Stabroek News

How to gain over US$1 billion per year from Guyanese Diaspora

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The PPP once declared the forests are Guyana’s most important resource. That party then pivoted on crude oil, even while pursuing its amorphous Low Carbon Developmen­t Strategy. The APNU+AFC government is also keen to benefit from oil extraction. There is also a lot of effort placed on recovering smuggled gold, itself another manifestat­ion of the natural resource curse. However, any serious developmen­t plan (and strategy to tackle the runaway crime rate) has to shift youth labour away from small and medium scale gold mining.

In 2011 the AFC stated in its Action Plan that Guyanese people (at home and overseas) with their embodied skills and education are the most important asset. These days the AFC appears neutered or merely lacks conviction. While in Brooklyn last year, President Granger called on Guyanese to return home to “invest in change…to open businesses…” Just a few remigrants will have the willingnes­s to open a business in Guyana, but this does not mean they cannot make an enormous contributi­on and transfer skills and knowledge to the entire society.

Before I discuss the shape of a possible diaspora framework, two issues have to be addressed. The first pertains to political economy: the remigrants must not interfere with the political patronage flows of local ethnic elites and ethnic masses. The proposal I present takes into considerat­ion the idea that the primary reason why elites are in politics in Guyana is to control the system of government patronage. Given the intra-group ethnic networks and pro-ethnic voting, patronage tends to flow towards the ethnic masses of the government of the day (think state jobs and contracts) and some are used to pacify ethnic elites of the other group. This is why you have several members of the new APNU+AFC government (and advisors or family members) with substantia­l natural resource and other economic claims. Since Independen­ce in 1966, Guyana’s political economy has been organized by two patronage systems: Party Paramountc­y of PNC and Elected Oligarchy of PPP. Both have been detrimenta­l to economic developmen­t. In time the patronage formation of the Granger administra­tion will be defined.

Patronage also explains why mid-level profession­als like Mr Winston Brassingto­n are being harassed by the APNU+AFC government and not the Oligarch-in-Chief himself and those with previous ministeria­l responsibi­lities who have accumulate­d observed wealth inconsiste­nt with annual salary. SARU is just a charade to pacify an ethnic mass easily swayed by simplistic propaganda and flawed calculatio­ns. In any case, the marginal cost of operating SARU will be greater than the marginal benefit.

Secondly, Guyanese at home should think deeply about the economic value of the diaspora and its capacity to greatly improve their economic fortunes. In tourismbas­ed economies the general population understand­s the importance of tourists. They do not pester or rob tourists. In Guyana even the famous newspaper columnist, Mr Freddie Kissoon, once labelled the diaspora as traitors. This amounts to throwing away a resource with greater economic value than the forests, gold or crude oil.

I argue that the APNU+AFC government and PPP should work towards encouragin­g about 50,000 Guyanese retirees from North America to resettle in Guyana. Top private medical facilities should be allowed to develop quickly. Private-public effort must create houses at prices more competitiv­e than Florida and Panama. Belize has long focused on attracting nonBelizea­n retirees with a fair degree of success. But Guyana should start with its large diaspora in North America. If we strip away the crimes of passion, Guyana is statistica­lly just as safe as Belize. Yes, security and hospitalit­y have to be greatly improved, and so too infrastruc­ture and the attitude of the locals. Guarantees can be put in place to hold their monthly retirement funds in US$ accounts in Guyanese banks. But as spending occurs, the funds would be exchanged for Guyana dollars.

My cursory observatio­n has been that Guyanese in North America would rather retire in Guyana than Florida if the former can pull itself together. Tourism will also result if 10,000 to 50,000 retirees go back to Guyana as friends and family will visit. In general, the small sample

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