…as Patterson says emptying oil fund is reckless
As the Budget debates continue at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre (ACCC), Natural Resources Minister Vickram Bharrat has defended Government’s withdrawal of $126.7 billion from the oil fund to partially finance this year’s fiscal plans, saying that the money would be injected into Guyana’s tradition sectors.
The $552.9B Budget caters for the commencement of some of the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) Government’s major projects, including the Gas-to-Shore project, the New Demerara River Bridge, and the Amaila Falls Hydro Project among others.

Minister Bharrat argued that the money withdrawn from the Natural Resource Fund would be used to incentivise these and other non-oil sectors.
“If you examine the Budget, Mr Speaker, you will see that the money from the Natural Resource Fund is flowing into those sectors. It is flowing into agriculture, it is flowing into health, it is flowing into education, it is flowing into tourism and manufacturing, it is flowing into our security. That is what it is being used for.
“So, when they come to the National Assembly and say, ‘The PPP is wasting the oil money, and there is no evidence of how the oil money will be spent’, Mr Speaker, we are saying to the people of Guyana: ‘That is how the money will be spent in 2022; on education, on health, on agriculture, on tourism, on security, on training our young people and building back the sugar industry. That is where the money will be spent, because the majority of our Guyanese are employed in those sectors, and not in the oil and gas sector, and that is why we are committed, as a Government, to ensure we grow the non-oil sector,” Bharrat posited.
Moreover, the Natural Resource Minister contended that it was for this reason that the Government forged ahead with the historic Local Content legislation, which stipulates provisions for Guyanese and locally-owned businesses in non-oil sectors and services to benefit exclusively and at specified percentages from the petroleum industry.










