Dear Editor,
Guyana’s 2026 budget—at G$1.558 trillion, nearly five times the 2020 level—represents the largest fiscal expansion in our history. But does our budget process allow for genuine democratic input, or merely the appearance of consultation?
In “Beyond Numbers: Deepening Democracy in Guyana’s Budget Process,” I examine why Parliament’s current role—extensive debate but limited amendment authority—creates a democratic deficit that becomes increasingly consequential as oil revenues expand. When annual budgets were in the hundreds of billions, institutional gaps led to missed opportunities for refinement. At nearly two trillion dollars, those same gaps risk far more serious outcomes.
What you’ll find:
– How Guyana’s “debate without amendment” model compares to international best practices
– Six tested reform approaches that balance executive leadership with genuine legislative oversight
– Why political incentives resist change—and how to reframe reform as system-level protection
– Concrete implications for the current budget cycle and future fiscal governance
The essay doesn’t argue that opposition parties have better answers than the government. It argues that democratic institutions should be designed to combine diverse knowledge, challenge weak reasoning, and produce decisions that reflect genuine deliberation rather than executive preference alone.
Read the full analysis: https://guyanabusinessjournal.com/2026/02/beyond-numbers-deepening-democracy-in-guyanas-budget-process/
Yours truly,
Terrence Richard Blackman, PhD
Founder & Publisher
Guyana Business Journal
guyanabusinessjournal.com
