Georgetown, Ministry of Finance, April 5, 2021:
Senior Finance Minister Dr. Ashni K. Singh earlier this morning attended and addressed a Ministerial Conclave on Human Capital convened by the World Bank Group as part of the International
Monetary Fund and World Bank Group’s 2021 Spring Meetings which are currently being held virtually. The Conclave was held under the theme ‘Investing in Human Capital for a Green, Resilient and Inclusive Recovery’.
Minister Singh spoke on the topic of promoting economic opportunities while ensuring environmental and fiscal sustainability. His address focused on the country’s Low Carbon Development Strategy (LCDS) which is soon to be expanded and which will set out a comprehensive development agenda for the country along a low carbon trajectory. He also focused on the high priority being placed by the Government of Guyana on various initiatives to promote human capital development.
In his address, the Minister highlighted Guyana’s bright economic prospects as well as the country’s vulnerabilities and development challenges.
He stated that “Guyana is indeed rich in natural resources, including oil, minerals, and forests that cover 85 percent of our territory. Our economic prospects are currently very bright. Despite COVID-19 and domestic political issues which caused a sharp contraction in non-oil GDP in 2020, we were still the fastest growing economy in the world as a result of us starting to produce oil, and we will remain amongst the fastest growing economies in the next few years. But we also face extreme vulnerabilities to climate change, as well as significant development challenges. We are well aware of the magnitude of these challenges. They include avoiding the resource curse, promoting a strong and competitive non-oil economy, addressing our infrastructure gap, and improving human development outcomes.”
On the issue of environmental sustainability, Minister Singh highlighted the role of both the original LCDS as well as the soon to be expanded LCDS.
He stated that “Guyana’s commitment to low carbon or green growth is longstanding. In 2008, we published what we believe was the first low carbon development strategy for a developing country. The LCDS reflected that Guyana is at the intersection of many different aspects of the climate challenge. On the one hand, our low-lying coast means we are heavily impacted by climate change. For example, in 2005, floods caused economic damage equivalent to 60 percent of GDP. On the other hand, our forests make a very substantial contribution in the global fight against climate change. The LCDS paved the way for us to join with Norway in 2009 in the world’s third largest international forest partnership under which the climate services provided by our forests were remunerated for the first time – making available US$250 million of performance-based payment for climate services to finance climate-friendly investments. We are now preparing an expanded LCDS which will build on the original LCDS and outline a comprehensive low carbon development agenda for our country.”
Minister Singh also pointed out that the Government places the highest level of importance on investing in human capital development, and elaborated the Government’s emphasis on education. He explained that “despite the many competing calls on our finite fiscal resources, we are investing heavily in the social sector – education, health, etc. – as well as in facilitative infrastructure such as information and communications technology. For example, in education, we are investing heavily in early childhood education, universal primary and secondary education, improving access to and quality of tertiary education, strengthening technical and vocational education, improving learning outcomes at all levels, and ensuring lifelong learning – supported with the use of information and communication technology based on lessons learnt during COVID-19 – and all with the aim of improving production and productivity as well as individual and household wellbeing.”
He added that “on many of these initiatives we are collaborating with the Bank, and we expect the education sector to dominate our portfolio of projects with the Bank in the next programming cycle… this will be in keeping with our emphasis on human capital development both as an input to, and an outcome of, sustainable economic growth.” The Minister added that the Government of Guyana views human capital development “as both a critical prerequisite for, and a critical objective of, economic growth”.
This morning’s Conclave on Human Capital saw participation from the World Bank Group President David Malpass, other senior executives of the Bank, as well as several Ministers of Finance from around the world.