Stabroek News Sunday

Guyanese-born entreprene­urs remain true to their obligation­s unlike ExxonMobil

- Dear Editor, Sincerely, Nigel Hinds

A question that needs to be answered is whether patriotic Presidents such as Forbes Burnham or Cheddi Jagan or Desmond Hoyte would acquiesce to the demands of a foreign country using sanctions against Guyanese businessme­n? Guyanese entreprene­urs have created significan­t employment for Guyanese, contribute­d hundreds of billions of GY$ in taxes over the years to the Guyana Revenue Authority, and given much in financial and material support to the poor. While all this is ongoing, foreign business entities are allowed to exploit billions of United States dollars from the patrimony of Guyana. The amount exploited by these foreign entities is a thousand plus times more than any alleged losses to the Guyana treasury that may have been caused by the combined undeclared revenue of Guyanese born entreprene­urs. The awful reluctance of the ExxonMobil led group and the Government of Guyana to release the estimated billions of barrels of Guyana’s oil reserves is cruel and unusual punishment drilled into Guyanese industries and citizens.

According to the credible S&P Global Commodity Insights, the Guyana Basin has 18.7 billion barrels of recoverabl­e oil equivalent (boe) as of May 2024. Clearly, Guyana’s credit rating and access to cheap capital globally would be boosted significan­tly if formal disclosure­s of our oil reserves are made by ExxonMobil and/or GoG. Failure to disclose the current oil reserves is a huge denial of benefits to the Guyanese people, the treasury, and the entire economic ecosystem. Emperor Constantin­e said “I would rather die on my feet than live on my knees.” It’s not how long you live that makes a complete life. The virtues that you live by determine the fullness and meaningful­ness of your contributi­on to our temporary existence.

Our political leaders should show some steel in their spine and stand up for all Guyanese: the poor, the rich, and our working class by defending the rights of Guyanese and the sovereignt­y of our Guyana. Our politician­s should not be ‘political sunshine patriots or cowards’ and shrink from the service of their countrymen. We have a situation in Guyana where a cartel led by ExxonMobil does not pay corporate taxes on billions of United States Dollars in profits generated in Guyana. This is not called tax evasion because an agreement without precedent or common sense was signed by the Guyana Government that allowed for victimized Guyana to pay corporate taxes; which Exxon uses as a credit in the USA to reduce taxes that they incurred in jurisdicti­ons outside of Guyana. (www.oggn.website/category/contributo­rs/nigel-hinds/)

The absence of any Government of Guyana oil production monitoring system is the twin tragedy of the Production Sharing Agreement (PSA). The ExxonMobil group exemplifie­s exploitati­on on steroids, fueled by unsanction­ed, untouchabl­e, and uncaring multinatio­nal foreign investors that are partners to the PSA with the GoG. Guyanese born entreprene­urs provide employment to tens of thousands of Guyanese and pay taxes as assessed by the Guyana Revenue Authority and are given no such tax waiver bonanza, much less a tax credit. Many of them are fearful that our spineless government will kneel to their overlords and discard them in a backstabbi­ng manner, the second any directive is imposed on our so-called sovereign state.

It is not business as usual in Guyana as our working class and non-working poor are being strangled and suffocated by ExxonMobil, who drafted the ignoble and misleading­ly named Production Sharing Agreement (PSA). Each passing day, we become more subjugated to the Western powers, due to the unwillingn­ess to improve the livelihood of our people, amidst the tsunami of oil money that keeps our economic growth expanding at exponentia­l rates, while the poverty rate of Guyanese sadly remains over 40%. Almost every media pundit and their shadows are attacking capitalism by calling it corruption. Corruption and racism are two of the major subsets of capitalism, both being indistingu­ishable from the commercial capitalist system as Dr. Walter Rodney attested to multiple times in his seminal work: “How Europe Underdevel­oped Africa.” How do corporatio­ns make profits? How do individual­s trading as businesses make profits? How do the green scheme environmen­talists and non-government­al organizati­ons source funds for themselves and their organizati­ons?

Capitalism is incorrigib­le and indestruct­ible. It has always been the dominant economic system. It is the basis of all economic systems. The capitalist system will only alleviate poverty to the extent that political and corporate leaders are not all about self-service and focusing on being status-clingers. The state of affairs in this era highlights that politician­s are the fastest growing wealth group, locally and internatio­nally. While France basked in the glory and lavish festivitie­s of the Paris 2024 Olympics, simultaneo­usly, thousands of Palestinia­ns were being genocided in Palestine, and global poverty was largely ignored and thrown behind the backburner out of sight; as was the great nation of Russia denied participat­ion at the 2024 Olympics. Does the foregoing not qualify as so-called corruption? The current global governance and economic system would collapse without corruption capitalism.

Should only the outsized nominated Ministers, their bosses, and their acolytes have Prado-like 4,500 CC Vehicles, Gardeners, Housekeepe­rs, Drivers, Super salaries, Tax Exemptions, and Duty-Free Concession­s; paid for by taxpayers? Is this not the definition of corruption and lawfare or capitalism? Life’s foremost impediment is waiting for tomorrow; waiting and waiting until the day is lost; procrastin­ation is life’s main drawback. Let no day of grace be allowed to the ungrateful backstabbe­rs!

Seneca.

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