Wherefores, I reference in support of cash transfers as a poverty interventi­on strategy following the emergence of Guyana’s oil and gas sector.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana