On a 90-minute drive from the Cheddi Jagan International Airport to Georgetown, the capital of Guyana, one night last week, three journalists from Trinidad and Tobago were stunned by the seemingly endless stream of trucks heading in the opposite direction. Dozens of trucks carrying road-building material zoomed past on a road that is in the process of being widened to accommodate the ever-increasing number of visitors to the country, as well as the new and foreign-used cars that are being purchased daily by Guyanese, many of whom have experienced an improvement in their standard of living in the last five years.
“Oil production is fast ramping up and, together with strong non-oil growth and large-scale infrastructure investment, it is supporting the highest real GDP growth rate in the world at a recorded average of 47 per cent in 2022–24,” summarised the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in its May 2025 Article IV consultation with the Guyanese authorities.
Speaking to Guardian Media on the sidelines of the Global Biodiversity Alliance (GBA) Summit, Guyana’s President Irfaan underscored the IMF’s point about large-scale infrastructure investment, noting there are 13 hotels either under construction or recently completed in Guyana. The new properties comprise three Marriot hotels, two carrying the Hilton brand, a Hyatt and a Four Points.
Included among the new hotels under construction is a massive 13-storey building to be named Blue Ridge Hotel that is expected to have 500 rooms upon completion. That project, located next to the Arthur Chung Conference Centre where the summit was held, is being undertaken by Pasha Global, a Suriname-headquartered casino company, in collaboration with Blue Bridge Inc, a Georgetown-based foreign used car dealer.
While the private sector is leading the construction of hotels, the Government of Guyana is undertaking major infrastructural development, such as roads and bridges, to improve the connectivity of the country, which hosts the Caribbean Community (Caricom) secretariat.
“We are on the verge of awarding the contract for the second terminal at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport. We are completing the Demerara River bridge. We are looking at bridging the Corentyne River between Guyana and Suriname. We are looking at building a new Berbice River bridge,” said the President. Guyana is also completing a number of new regional hospitals.
Asked how Guyana controls cost overruns and late delivery of infrastructural projects, President Ali said, “With proper project management and great oversight. I want you to look at all of our projects and compare the cost that we have paid for the type of investment. Look at the investment we are making in roadways, in terms of the cost per kilometre.
Among some of the other ways Guyanese are benefiting from the country’s recent wealth include: University education in the country is now free of cost; the country has a health voucher that has baseline health information; Guyana is working on digital healthcare infrastructure, which will include a One Guyana digital health card; a common payment platform to support a digital financial system. The South American country is also in the process of migrating all of its national records on to a digital system to reduce bureaucracy, remove inefficiency, reduce the cost of doing business and increase productivity, said the president.
Asked whether Guyana’s oil revenues are being distributed equitably, Ali first pointed out that only 37 per cent of the budget is financed from oil revenues.
“The rest of it speaks to the diversified nature of our economy. We are using the revenues to invest and to create wealth. Oil resources are not wealth. Oil resources are revenue that can and should be used to create wealth.
“That is why we are using the resources from the budget to create world-class infrastructure, healthcare and education. All of our pensioners have the same equitable access to a non-contributory pension at 65.
“Every single newborn Guyanese child comes into the world with a grant given to them. Every single child gets a Because We Care grant. Every single child gets the same textbooks in school. Every single teacher gets the same increase. Every single public servant gets the same increase and every single farmer gets the same benefit that goes to them.
The Guyanese president said the country’s oil revenues are being distributed equitably “in practice, in theory and by the definition of what is equitable.”
He explained that the revenue from the energy sector goes into the Natural Resource Fund.
“For the money to go into the budget, it has to pass through a parliamentary process, which has its own accountability. It must be passed by the Parliament and then it is audited by the Auditor General. We have an entire ecosystem that is supporting this.”
On the issue of whether Guyana has learnt any lessons from T&T’s LNG-inspired boom from 1999, President Ali said his country is evaluating the successes and challenges of T&T and other countries regarding the use of natural resource revenues.
“Trinidad and Tobago’s private sector has played, and continues to play, a role in the development of our oil and gas resources. In the initial phase in the development of our oil and gas sector, much of that capacity came from Trinidad and Tobago, because they would have had the experience.
“Now, in Guyana, we have great experience in deepsea drilling, which is going to happen in Trinidad. So we have built up that capacity,” he said, referring to reports last week that ExxonMobil is negotiating with the T&T government to explore for oil and gas in up to seven deepwater blocks off Trinidad’s east coast.
“Trinidad’s private sector has benefited enormously from the development and expansion that is taking place here,” the Guyanese leader sad.
In terms of the lessons learnt from the experience of other energy-rich countries, President Ali said, “What we are doing is what is good for Guyana. And what is good for Guyana is how we use the resources from oil and gas to expand our economy, diversify our economy, invest in human capital and invest in the modernisation of the country.
“We are building a digital Guyana. We are using the energy resources to bridge that gap between us and the rest of the world because we want by 2030 to be on par with the rest of the world in order to compete. To do that, you have to invest in AI, invest in digitisation, create an entire digital platform through which the economy grows and modernise our financial system.
“So we are not in comparison with any country. We are humbly seeking to build an economy and a country that supports Guyana’s development and contributes to regional prosperity. I have said it before that we want to build a system here that must help the region to prosper.”
President Ali’s goal to generate wealth for the Guyanese people and contribute to regional prosperity is why it is investing in world-class education and healthcare.
“If you have the time, you should check some of the new hospitals that we have just commissioned. It is unbelievable what we have achieved in just four-and-a-half to five years, with two years of COVID. It is a work in progress. You will see an economy here that is heavily focussed. Look at the foreign direct investment. It is coming in agriculture, agro-processing, in tourism and in manufacturing and industrial development. That is because we have been able to build a platform and create a fiscal incentive system that is telling the world that these are the areas we see as key and critical and these are the areas we are investing in to have a solid diversified, sustainable economy.”
The Guyanese president said when the country’s gas-to-energy project is commissioned in the next few years, the cost of electricity will be reduced by half.
“We are going to have a massive manufacturing, agro-processing and industrial development being done here,” he said.