Guyana’s Economic Transformation: From Low-Income Nation to Petroleum Powerhouse

Once a quiet agricultural nation, with a most nostalgic, provincial colonial style and atmosphere capital Georgetown.

That I was privileged to get to know while visiting family and friends in 1972.

Guyana now stands at the center of a global energy revolution, navigating the promises and perils of sudden resource wealth.

Here’s how this South American nation is rewriting its economic destiny.


The Catalyst: A Black Gold Bonanza


The story begins in 2015, when ExxonMobil struck oil in the Stabroek Block, a 6.6-million-acre offshore zone. Subsequent discoveries revealed 11 billion barrels of recoverable oil, equivalent to $1.3 trillion at current prices-a staggering sum for a nation of 800,000 people. By 2024, production surged to 616,000 barrels daily, with revenues catapulting Guyana’s GDP from $3.4 billion (2018) to $35.2 billion (2024).


Key Phases of Development
1. Exploration Boom (2015–2019)
• 18 commercial discoveries (up to 2025, some 31 discoveries) across the Stabroek Block.
• $30 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI) committed by Exxon-led consortium.
2. First Oil (2019–2022)
• Liza Phase 1 (120,000 bpd) began production in December 2019.
• Government oil revenues jumped from $0 (2018) to $1.1 billion (2022).
3. Scale-Up Era (2023–2027)
• Six FPSO vessels operational by 2027, targeting 1.2 million bpd.
• Oil sector to contribute 62% of GDP by 2025 (IMF estimates).


The Money Supply Puzzle: 22.5% Growth Explained
Guyana’s monetary expansion reflects strategic choices in managing its windfall:

  1. Infrastructure Financing
    The government is deploying oil revenues through ambitious projects:
    • Gas-to-Energy Pipeline ($900M): Slated to cut electricity costs by 50% by 2026.
    • Road to Brazil ($2B): A 450-km highway to unlock Amazonian trade routes.
    • Housing Boom: 50,000 new homes by 2025, addressing a chronic shortage.
    These investments required expanding liquidity to avoid foreign contractor dependence.
  2. Sovereign Wealth Management
    The Natural Resource Fund (NRF), modeled on Norway’s system, has strict withdrawal rules:
    • 2023 Withdrawals: $1.6 billion (4.3% of 2022 GDP).
    • 2025 Cap: $2.5 billion, ensuring long-term savings.
    The 22.5% money growth balances immediate needs with intergenerational equity.
  3. Private Sector Activation
    • Bank loans to businesses grew 27% YoY (2023).
    • Agriculture credit increased 18% (2022–2024), preserving rice and sugar exports.
    The Dual Economy Challenge

  4. While oil dominates headlines, Guyana’s non-oil sectors tell a nuanced story:

Successes:
• Rice exports hit $600M (2024), leveraging Venezuelan and Caribbean demand.
• Eco-tourism grew 40% post-pandemic, capitalizing on rainforest attractions.
Risks:
• Labor Shifts: 23% of agricultural workers moved to oil services (2021–2024).
• Inflation: Housing prices in Georgetown rose 68% (2020–2024).
Navigating the Resource Curse
Guyana’s policymakers are acutely aware of historical precedents:

  1. Institutional Reforms
    • Petroleum Commission Act (2022): Independent oversight of oil contracts.
    • Anti-Corruption Courts: 142 cases prosecuted in 2023, recovering $87M.
  2. Environmental Safeguards
    • Low-Carbon Strategy: 70% forest cover maintained despite oil boom.
    • Renewable Investments: $100M solar farm network underway.
  3. Social Investments
    • Education budget tripled to $1.2B (2025).
    • Universal healthcare expansion reduced maternal mortality by 33% (2020–2024).
    The Road Ahead: Opportunities and Pitfalls
    Opportunities:
    • Regional Energy Hub: Potential to supply Brazil’s 3.1 million bpd demand.
    • Carbon Credits: $750M earned since 2022 for forest conservation.
    • Diaspora Reversal: 12,000 skilled Guyanese returned in 2024.
    Threats:
    • Fiscal Overreach: Debt-to-GDP ratio projected at 43% by 2026 (up from 29% in 2020).
    • Geopolitical Tensions: Venezuela’s contested claims over Essequibo region.

  4. Conclusion: A Model in the Making?
    Guyana’s 22.5% money supply growth is not mere monetary policy-it’s the heartbeat of a nation leapfrogging developmental stages. The IMF projects per capita GDP will surpass $45,000 by 2030, potentially exceeding Saudi Arabia’s.
  5. Yet, as President Irfaan Ali notes, “Oil is a bridge, not the destination.”
    The ultimate test lies in transforming petrodollars into human capital, diversified industries, and climate resilience. If successful, Guyana could offer a blueprint for emerging economies. If not, it risks becoming another cautionary tale. For now, the world watches as this former colonial backwater engineers a modern economic miracle-one barrel, and one careful policy decision, at a time.

  6. Data sources: IMF Country Reports, Bank of Guyana, Stabroek News, ExxonMobil disclosures

P.D.

The 22.5% money supply growth in 2024 reflects the difficult balance Guyana must strike between injecting petroleum wealth into its developing economy and avoiding the inflation, corruption, and distortions that have plagued other resource-rich nations.

This represents monetary policy in an unprecedented situation—managing what might be the most rapid peacetime economic transformation in modern history.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Guyana appears midway down the list of 20 Top Money Printers of Voronoy (19th May, 2025; www.econovis.net, based on data from Central Banks and IMF) with 22.5% money supply growth.

Why Countries Expand Their Money Supply, Including Guyana?

General Reasons for Money Supply Expansion:

1. Economic Stimulus: Governments often increase money supply to boost economic activity during downturns or to accelerate growth.
2. Government Financing: To fund budget deficits without raising taxes or when unable to borrow affordably.
3. Debt Management: Managing existing government debt by effectively reducing its real value through inflation.
4. Currency Management: Sometimes to deliberately devalue currency to boost exports.
5. Response to Crises: Economic shocks may require liquidity injections to prevent system collapse.

Guyana’s Specific Case (22.5% growth):
Guyana’s situation is particularly interesting because it represents a rapidly developing economy.

Marcel

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