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Home Feature

Professor Clive Thomas: A Scholar, Activist, and Catalyst for Change in Guyana

Admin by Admin
February 23, 2025
in Feature, News
Economist, Professor Clive Thomas

Economist, Professor Clive Thomas

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By Michelle Ann Joseph- Clive Yolande Thomas is a learned son of the soil whose innovative cash grant initiative remains highly relevant today. Since his introduction of the concept in 2018, citizens across Guyana have been benefiting from this programme—a testament to his enduring impact.

Born in the 1930s, Thomas is a distinguished Guyanese economist, intellectual, trade unionist, and politician. He earned his Doctorate in Economics from the London School of Economics in 1964 and joined the University of the West Indies the same year.

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In 1969, he returned to Guyana as a lecturer in the Department of Economics at the University of Guyana. In 2005, he was honored with the title of Distinguished Professor and served as Director of the Institute for Development Studies, established in 1973 within the Faculty of Social Sciences.

Thomas is renowned for his contributions to monetary and financial economics in developing, dependent economies—particularly in the Caribbean. His expertise has been sought by governments in various policy areas, and he has played a prominent role in regional integration initiatives. His work spans issues related to central banking, financial institutions, economic management, and alternative development models.

His groundbreaking research on the sugar industry, advocacy for its long-term sustainability, and studies on the use of sugarcane for ethanol production have been widely documented. Thomas is the author of 30 books and over 150 articles in academic journals.

Thomas is best known for three influential studies: Dependence and Transformation: The Economics of the Transition to Socialism (1974); The Rise of the Authoritarian State in Peripheral Societies (1984) and The Poor and the Powerless: Economic Policy and Change in the Caribbean (1988)

His academic work was closely linked to international Marxist currents and significantly contributed to the Caribbean New World Intellectual Movement of the early 1960s. A deep and inclusive thinker, he excelled not only as an economist but also as a philosopher and political tactician.

As a scholar-activist, Thomas was among the Caribbean intellectuals whose independent Marxist perspective helped forge links between socialism and democracy. As part of the New World Group, he played a significant role in developing radical Third World economic models and nurturing a New Left perspective on political and social issues.

Beyond academia, Thomas was actively involved in political and trade union activities in Guyana. A close ally and friend of the late Dr. Walter Rodney—a leading historian and activist—he contributed to forming Racoon, a newspaper, and the Movement Against Oppression (MAO). These groups later merged with other organisations under Rodney’s leadership in the 1970s, ultimately leading to the formation of the Working People’s Alliance (WPA). From its inception in 1974, Thomas served as the WPA’s co-leader, and his text “Bread and Justice” became an important ideological template for the movement.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, he worked tirelessly to support Guyanese trade unions and the Guyana Trade Union Congress in advocating for workers’ economic and political rights. Alongside Walter Rodney, he even taught volunteer classes for bauxite workers in McKenzie, a town founded on bauxite production. As a respected member of the Guyanese and Caribbean academic communities, he was actively involved in the University of Guyana Workers Union (UGWU).

Since the late 1990s, Thomas has been a vocal critic of money laundering and market-driven economic policies promoted by ruling political parties in Guyana and the Caribbean, frequently contributing to “Guyana and the Wider World,” a weekly column in the daily Stabroek News.

In 1993, the Guyanese government recognised his outstanding contributions by awarding him the Cacique Crown of Honour (CCH), the country’s second-highest honor.

This Black History Month and beyond, we continue to honour and celebrate the contributions of Afro-Guyanese men and women. In doing so, we proudly give Clive Thomas his well-deserved recognition—a distinguished individual and a living inspiration.

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