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Home Letters

Guyana Cannot Afford a Culture of Inefficiency

Admin by Admin
May 13, 2026
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‘Summer Camps’ in Guyana? A Lesson in Miseducation

From Ali Baba to ‘Ally-Bhar-Rat

Dear Editor,
 
In recent times, much has been said about government efficiency, modernization, and the transformation of public service delivery in Guyana. Yet, beneath the speeches, ribbon cuttings, and public relations campaigns lies a troubling reality that many citizens confront daily, a system that appears increasingly unable to efficiently serve the very people it was designed to protect and support.
 
One of the clearest indicators of this dysfunction was the recent public outreach initiative led by the Vice President, where scores of citizens came forward with unresolved matters, many of which had reportedly been pending for months, years, and in some cases, decades. While the event may have been intended to showcase responsiveness and accessibility, it inadvertently exposed a deeper and more uncomfortable truth: if senior political leaders must personally intervene to resolve routine administrative issues, then serious questions must be asked about the effectiveness of the ministries, agencies, and systems operating beneath them.
 
A functioning public service should not require extraordinary intervention for ordinary citizens to receive results. Governance cannot become dependent on public “problem-solving days” while institutions tasked with delivering services remain plagued by delays, inefficiency, and poor accountability. What was intended as a demonstration of leadership instead became a public display of institutional failure.
 
Equally concerning were remarks suggesting ministers involvement in contracts and procurement matters, comments that only intensified public skepticism about where efficiency truly exists within the system. Too often, there appears to be remarkable speed when contracts are awarded, funds are allocated, or projects are announced, but unacceptable delays when citizens seek basic services, project completion, or administrative justice.
 
The recurring cycle of rehabilitation works on recently completed infrastructure projects further deepens public frustration. Roads are repaired repeatedly. Drainage systems continue to fail. Flood mitigation efforts often appear reactive rather than preventative. When the President himself must conduct after-midnight flood assessments, it raises another uncomfortable question: why are systems failing to identify and address these issues before they become national emergencies?
 
These are not isolated incidents. They point to broader concerns surrounding project oversight, contractor accountability, management competence, and the possible misuse of public funds. Whether the root cause is corruption, negligence, weak supervision, political patronage, or bureaucratic incompetence, the consequences are ultimately borne by taxpayers.
And that cost is not insignificant.
 
Every delayed project, every failed drainage system, every repeated rehabilitation contract, and every unresolved citizen complaint represents millions of dollars in public resources being lost through inefficiency. In a rapidly developing country with growing revenues and expanding ambitions, this should concern every citizen regardless of political affiliation.
Development is not measured solely by the number of projects announced or the scale of national spending. True development is measured by the strength of institutions, the reliability of systems, and the ability of ordinary citizens to access services fairly, efficiently, and without political intervention.
 
Guyana stands at a critical moment in its history. With unprecedented opportunities for growth and transformation before us, the country cannot afford a culture where inefficiency is normalized and accountability is selective. Transparency, competent management, stronger oversight mechanisms, and genuine institutional reform are no longer optional, they are essential.
 
The public deserves more than grand announcements and carefully staged optics. They deserve systems that work, ministries that function efficiently, projects that are properly supervised, and leadership that prioritizes accountability as much as publicity.
Because in the end, the true measure of governance is not how quickly leaders can respond to public crises, but how effectively the system prevents those crises from occurring in the first place.
 
Yours truly,
Clayon F. Halley
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