Jagdeo did not attack or criticise the Rowley government

Dear Editor,
REFERENCE is made to Vice-President (VP) Jagdeo’s ‘falling apart’ statement (March 25 and 26) about Trinidad and Tobago. It is true that T&T’s economy has not been doing very well as in earlier decades.
It may not be politically correct for a high government figure like the VP to make such a remark that could be interpreted as an attack on a fellow CARICOM nation. No one would be offended if the statement had been uttered by me or some other political analyst or academic. It is an accurate statement and one must understand it in the context used. The VP did not mean to offend or pass judgment on the current administration of T&T, but to learn from the T&T model of using its petro-dollars. At any rate, not too many people in Trinidad and Tobago would disagree with the VP. I travel to T&T frequently, as many as 10 times a year over the last few decades, except during 2020 and 2021. I was there just two weeks ago to conduct a survey on the popularity of the government and other issues. (The government is very unpopular but more acceptable than the political opposition that is not viewed as a viable alternative, even among its traditional supporters. Although very unpopular in 2020, Rowley was comfortably re-elected as polls I conducted had predicted).
It is reported that the T&T PM Dr Rowley, was peeved about the statement. The Foreign Minister of T&T protested the ‘off-the-cuff’ comment of the VP. The government official must protest for public consumption. That is normal in diplomatic relations. Jagdeo was simply commenting on T&T’s unwise use of petro-dollars (over US$300 billion in today’s money) without planning for the future of the economy after oil runs out. He was commenting about the economy, not about governance, although economy is tied to governance. The T&T economy has not been doing very well in recent years. He was cautioning Guyanese that we must not fall in the same boat, and he assures that this administration will not spend our petro dollars unwisely. His goal is for Guyana to avoid the so-called oil curse, to which so many countries have fallen victims.
There is nothing in Jagdeo’s remark for the T&T administration to be upset about. The VP did not attack or criticise the Rowley government. Economists or socio-politico analysts in T&T and throughout the Caribbean would not disagree with the VP’s assessment of the T&T economy. Jagdeo was not criticising the Rowley administration for its handling of petro dollars. The misuse of oil money began decades ago under Eric Williams and continued by successive administrations. Rowley (in office since Sept 2015), has not been in a position to change economic course, although his administration has not made any serious effort to plan for an economy post-energy. Only the Basdeo Panday administration attempted to plan for the future by putting money aside for hard days.
Many people around the region and in T&T in particular, feel that T&T does not have much to show for the large amount of oil money received. Much of the money was frittered away. Many in the public feel a lot of money was siphoned off by officials going back to the 1960s and invested in Miami, Toronto, and London. There were many reports in the media. An alternative economic base has not been created, unlike say among Middle-Eastern oil economies or Malaysia or Mexico. Agriculture has been neglected; arable land was used for public housing instead of building an agro-based economy as several countries have done.
No T&T government in recent years has been able to meet rising expectations and demands.  Every administration since ANR Robinson in 1986 was advised to pursue economic diversification, but none wanted to swallow the unpopular medicine, fearing a backlash from the population and non- re-election. And unless a lot of energy is discovered soon and the government pursues economic diversification, T&T could find itself in greater economic problems. Many ‘Trinis’ have migrated to Guyana looking for work and or investments.
In his bold remark about T&T falling apart, Jagdeo aims for Guyana to learn a lesson. He does not want Guyana to follow the T&T precedent among CARICOM partners – of frittering away oil revenues. Guyana’s oil revenue must be used to diversity the economy —  agro industrialisation and encouraging start-up industries tied to low-cost energy such as petro-chemicals, fertilisers, glass, tiles, etc.

Yours faithfully,
Vishnu Bisram

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