Guyana often looks to the United States, Canada and the wealthy countries of Europe for examples of development. Yet one of the most important lessons for our country’s future may come from a nation that many Guyanese could hardly locate on a map.
Estonia is a tiny country in Northern Europe with a population of just 1.3 million people, not much larger than Guyana itself. It has no vast oil reserves, no significant gold deposits, no major agricultural advantages and no billion-dollar offshore discoveries. Yet Estonia has built a modern, prosperous economy with a GDP of more than US$50 billion and one of the highest standards of living in Eastern Europe.
How did they do it?
The answer is both simple and difficult. Estonia invested in its people.
When Estonia regained its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, it was poor. Its infrastructure was outdated, its economy was struggling and many doubted whether the small nation could compete with larger and richer countries. Rather than obsessing over natural resources, Estonia made a bold decision. It would become a knowledge economy.
Its leaders understood something that many developing countries fail to appreciate. In the twenty-first century, the most valuable natural resource is not oil, gold or timber. It is human talent.
The country digitized almost every government service. Citizens can vote online, access their medical records electronically, file taxes in minutes and register a business without standing in endless lines or completing mountains of paperwork. Government became simpler, faster and more transparent.
But perhaps Estonia’s greatest achievement was in education.
More than two decades ago, Estonia launched an ambitious effort to put computers and internet access into every school. Through the famous Tiger Leap programme, schools were equipped with technology and teachers were trained to use it effectively. Digital literacy became a national priority.
Today, Estonian students consistently rank among the best in Europe and among the top performers in the world in mathematics, science and reading. Coding and computational thinking are introduced at an early age. Technology is not treated as an extracurricular activity or a luxury available only to a few children. It is viewed as a fundamental skill for citizenship and economic participation.
The results are remarkable.
Despite its small size, Estonia has become one of Europe’s leading technology hubs. It has one of the highest numbers of startups per capita anywhere in the world.
The country gave birth to companies such as Skype, which transformed global communications. It is also home to globally successful companies like Wise, formerly TransferWise, which disrupted international banking, and Bolt, one of Europe’s largest transportation and delivery platforms.
Thousands of technology startups have emerged from Estonia’s innovation ecosystem. Venture capital firms actively invest in young entrepreneurs. Universities collaborate with industry. Young people grow up believing that they can build products and services for the global market rather than waiting for government jobs.
The startup culture has become a national identity.
Imagine if Guyana embraced a similar philosophy.
Imagine if every school in Region One, Region Eight and Region Nine had reliable internet access and computer laboratories. Imagine if coding and robotics were introduced to every child from primary school. Imagine if every young person in Bartica, Lethem, Mahdia or Mabaruma believed they could create the next global technology company.
Imagine if our brightest minds saw entrepreneurship and innovation as attainable paths to prosperity.
The truth is that Guyana possesses advantages that Estonia never had.
We have oil revenues measured in billions of US dollars. We have gold, timber, fertile land, fresh water and tremendous biodiversity. We have a young population eager to learn and a large diaspora with expertise in business and technology.
Yet natural resources alone do not guarantee development.
History is filled with countries that discovered valuable resources and remained unequal, divided and underdeveloped.
Estonia’s story reminds us that development is fundamentally about building institutions and investing in human capacity.
Roads and buildings matter. Stadiums and monuments matter. But the most important infrastructure any nation can build is the infrastructure of the human mind.
The greatest return on our oil wealth may not come from another highway or another grand ceremony. It may come from putting the resource of a laptop into the hands of every child, ensuring every school has internet connectivity, training teachers to use technology effectively and creating an environment where young entrepreneurs can build businesses that compete globally.
One day the oil will run out.
The question is whether Guyana will have built an economy capable of thriving long after that happens.
Estonia’s journey suggests that the answer lies not beneath the ground, but inside our classrooms, our universities and the imagination of our people.
The lesson for Guyana is clear: resource wealth can build infrastructure, but only human capital can build a nation.
