The government’s decision to double the ceiling on mortgage interest tax relief for first-time homeowners has been presented as another major intervention to support homeownership and help families build wealth. President Irfaan Ali described the measure as a way of putting more money back into the pockets of homeowners and making the government a partner in helping Guyanese families build their homes and their futures.
There is nothing inherently wrong with encouraging homeownership. In fact, homeownership remains one of the most effective ways for families to build wealth over time. A home provides security, stability, and an asset that can be passed to future generations. Families who own homes often enjoy greater financial security because they are building equity rather than simply paying rent month after month.
The issue is not whether homeownership is a worthy goal. The issue is whether this particular policy meaningfully addresses inequality and poverty in Guyana.
The answer, unfortunately, is that it likely does not.
A mortgage interest tax deduction benefits a very specific category of people. To benefit from the programme, a person must earn enough income to pay income taxes, qualify for a mortgage from a financial institution, and possess sufficient income and savings to purchase or build a home in the first place. That immediately excludes a large segment of the population.
A minimum-wage worker who pays little or no income tax receives little or no benefit from a tax deduction. A family that cannot qualify for a mortgage receives no benefit. A household struggling to buy groceries, pay rent, or save for a down payment receives no immediate assistance whatsoever. The government’s new measure may be sharing the cost of a mortgage with some Guyanese, but it is certainly not sharing the cost of poverty.
This distinction matters.
Guyana’s own data and various studies have repeatedly suggested that a substantial portion of the population lives in poverty or economic vulnerability, with estimates often placing the figure at approximately 58 percent. At the same time, Guyanese families are facing one of the most severe cost-of-living crises in recent history. Food prices have risen dramatically. Housing costs have increased sharply. Rent, transportation, utilities, and construction costs have all moved in one direction, upward.
For many families, the problem is not mortgage interest.
The problem is obtaining a mortgage at all.
The problem is earning enough to save for a down payment.
The problem is qualifying for financing.
The problem is paying rent while trying to feed a family and keep children in school.
A tax deduction does very little for households facing these realities.
This is why economists often distinguish between policies that promote economic activity and policies that reduce inequality. The government’s mortgage tax relief programme may stimulate construction activity. It may support the banking sector. It may encourage additional home purchases among middle-income and upper-middle-income households. These are legitimate policy objectives and should not be dismissed.
However, stimulating economic activity and reducing poverty are not the same thing.
In fact, tax deductions often provide their greatest benefits to people who are already in a better financial position than the average citizen. The irony is difficult to ignore. At a time when many Guyanese cannot afford homes, one of the government’s newest housing interventions primarily benefits those who already earn enough to buy one.
The policy may therefore widen perceptions of inequality even if that was never its intention.
A citizen who is struggling to buy food, pay rent, and save a few thousand dollars each month is unlikely to feel included in a programme that provides tax relief to someone who already possesses the income necessary to secure a multi-million-dollar mortgage. This is particularly true in an oil-rich country where citizens increasingly expect public policy to broaden opportunities and spread prosperity more evenly.
There is another way.
Many countries complement mortgage incentives with programmes specifically designed to help lower-income households enter the housing market. Governments around the world have implemented:
- First-time homebuyer grants;
- Down-payment assistance programmes;
- Matching savings programmes;
- Subsidized mortgages;
- Housing vouchers;
- Rent-to-own programmes; and
- Construction grants for low-income families.
These programmes reach families who cannot benefit from tax deductions because they do not yet possess the income or financial stability necessary to access traditional mortgages.
If the government’s objective is truly to broaden homeownership and reduce inequality, then direct assistance to lower-income households would likely produce a far greater social impact. A grant of G$1 million or G$2 million to qualifying first-time homebuyers could make the difference between renting indefinitely and purchasing a home. A subsidized mortgage programme targeted at lower-income families could help thousands of citizens become homeowners. Financial literacy and savings programmes could help households improve their creditworthiness and prepare for the responsibilities of homeownership.
These interventions attack the barriers that prevent people from owning homes.
A tax deduction rewards those who have already overcome those barriers.
This is not an argument against the government’s mortgage assistance programme. It may very well succeed in stimulating the housing market and providing relief to many middle-class families. It is, however, an argument about priorities and impact.
In a country experiencing unprecedented economic growth and receiving billions of dollars in oil revenues, public policies should be judged not only by whether they are economically sound but also by whether they meaningfully expand opportunity.
Who benefits?
Who is left out?
Who receives assistance?
And who continues to struggle?
Those questions matter because inequality is not reduced by helping only those who are already in a position to benefit.
The true test of public policy is whether it creates opportunities for people who otherwise would have none.
Homeownership can absolutely transform lives. It builds wealth, strengthens communities, and creates stability for future generations. But if the government’s newest housing intervention largely bypasses the poor and economically vulnerable, then its impact on inequality and poverty reduction will inevitably be limited.
In a nation of extraordinary and growing wealth, we should aspire to policies that not only help people keep their homes, but also help more people obtain one in the first place.
