Stabroek News

Government, private sector standoff immature and embarrassi­ng - Gouveia

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The present standoff between the APNU+AFC Coalition Government and the Private Sector Commission (PSC) following a sharp public exchange between the two earlier this month is “a counterpro­ductive developmen­t that is unacceptab­le given the uncertaint­y of the present economic climate,” former PSC Chairman and Roraima Airways Chief Executive Officer Gerry Gouveia told Stabroek Business in an interview on Tuesday.

“At a time when all the countries surroundin­g us – Trinidad, Suriname, Barbados, Venezuela and Brazil – are in economic trouble and when there might be persons and organizati­ons bleeding our foreign exchange into those troubled countries, more than ever before, we need to put our heads together to craft a strategy to protect our exchange rate. Instead, we are hardly even talking to each other. Frankly, I find the whole thing ridiculous,” an animated Gouveia said.

“Given everything that is happening there is every reason for the government and the private sector to be talking to each other. The economic challenges facing us are not going to be solved by one side or the other. It has to be done together. Instead of dialogue what obtains are harsh words and threats. It’s nonsense really,” the business executive added.

Early in December the PSC mounted a sharp attack on the government’s 2017 budget with the Chair of the Commission’s Finance and Economic sub-committee Ramesh Persaud declaring that the budget had left the private sector still not very clear on the overall direction in which the country is heading. “We don’t have certainty of plans,” Persaud had told a post-budget press conference. Since then the PSC has become increasing­ly critical of the country’s economic direction.

A subsequent sharp exchange between the two sides that ended with the government charging that the PSC’s statement was “political,” widened the rift between the two sides, and threw up a wall of silence that has remained in place since then.

Asked whether he thought that the country’s economic circumstan­ces dictated that the two sides should engage, Gouveia responded that it would be, “illogical for them to do otherwise.” The former PSC Head said that the rift between the two sides “only serves to deepen the wider uncertaint­y with regard to the state of the country’s economy. It would be irresponsi­ble on both sides not to want to meet. We’ve got to begin to trust each other, listen to each other’s positions on the issues that matter and arrive at decisions to move this economy forward.”

According to Gouveia it was inconceiva­ble, “that we could have a situation in which the government and the private sector were not talking when it requires a collective effort by them both to fix the country’s economy. Frankly, it’s immature

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 ??  ?? Roraima Airways Chief Executive Officer Gerry Gouveia
Roraima Airways Chief Executive Officer Gerry Gouveia
 ??  ?? President of the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce Deodat Indar
President of the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce Deodat Indar

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