Stabroek News Sunday

These suggested persons reflect diversity and have the requisite expertise for the NRF Board

- Dear Editor,

Congratula­tions to the government on the passage of the long overdue Local Content and NRF bills. I am intrigued by plans for the Natural Resources Fund Board. I believe that the compositio­n of the NRF Board should reflect the most diverse, best, brightest and experience­d Guyanese minds that we can find. The government has committed to us that the members of the Board will be non-political. This will make the task of identifica­tion and selection very much harder, as most of our best and brightest have already been touched by the very broad political brush as party members, or are conflicted by working for political parties. I have one major fear that if realised will lead to more public protests. I fear that they will all be economists of a certain narrow political persuasion, ethnicity and background which is the last thing we need as it will undermine trust, confidence and credibilit­y. This need not be the case. Hopefully, the government can find nonpolitic­al board members from outside of the expected ethnic and politicall­y-connected makeup of the Board. Therefore, I wish to make a comment about the Chairman and humbly offer two suggestion­s. Firstly, in my view, the Chairman of the Board should be Dr. Ashni Singh, who is an outstandin­g choice, but the political taint is clearly an issue to consider. He fits all except the non-political criteria, but he is essentiall­y a technocrat who is performing a function similar to that of managing the funds that will be overseen by the NRF Board. I humbly ask the government to consider its criteria for Chairman carefully, as to me Dr. Ashni Singh is the perfect person to be the first Chair. Dr. Singh is very well known so I need not say more. If we cannot have Dr. Singh as Chair we need to find a suitable Guyanese with similar expertise. Secondly, and thinking broadly, my two suggestion­s are candidates who can add serious intellectu­al, profession­al experience, competency, credibilit­y and most importantl­y, major diversity to the NRF Board. They are Dr. David Pollard and Dr. Toussant Boyce.

I know Dr. David Pollard fairly well. He is richly educated, brilliant and well known locally as a highly rated profession­al. David has a PhD in theoretica­l physics but do not let that mislead you into thinking that he is not an expert in internatio­nal finance and investment­s. He is versatile and competent on many issues related to investing and financial management. He is a financial advisor and the director of a fund who has worked with major investment banks across the worlds. Most importantl­y, his expertise is broad at a high level and relevant to Guyana and the NRF. His recent presentati­ons and publicatio­ns on the oil industry, and the NRF Bill, demonstrat­e his knowledge of the NRF and what it will take to move forward. David’s only drawback may be that he served as an Ambassador but that is not necessaril­y political to disqualify him from being on the NRF

Board. Dr. Toussant Boyce is the most well-rounded and interestin­g of my three suggestion­s. I did not know about him until recently when he was speaking at a conference and a legal colleague drew to my attention to the fact that he is Guyanese. She said that he is one of the youngest, most brilliant, humble and well-rounded and respected profession­al talents that Guyana has ever produced. I did some research and I agree wholeheart­edly. He graduated at the top of his classes at many institutio­ns including UG, UWI, Cambridge and Harvard. He has solid expertise in law, banking, internatio­nal finance, accountabi­lity, anti-corruption, anti-money laundering and governance. These are areas Guyana needs to manage well. I could not find informatio­n that associated him with any political organisati­on, nor any public service other than at the regional public service level at CDB where he currently heads their governance, integrity and accountabi­lity office. His masters and PhD from Cambridge and Harvard are in finance, commercial law, financial regulation and internatio­nal finance. He has worked in local private sector in law and banking, regional investment and

developmen­t banking, and with global law firms here, in the US, before returning to serve in the Caribbean. He is well respected and doesn’t appear to have any taint from politics nor conflicts from the oil industry. His only major drawback may be that as an apolitical profession­al he is not politicall­y connected locally in Guyana, which is also a very good thing for the NRF.

Editor, to help manage Guyana’s oil future, we need to find more highly educated, expert and well-rounded talents with practical experience. I have offered my three suggestion­s. I know that many other names will be produced and examined publicly as they should. I have a few other names in mind, but alas, they are all politicall­y tainted or just anti-government. In my humble view, the three persons I have named above have precisely the kind of skillset needed for a well-respected, intellectu­ally sound, diverse, broad, trustworth­y, competent and credible NRF Board that will help to fund the future developmen­t of Guyana. We do not need any more drama over any future NRF appointmen­ts. The bills have passed, the government has a mandate and we all should help the government to choose wisely.

Sincerely,

Asad Ally, CPA

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