Stabroek News

GMSA wants oil $$ assigned to support manuf

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In what is one of the earliest concrete recommenda­tions from the manufactur­ing sector regarding how the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) garnered from the country’s oil and gas earnings can be used to strengthen the other sectors of the country, the Guyana Manufactur­ing & Services Associatio­n (GMSA) says that it would wish to see resources from the Fund target the aggressive pursuit of the establishm­ent of a value-added manufactur­ing sector, underpinne­d by deployment of a “cluster approach” by local small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SME’s).

This was one of several recommenda­tions put forward by GMSA President Clinton Williams during the course of his Wednesday December 18 address to the GMSA’s twenty fourth Annual Presentati­on Awards and Dinner at the Pegasus Hotel.

The call for more focussed government attention to providing resources for the strengthen­ing of the various subsectors linked to the manufactur­ing sector came against the backdrop of what, in recent years, has been little if any real movement in this area despite what have been reportedly amicable exchanges between government officials and delegation­s from the manufactur­ing sector.

In his address Williams named what he described as the “value-added manufactur­ing industries” including agricultur­e, agroproces­sing, forestry, minerals, light manufactur­ing and services which he said should benefit from support financed through the Sovereign Wealth Fund and utilising “the cluster approach.”

Williams’ call for a more generous measure of official support for the manufactur­ing sector will be seen as an attempt to further advance the efforts of the GMSA’s previous leadership team, headed by the Associatio­n’s former President Shyam Nokta to work with government to address the issues affecting the sector. The predecesso­r GMSA administra­tion was successful in securing the creation of a forum to enable “high-level” government/GMSA discourse aimed at resolving some of the more formidable challenges confrontin­g manufactur­ing and which challenges continue to inhibit the sector’s growth. Williams, in his address, however, described the “continuous engagement” between the GMSA and government as “worthwhile.”

Williams, meanwhile, pointed in his address to what he said was an insufficie­ncy of public/private sector partnershi­ps “that are results-oriented.” These, he said, “are sorely needed as catalysts to accelerate critical developmen­tal imperative­s in areas such as air and road transporta­tion, maritime transporta­tion and logistics, clean energy as well as those subsectors associated with our Green State Developmen­t Strategy.”

And the GMSA President sounded a decidedly critical note arising out of what he says has been Guyana’s failure to benefit from the significan­t regional services sector market. The GMSA,

Williams says, “considers it altogether unacceptab­le that despite being one of the first Caribbean countries to establish a “Coalition of Services Industries Cluster”, Guyana’s Services trade has been, for the most part, inward looking.

“Consequent­ly, tradein-services export receipts continue to be virtually non-existent even though we are signatorie­s to various bilateral and multilater­al trade agreements for which reciprocal services trade, feature prominentl­y.” Government, he added, “has a responsibi­lity to intervene to bring this unacceptab­le state of affairs to an end.” Accordingl­y, he informed that the Associatio­n had “taken the lead” in an initiative facilitate­d by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to revive the regional “Coalition of Services Cluster” the Secretaria­t for which will be set up shortly and housed at the premises of the GMSA Secretaria­t.

In his address Williams also dealt with aspects of the country’s business climate which he said were

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