– as local content, GSDS and security discussed at PSC corporate dinner
Minister of State, Joseph Harmon, on Thursday evening said the Private Sector and the Government of Guyana are not adversaries, but rather partners in development, who must work in tandem with each other.
He made these remarks in an invited comment at the Private Sector Commission’s (PSC) corporate dinner, hosted at the Rotunda, Banks DIH Limited, Thirst Park, and added that such engagements are aimed at strengthening the relationship between the Government and the Private Sector, since the administration strongly believes that private enterprise is the engine of growth of the economy.
“We believe that we have to set the regulatory and the other frameworks which would allow businesses to flourish, and to provide that good life for the people of Guyana that we are talking about. So this dinner here tonight is basically my meeting with some of the CEOs [Chief Executive Officers] of major companies of the country to discuss the Green State Development Strategy (GSDS), local content in legislation, and matters of that nature.
“I know they will also want to discuss how crime impacts their businesses, so it is going to be a very interactive dinner. I am happy to be here to represent the views of the President and the Government, so that the Private Sector understands that this is what we are really about. If you have a well-functioning Government and a well-functioning Private Sector, then it rebounds to the benefit of the Guyanese people, and that is what we want,” he said.
Last year, the Government, in collaboration with the Private Sector Commission, hosted a two-day business summit at the Marriott Hotel. The concept, a brainchild of President David Granger, sought to ensure that the interests of all business owners – including farmers, fisher-folk, miners, loggers, traders and workers – could be considered, and that the event would set up the basis for consultation rather than confrontation.
An outcome of that summit was the drafting of the ‘Private Sector Commission’s Action Plan for the Sustainable Development of Guyana’. Minister Harmon received a copy of the Plan at the dinner, and noted that the Government is committed to perusing the document in its entirety, and engaging the Commission on it at the earliest possible time.
“We will study this document, and certainly you will get the Government’s response to it in a short space of time, so that we can move this country forward. I believe that, for far too long, we have operated in little silos: the Government silo, the Private Sector silo and the Opposition silo; and it is time that we break down these silos in the interest of the people of this country. If – for no other reason, I think – if this document serves that purpose, then I think we would have had time well spent at that Conference,” he said. Meanwhile, Chairman and Managing Director of Banks DIH Limited, Clifford Reis, in a brief comment, said that while there are areas for the Government and the Private Sector to increase cooperation, the Private Sector must, at the same time, recognise that its role is not solely to criticise.
“The Private Sector has a serious part to play in not only criticising Government, but it has to work with Government and develop the future of this country… It is about time we start working together. Let people know that we are one nation, one people, and that we have a good future,” he said. PSC Chairman Eddie Boyer, in an invited comment, said that the Commission appreciates the engagement with the Minister of State as it is his third engagement with members of the Private Sector in just over one week. Last week, Minister Harmon addressed the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI) and the Guyana Manufacturing and Services Association (GMSA) Annual General Meetings.
“We have great hopes because the Minister of State has always given us a great sense of how the Government and the Private Sector ought to work together so we would be engaging him on some of the issues regarding the wider Private Sector and issues where we can play a part and the public-private partnership along with the fact that we have done a series of events together. At the end of it, we want to create employment, we want to see the Guyanese people benefit from jobs and benefit from the industries such as the oil and gas, which is coming on stream,” he said.