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Home Op-ed

Investor Beware! You Have to Be Nuts to Invest in Guyana

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
October 18, 2024
in Op-ed
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Investing in Guyana right now is like betting on a house of cards during a hurricane. From runaway inflation to skyrocketing property prices, the country’s economic landscape is not just unstable—it’s chaotic. Investors have seen real estate prices soar by nearly 500% in the last year alone, creating a bubble ripe for collapse. If you think you’re coming here to capitalize on some new frontier of opportunity, think again. Between the government’s institutional dysfunction, rampant corruption, and a precarious social climate, Guyana is not a place for the faint-hearted—or the ethical.

Inflation is out of control, and the cost of living has made life unbearable for everyday citizens. The government seems either unable or unwilling to address the crisis, fueling widespread frustration. Public-sector wages are abysmally low, and union activity simmers just below the surface, threatening to boil over at any moment. Employees are disgruntled and disillusioned—an investor’s nightmare. Hiring a workforce that is both underpaid and under-skilled means productivity will be a constant uphill battle, and **over half the population lacks a high school education.

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In Guyana, business doesn’t run on efficiency—it runs on kickbacks. Weak institutions and a compromised bureaucracy mean that getting anything done requires greasing the right palms. If a government official expedites your business, rest assured: **a bribe was expected**. But the favor is fleeting—what’s given can just as easily be taken away. Imagine setting up your company only to have Bharrat Jagdeo or some other government official decide you’ve employed the wrong people or aligned yourself with an inconvenient NGO. They could shut you down or stymie your operations without a moment’s notice. In Guyana, it’s not just about doing business—it’s about knowing whom to please and whom to fear.

The country is a tinderbox waiting to ignite. Ethnic tensions run high, and the government’s biases only add fuel to the fire. Racism and favoritism within the administration have polarized society, and if civil unrest erupts, investors will be caught in the crossfire. The risks aren’t just financial—they’re personal. What happens when your hiring practices or community involvement become a political liability? In Guyana, playing by the rules isn’t enough; you must constantly navigate a shifting landscape of political allegiances and ethnic tensions.

Let’s be clear—oil is the only thing Guyana has going for it. Anything beyond the energy sector is a mirage, and investing in non-oil ventures is reckless at best. Shareholders should be concerned, if not outraged, at the idea of throwing money into this volatile environment. Without oil, there is no sound business case for being here. And even in oil, the risks remain steep—your profits will only be as secure as the goodwill of those in power.

Why Are You Really Here?
If, despite all of this, you still feel compelled to invest in Guyana, then one has to ask—what are you really after? Are you here to launder money? To take advantage of the country’s deeply entrenched corruption? There is no other logical reason to gamble your wealth in such a dysfunctional environment.

Unless you’re looking to get dirty, steer clear of Guyana. With unstable institutions, rampant corruption, ethnic tensions, and a poorly educated workforce, it’s not a place to build a legitimate business. Oil may bring in the brave or the foolish, but anything beyond that? You’d have to be nuts.

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