The Guyana Business Journal inaugurated its 2026 New Visions, New Voices series with a powerful webinar between GBJ Publisher Prof. Terrence Richard Blackman and Caribbean development thinker Omari Joseph titled “Beyond Oil: Building Guyana’s Human Capital Future.” The ninety-minute dialogue, hosted in January 2026, explored urgent challenges and opportunities shaping Guyana’s economic transformation beyond hydrocarbon revenues.
In a wide-ranging conversation, Joseph—whose scholarship and regional policy engagement span youth employment, entrepreneurship, regional integration, and climate resilience—challenged conventional growth narratives and articulated a compelling framework for people-centered development.
“Economic growth figures mean little if our youth, our professionals, and our communities cannot find meaningful opportunity to contribute and thrive,” Joseph emphasized.
Key insights from the webinar included:
- Human Capital Paradox: Despite robust GDP growth, systemic barriers persist in youth employment and geographic access to opportunity, particularly outside core urban centers.
- Skills and Career Diversification: Joseph highlighted the need to align educational outcomes with the real economy—expanding pathways in STEM, renewable energy, technical trades, and creative sectors beyond traditional professions.
- Entrepreneurship Ecosystems: Sustainable job creation demands support structures for small and medium enterprises, expanded mentorship beyond elite institutions, and financial mechanisms tailored for emerging founders.
- Data as Foundation: Reliable, current public data was identified as indispensable for evidence-based policy, accountability, and entrepreneurial decision-making.
- Caribbean Integration: Strengthening CARICOM implementation and labor mobility was presented as a capacity multiplier for Guyana and the wider region—moving beyond rhetoric to functional economic cooperation.
- Climate Strategy: Joseph advocated leveraging oil revenues as bridge financing for renewable and climate-resilient infrastructure, coupled with clearly articulated long-term environmental goals.
- Tourism Potential: Prioritizing eco- and community-led tourism was proposed as a high-value niche grounded in Guyana’s unique natural and cultural assets.
- Diaspora Engagement: Beyond remittances, diaspora investment and mentorship were underscored as strategic contributions to national development.
The dialogue concluded with a forceful message: development must be literally people-centered—not merely rhetorically invoked. Prof. Blackman underscored the urgency of human capital investment, reminding audiences that the mathematics of compound effects makes delay increasingly costly.
“The window for transformational investment is finite,” Blackman noted. “Every year without decisive action means generations pay a higher price.”
This webinar continues GBJ’s commitment to amplifying the voices of emerging leaders whose perspectives transcend partisanship and prioritize evidence-based solutions. Future installments will continue to spotlight Caribbean scholars and practitioners addressing the most pressing developmental questions in policy, economics, and society.
Read the full webinar report: https://guyanabusinessjournal.
