Dear Editor,
The 2026 Budget of $1.558 trillion represents a historic moment for Guyana, marking our transition into a “double-digit debt” economy. While the headline figures suggest a nation in a hurry to modernize, the underlying economics reveal a complex balancing act between rapid development and the risk of domestic inflation.
Below is a breakdown of the fiscal strategy and the potential impacts on the Guyanese public.
The Debt Profile: Breaking the US$10B Ceiling
The government’s decision to borrow US$2.6 billion this year has pushed the total national debt to US$10.3 billion. Here is where that money is coming from and what it means:
- Multilateral Debt: Loans from the IDB and CDB are rising from US\bm{1.9B to US}2.4B. These typically have lower interest rates but come with strict oversight.
- Bilateral Debt: Loans from allies like China, Canada, and the US are jumping from US\bm{880M to US}1.5B. This represents a significant increase in our financial obligations to foreign governments.
- Domestic Debt: Now at US$6B, this makes up the largest chunk (62.3%) of our total debt. While safer because it’s in local currency, it competes with the private sector for local banking capital.
- The “Safety” Argument: The Finance Ministry argues this is sustainable because the Debt-to-GDP ratio fell from 47.4% (2020) to 28.6% (2025). Essentially, the economy is growing faster than the debt.
The “Cantillon Effect”: Who Gets the Money First?
A trillion-dollar budget doesn’t reach everyone at once. Economically, we are seeing the Cantillon Effect in real-time, which dictates that the timing of money injection matters as much as the amount:
- The “First Recipients”: Large infrastructure contractors and suppliers receive the money first. They spend this “new” cash while prices are still low, gaining the most purchasing power.
- The “Last Recipients”: By the time this money circulates to the average worker or market vendor, prices for food, rent, and transport have already risen.
- The Inflation Gap: While the official inflation rate is cited at 2.5%, this “headline” figure often misses the “cost-of-living” reality. Large cash injections can “overheat” the economy, making the Guyana dollar buy less at the grocery store than it did a year ago.
Budget Fuel: Beyond Borrowing
The 2026 Budget is not just fueled by debt; it is a massive mobilization of all available assets:
- Oil Inflows: US$2.4 billion directly from the Natural Resource Fund.
- Carbon Credits: US$238.7 million from our forestry conservation efforts.
- Total Increase: A 12.7% jump over the 2025 budget, showing a relentless pace of spending.
Key Concerns for the Public
- The Debt Burden: Guyana closed 2025 with a US$7.7B debt. Adding another US$2.6B in a single year is an aggressive move that relies entirely on oil prices remaining high.Current trends would suggest oil prices would be moving in the opposite direction fueled by the influx of Venezuelan crude into the mix.
- Imported Inflation: As we borrow and spend on massive projects, we import more machinery and services. If global prices rise, Guyana’s “spending spree” becomes more expensive, potentially leading to budget overruns.
- The Cash Grant Paradox: While the $100,000 adult grant and $85,000 school grants provide immediate relief, they also add to the total money supply. Without a corresponding increase in the supply of local goods (like farming output), these grants can inadvertently drive prices higher.
Conclusion
Guyana is currently leveraging its future oil wealth to build present-day infrastructure. It is a high-stakes gamble: if the roads, bridges, and power plants lead to a massive boost in non-oil productivity, the US$10B debt will be a footnote. However, if the “Cantillon Effect” continues to widen the gap between the wealthy contractors and the average consumer, the “trillion-dollar” era may be remembered more for its high costs than its high growth.
Yours truly,
Hemdutt Kumar
