Stabroek News

Rupununi Chamber President wants politician­s to cease ‘playing monopoly’ with township’s economy

- Story and photograph­s By Pauline Stanford Part two of the recent coverage of Lethem will be published in the next issue of the Stabroek Business.

The Lethem community, more particular­ly the business community there, appears hopeful rather than optimistic about the prospects of a Rupununi Rodeo being staged this year.

Another year without the customary financial ‘fix’ that the township gets from the Rodeo could create even greater challenges for a community that is already considerab­ly economical­ly depressed. Still no one seems inclined to place a meaningful bet on a rodeo this year. The portents afforded by the sustained menace of the COVID-19 pandemic does not allow for that level of optimism.

President of the Rupununi Chamber of Commerce, Daniel Gajie, prefers to proffer a more macrocosmi­c view of the township, it socio-economic circumstan­ces and its future. Gajie is not inclined to ‘pull punches’. There is, he says, an urgent need for central government “to stop the haphazard planning that has been occurring in the Rupununi for several decades. There is need for a permanent developmen­t plan that can span approximat­ely thirty years and continue whether or not there is a change in Ministers or Government.”

The Rupununi businessma­n cannot, he says, recall the number of “developmen­t plans” for the township that have been fashioned by government in collaborat­ion with the private sector, over the years. “As Ministers and government change, they put aside the previous administra­tion’s plan and put forward their own,” he adds.

President of the Rupununi Chamber of Commerce, Daniel Gajie,

He cites official attitudes to the flooding in large parts of the interior as a microcosm of a wider problem. “This is something that occurs regularly. In 2011 there was flood; in 2015 there was a flood; in 2019 there was a flood; afterwards they are sending the farmers back to the farm again, giving them cutlasses and cassava sticks and telling them to go and plant. There is no serious thought or commitment here.” There is no hint of equivocati­on in Gajie’s pronouncem­ent.

Gajie makes no pretence about the fact that the traction possessed by the Rupununi Chamber of Commerce in its quest to influence state policy on the private sector and its role is wafer thin. “We have been lobbying for the past eighteen years for the developmen­t of a Lethem Industrial Site… but it has failed to start” he says, adding, “Never mind the fact that there were several businessme­n who were ready to occupy the land.”

The absence of a coherent plan to enable the creation of a robust, locally-driven business community at Lethem has meant that, in large measure, Chinese and Brazilian entreprene­urial opportunis­ts have stepped into the void. Gajie says that what commenced as a relative trickle “around 2007-2008” has now become an ‘open sepulchre.’ “They [the Brazilians] began by crossing the river on pontoons. It started with a few dozen Brazilians per day. Afterwards vehicles began to come across on the pontoons. They began to come in greater numbers, especially on weekends and on Brazilian holidays.

The operationa­lising of the Takatu Bridge in September 2009 opened the floodgate wider. “More Brazilians and Brazilian vehicles began crossing the bridge. At that time they came to shop in Lethem and there was a rise in Guyanese businesses,” Gajie explained.

Enter the Chinese… who, Gajie says arrived at Lethem well-prepared to respond to the surfeit of Brazilian demand for a range of consumer goods. He estimates that between 2010 and 2020 approximat­ely twenty-seven Guyanese, Brazilian and Chinese businesses were establishe­d on the Barrack Retreat Road at Lethem. These he says, include, supermarke­ts, clothing stores, hardware stores and cosmetics and beauty stores. Ironically, the Rupununi Chamber President says, it is the Brazilians who ‘cross’ to Guyana that are the big spenders in these stores.

“Prior, to the pandemic, Lethem would see about one thousand Brazilians per day shopping in Lethem and that number increases during holiday. There is an influx of shoppers during Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays,” the Rupununi Chamber president told the Stabroek Business.

Nor is he reluctant to concede what he says has been the considerab­le marginalis­ation of local business enterprise­s which, on their own, can mount no effective response to what has been a Brazilian and Chinese invasion.

It is, Gajie believes, the historic leaden-footedness of central government over the years that has created a business environmen­t at Lethem that places Guyanese businesses at a distinct disadvanta­ge. Setting aside the failure of the state, over several years, to create a convivial physical environmen­t for Guyanese businesses, the high costs associated with moving goods from the coast to the hinterland have created a situation in which Guyanese businesses are simply unable to compete with the Brazilian and Chinese ‘invasions’.

Gajie recalls that under the Jagdeo administra­tion a “Lethem commercial area was establishe­d, twenty four hour electricit­y was installed… the developmen­t of a maintenanc­e programme started between Linden and Lethem. Subsequent­ly, we got National Insurance Scheme, police services expanded to include a Certifying Officer. Previously, drivers had to travel to get that service,” the Chamber President told this newspaper. He also stated that under the previous administra­tion the [Rupununi] Chamber was able to get the government to agree for it to commence the process of business registrati­on in the community. “Previously, business owners had to travel to Suddie, Essequibo Coast, a trip that cost more than $100,000. These days, the business owners apply at the Chamber office and pay a small fee and within two weeks they have their business registrati­on,” Gajie says.

He also alluded to the lobbying by the Rupununi Chamber of the Guyana Revenue Authority to provide a service directly to the Lethem community.

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 ?? ?? Cyclists making their way into Brazil across the Jakatu Bridge
Cyclists making their way into Brazil across the Jakatu Bridge

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