Guyana is poised to remain the Caribbean’s fastest-growing economy and one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, according to the latest International Monetary Fund (IMF) projections, but the country’s economic success is increasingly being overshadowed by a troubling social contradiction: it is now the wealthiest sovereign state in the Caribbean by income, while carrying one of the highest poverty rates in the region.
The IMF’s April 2026 outlook projects that Guyana will record economic growth of 16.2 per cent this year and 19.7 per cent in 2027, following explosive expansion of 43.8 per cent in 2024 and 19.3 per cent in 2025. Those figures place Guyana far ahead of regional commodity-exporting economies like Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago and cement its position as the Caribbean’s economic outlier.
The oil-driven boom has propelled Guyana to the top of the region’s wealth rankings, with GDP per capita now estimated at US$29,884 nominally and US$94,258 on a purchasing power parity basis — surpassing long-established regional economies like The Bahamas and Barbados.
But beneath those numbers lies a social reality that analysts say exposes a major failure in the distribution of national wealth under the administration of President Irfaan Ali.
According to the 2025 poverty report by the Inter-American Development Bank, some 58 per cent of Guyana’s population lives in poverty, with 32 per cent enduring abject poverty—figures that local analysts contend are even higher.
The data places Guyana among the Caribbean’s most impoverished societies, despite its position as the region’s richest sovereign economy.
A comparison with regional peers makes the disparity even sharper:
Caribbean Wealth vs Poverty (2025–2026)
| Rank | Country | GDP Per Capita (US$) | Poverty Rate | Extreme/Abject Poverty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Guyana | 29,884 (Nominal) / 94,258 (PPP) | 58% | 32% |
| 2 | The Bahamas | 39,455 | 12.8% | N/A |
| 3 | Barbados | 25,366 | 14%–17% | N/A |
| 4 | Antigua and Barbuda | 23,726 | 18% | N/A |
| 5 | Saint Kitts and Nevis | 22,771 | 24% | N/A |
| 6 | Trinidad and Tobago | 18,072 | 16%–20% | N/A |
| 7 | Jamaica | 8,106 | 16.7% | N/A |
| 8 | Belize | 7,968 | 26.4% | N/A |
| 9 | Suriname | 7,099 | 17.5%–20% | N/A |
| 10 | Haiti | 2,557 | Over 60% | Severe |
Key Observation:
Guyana now ranks as the wealthiest sovereign Caribbean nation by income, powered by oil, but simultaneously records one of the highest poverty rates in the region. This makes it an outlier in the Caribbean — a country with extraordinary macroeconomic growth but severe human development challenges.
By comparison, countries like The Bahamas, Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago maintain lower poverty rates despite slower growth, suggesting stronger wealth distribution or more mature social protection systems.
For economists and social observers, the table highlights what they describe as the “Guyana paradox” — immense oil wealth concentrated at the macroeconomic level, but limited translation into broad-based social upliftment.
While the government has touted major infrastructure expansion, housing developments and investment in health and education, many households continue to struggle with rising living costs.
The IMF projects inflation at 5.7 per cent in 2026 and 5.2 per cent in 2027, continuing to erode purchasing power.
In practical terms, many Guyanese say wages and pensions are losing value faster than incomes can keep up.
That concern has been amplified by labour unions, which continue to press for a living wage, stronger worker protections and fairer distribution of oil wealth.
The human capital indicators also remain troubling.
The World Bank has repeatedly found that Guyanese children continue to underperform compared to their Latin American and Caribbean counterparts in literacy and numeracy.
Guyana’s own Ministry of Education Education Sector Plan 2021–2025 shows that only half of students entering secondary school make it to the final grade — just 39 per cent of boys and 62 per cent of girls.
Health outcomes also continue to lag behind regional standards.
Together, those indicators suggest that while oil has transformed the economy’s headline figures, it has yet to produce equivalent gains in the quality of life of ordinary citizens.
This has fuelled growing scrutiny of the government’s development model.
The administration’s “One Guyana” national slogan was designed to project unity and inclusive development, but some analysts argue that the oil economy remains unevenly experienced, politically contentious and socially fragmented.
With general elections expected later this year and Guyana set to celebrate its 60th Independence Anniversary on May 26, the country faces a defining question: whether oil wealth will finally deliver broad-based prosperity or deepen the long-standing divide between national wealth and household reality.
For all its record-breaking growth, Guyana now stands as the Caribbean’s clearest example that economic expansion and human development do not always move together.
And in an oil-rich state generating billions annually, that contradiction is becoming harder to ignore.
