Dear Editor,
The anonymous (weakling) author of the Peeping Tom column in the January 6, 2024 contended that…” The Natural Resource Fund, as at the end of 2022, had received more than US$1.7 B in inflows of royalties and profit oil. In that year, the fund accrued US$17.5 M in interest alone. From the inception of the fund to the end of 2022, the total interest payments for 2022 would have amounted to G$3.6 B…. Interest earned would have increased during the first 11 months of 2023. The government earned more than G$16B in interest for 2023, a sum that is more than enough to grant a 13% increase in wages and salaries to public sector workers for 2023.”
The foregoing contention by both Peeping Tom and Elson Low, however, is a classic illustration of their unfamiliarity and/or ignorance; lack of appreciation for the legal operations of the Natural Resources Fund Act (2021) (hereinafter “NRF Act), and more so their profound ineptness altogether in the area of public financial management in general.
Section 19 of the NRF Act states that…” The amount that the Minister shall request the National Assembly to approve as withdrawal from the Fund for the next ensuing fiscal year shall be included in the annual budget proposal and shall not exceed, for that year, the ceiling calculated in accordance with Section 17 and the First Schedule plus any amount required for emergency financing”. This means that the withdrawal from the NRF is based on the previous fiscal year’s balance. For example, the NRF withdrawal for the fiscal year 2023 would be based on the closing balance for the fiscal year ending 2022. Similarly, the NRF withdrawal for the fiscal year 2024, would be based on the closing balance for the fiscal year ended 2023.
For the avoidance of any doubt, though anyone could independently verify the NRF balance and interest earned as per the relevant NRF reports on the Bank of Guyana website, the table below is extracted (snipped) from the September 2023 quarterly report.










