More money for Guyanese: Healing oil or Snake oil
THE 592 GUARDIAN♦ ACCOUNTABILITY ♦ INTEGRITY♦ TRUTH
OP-ED BY :GHK LALL-JUNE 2026
More money for Guyanese: Healing oil or Snake oil
I like it. More money for Guyanese workers. Not private sector minimum wage workers, regrettably. If any local workers are due more money, private sector (and public service) minimum wage workers stand out. More money is for Guyanese in the oil industry. Well, that’s the call, with PPP Govt Minister Vickram Bharrat doing the honors. A timely push from the government. But as Guyanese know better than me -waan haan caan klap. How will the oil companies and other entities, all foreign, respond to this significant government call? I foresee a few, ah, hiccups. Some sneezing to cause watery eyes and runny noses. I live with allergies, so I recognize the triggers. More money for Guyanese is a trigger, pollen shower.
More money for Guyanese workers in Guyana’s oil industry means all the companies, local and foreign, have to shell out for cash.
The bottom line gets thinner. Nowhere near red. But not as green. Not as many greenbacks to export to U.S. banks. Not as much for local companies keeping their stashes at home.
It has been hailed rather heartily that people are a company’s best assets. That is, until money matters surface and get in the way. More money, especially more pay, has historically led to bad friends and bad blood. Simply ask Guyanese luminaries Lincoln Lewis and Seepaul Narine. Poor Seepaul! Even he own peeple in de PPP givin he haad kyaad fuh he peeple in de fields. More money to be paid by foreign companies to local workers, so they are at a comparable level with their expatriate neighbors, is going to cause those companies to wince. And, once they have to pony up, that may mean that local companies with local workers could be compelled to do something. Not necessarily the same, but something more in the envelope.
I am trying to get ahead of foreign oil companies’ reactions. To help my fine friend, VP Jagdeo, I have some good ones for him to ponder. Years of experience is a walkover. I walkover specific experience (yessir!) Guyanese have six years under their belt. Tick that box. But there is that animal called equivalent qualifications. How measured? By whom? Leave that box for now. Then, there are those intangibles that PPP Govt agents have used in domestic public service arenas of recruitment, promotion, compensation: team player, leadership skills, organizational asset. Any of these can be a weight that slows down the rate of pay growth for Guyanese workers. Then, there’s that big, bad, one that’s both tangible and intangible: Evaluation Report. Tangible because it’s usually on paper. Intangible because it’s the product of something in the evaluator’s head. A fine kettle of scorpions, that is.
Which right-minded foreign company executive, manager, willingly forks out millions more for local workers?
However, deserving, overdue, they may be? Business is a cold-blooded reptile. Never about the milk of human kindness. It’s capitalism, not Christianity. What’s the edge, the bludgeon, that expatriates calling the shots have? Make the evaluation unconscionably, improperly, tough, and few are the local workers that measure up. Don’t have what it takes.
At bottom, not qualifying for the kind of lovely money of which Minister Bharrat gushed so splendidly. From the offshore oil rigs, the S-o-S comes: Georgetown -there’s a problem. Few Guyanese workers are up to scratch. How many Bobby Gossais can there be in an oil yard? Translation: few of them have earned the right to more money. Definitely not anywhere in the vicinity of any equality with highly-skilled, highly qualified, and highly compensated (and highly-cherished) foreign imports. Before fellow Guyanese, I plead: don’t shortchange that abbreviation in brackets.
I welcome more moolah for Guyanese oil industry workers. Has to be an industry now, with a million daily near happening. Meanwhile, I remember inflation. Apparently, PPP Govt fears have been tamed. Thanks for the corroborating stats, Dr. de la Cruz. Nonoil Guyanese will fall farther behind, have so survive. Somehow.

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