Stabroek News

Ramsaroop wants Guyana’s July investment forum to yield ‘bankable’ projects

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What is being touted as a strategica­lly important moment for the Caribbean will materialis­e with the hosting by Guyana of a Caribbean Investment Forum from July 10 to 12 this year.

Setting aside the fact that Guyana’s hosting of such a significan­t regional event underscore­s the country’s growing significan­ce in the face of its new-found oil wealth, the deliberati­ons and outcomes of the forum will determine whether the region, this time around, can take deliberate steps in the direction of forging a regional partnershi­p that deliver positive results for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) as a whole.

While the significan­ce of regional fora has always been characteri­sed by what we in the Caribbean customaril­y describe as the ‘noise in the market’ not yielding any significan­t sales, two factors may well have given rise to somewhat exalted expectatio­ns this time around. The first is the role that Guyana, in the face of its relatively recent oil discoverie­s, now plays as a regional leader in the area of regional developmen­t undertakin­gs. The second is the clutch of challenges, not least its food security weaknesses, that face much of the

rest of the region.

The organisers of the three-day forum, which will be staged at the National

Cultural Centre in the country’s capital, Georgetown, will focus on themes that include sustainabl­e agricultur­e and the ‘greening’ of regional economies, all issues with which the host country is particular­ly familiar as well as initiative­s designed to effect a transition to a culture of digitalisa­tion of business in the region.

The Head of the Guyana Office for Investment (G-Invest) is on record as saying that the forum is one of the biggest ever held in the region and that it expects to attract up to seven hundred investors. The participan­ts are expected to come from both the Caribbean and further afield.

“We expect a lot of investors coming to see what it is about Guyana, and we are pushing the private sector. There is a call out for bankable projects, because the investors are coming in looking for bankable projects, and we want to showcase what Guyana is all about,” Dr. Ramsaroop reportedly told the Department of Public Informatio­n (DPI) in a recent interview.

With the Caribbean having grown tired of staging events that yield ‘noises in the market’ but little in terms of significan­t ‘sales,’ Guyana, whose petro-credential­s have, for now at least, increased its overall ‘stock’ in the region, will be expected to deliver a forum that yields concrete outcomes, particular­ly in terms of bankable undertakin­gs to intra-regional entreprene­urship, particular­ly in areas that include agricultur­e and agro- processing and meaningful sectorial investment streams.

Ramsaroop is quoted in the state media as saying that “agricultur­e and food security are among Guyana’s top priorities, moving forward.” The senior government official reportedly spoke to the regional ambition of realising its commitment to reducing extra-regional food imports by 25% by 2025 as well as contributi­ng to the realisatio­n of cheaper energy within the same time frame. The country’s ambitions, according to Dr. Ramsaroop, also include the realisatio­n of large-scale agroproces­sing and sustainabl­e farming.

While the focus of the government’s ‘lead’ player in the business and investment sector also focussed on what he reportedly identified as some of the successes of the local private sector, including the tourism sector, ‘watchers’ will be particular­ly interested in the period beyond

the event itself to determine whether the undertakin­gs arrived at, in what is expected to be the ‘up tempo’ environmen­t of the forum will be actualised within time frames that are consistent with the extent of the some of the emergencie­s facing the region.

Dr Ramsaroop also reportedly asserted that a key goal of the July forum is to foster more joint ventures and partnershi­ps in sectors that include tourism, which will generate different product offerings and intra-regional collaborat­ion.

The investment official is also quoted as saying that “the investors coming into the region [are] part of Guyana’s developmen­t” and that “our private sector is stepping up to make sure that they get ready for partnershi­p.” Adding that the event is a “very important conference,” Dr Ramsaroop is challengin­g the local private sector to “make sure they get ready for this influx of investors that will come in looking for these “bankable projects.”

 ?? ?? Dr. Peter Ramsaroop
Dr. Peter Ramsaroop

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