The Government is considering a second countrywide COVID-19 cash grant distribution exercise. This was revealed by Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo.

After taking office in August 2020, People’s Progressive Party (PPP) rolled out a $25,000 per household cash grant to assist households during the COVID-19 pandemic. During a programme on a US-based online radio station, Jagdeo said consideration for a second countrywide cash grant distribution exercise would be given by this year end. He was at the time asked about the Government’s efforts to provide a stimulus for the country amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Right now, we don’t have a second plan (for a cash grant) immediately, because we’ve not completely rolled out that plan as yet. There were people who filled up a pink form that we now have to go back and reassess. We’ll have to determine by the end of the year whether we’ll have another programme, because, logistically, it was very difficult to roll out; we had to go to every home.
“We continue with the hamper programme, but it’s more selective now. But the stimulus itself was through the tax measures. That, the $7 or $8 billion we spent in the cash grant, that also was spent back into the economy, so it did serve as a stimulus too,” the Vice President explained during the interview.
Jagdeo expounded that the two budgets passed by the PPP Government, the $330 billion emergency budget in September 2020 and the $353.8 billion budget passed in March of this year, acted as a stimulus for the economy.
“In that (emergency) budget, we removed taxes or reduced taxes and put in place other incentives that would be equivalent, when you annualise it, to $40 billion more in people’s pockets in tax savings.”
“And then, in the 2021 budget, we added to that. So, already, we see the benefit of this in the economy. The money that we gave out was not so much a stimulus to the economy, although it did serve that purpose. That was more to assist households with food and so. And a lot of people were appreciative of that,” he said.
