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Citizens Urged to Prepare for Development Bank Opportunities as Legislation Heads to Parliament

Admin by Admin
June 4, 2026
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Prospective entrepreneurs, farmers, artisans, creatives and small business owners are being encouraged to familiarise themselves with the requirements of the proposed Guyana Development Bank and begin preparing business plans ahead of the institution’s expected launch.

The call comes as legislation to establish the Development Bank is expected to be presented in the National Assembly on Friday, marking a significant step in the government’s effort to expand access to financing for individuals who traditionally face challenges obtaining credit from commercial banks.

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According to information released by the government, the bank will offer financing of up to $3 million without interest and without collateral requirements, potentially opening doors for thousands of Guyanese seeking to start or expand businesses.

To qualify, applicants will be required to present a viable business idea or business plan, valid identification and proof of business registration, or demonstrate a willingness to formally register their enterprise. Compliance with National Insurance Scheme (NIS) and Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) requirements will also be necessary, although support services are expected to be available to assist applicants in meeting those obligations.

In addition to financing, the institution is expected to provide training, mentorship and business support services aimed at improving the long-term viability of funded ventures.

The announcement has prompted calls for citizens to begin preparing now rather than waiting for the programme’s formal rollout. Business development advocates argue that access to financing alone is rarely enough to ensure success and that entrepreneurs who invest time in developing sound business plans, financial projections and market strategies will be better positioned to benefit from the initiative.

There are also calls for civil society organisations, cooperatives, chambers of commerce, trade unions, faith-based groups and community organisations to assist their members in understanding the application process and preparing the documentation required to access financing. Such support could prove particularly important in rural and hinterland communities where access to business-development resources may be limited.

The proposed institution has also revived debate about the closure of state-owned development banks that once served similar functions. Guyana previously operated the Guyana Agricultural and Industrial Development Bank (GAIBANK), established in 1973, and the Guyana National Cooperative Bank (GNCB), established in 1977 under the administration of the late President Forbes Burnham. Both institutions were created to provide financing to farmers, cooperatives, small businesses and ordinary Guyanese who often struggled to secure credit from commercial banks.

During the 1990s, under the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) administration, the Guyana National Cooperative Bank (GNCB) was merged into what became the National Bank of Industry and Commerce (NBIC) in 1995, while the Guyana Agricultural and Industrial Development Bank (GAIBANK) was subsequently placed into liquidation. The decisions remain controversial decades later, with many observers arguing that the dismantling of the two institutions eroded access to affordable financing for small farmers, cooperatives, village entrepreneurs and other ordinary Guyanese. They maintain that, rather than reforming and strengthening the banks, successive PPP/C administrations allowed critical avenues of development financing to disappear, leaving many in the productive sectors increasingly dependent on commercial lenders whose borrowing requirements often placed credit beyond their reach.

Against that backdrop, the proposed Development Bank is being viewed by some as an attempt to restore a function once performed by those institutions. The challenge, they say, will be ensuring that the new bank reaches the people for whom it is intended and does not become another bureaucratic programme inaccessible to those most in need of support.

The government is encouraging citizens to use the period before the bank becomes operational to refine business concepts, prepare detailed plans and gather the necessary documentation.

The Guyana Development Bank forms part of the government’s strategy to stimulate entrepreneurship, expand access to financing and create opportunities for wealth creation.  However, analysts note that the true measure of the bank’s success will not simply be the amount of money disbursed, but whether ordinary Guyanese from every community are able to access the programme on an equitable basis and convert those opportunities into sustainable businesses and lasting economic empowerment.

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