Dear Editor,
Over the years much has been said about our GDP growth, press releases, and celebratory statistics. Yet for many households, life is becoming harder, not easier. This contradiction exposes a simple truth that deserves honest public discussion. The fact is GDP can grow while poverty rises if the gains from growth do not reach ordinary people.
GDP measures how big the economy is. Poverty measures whether people can afford to live. Confusing the two has allowed a great deal of fluff to pass as progress.
Allow me to explain, in practical terms, how this happens.
First, GDP growth does not mean income growth for everyone.
An economy can expand rapidly because of oil, mining, or large construction projects—sectors that employ a relatively small number of people. Profits rise, output rises, and GDP looks impressive, but wages for most workers remain stagnant. Growth becomes concentrated, not shared.
Second, the cost-of-living often rises faster than wages.
Even when incomes increase modestly, prices can rise much faster, with increases in food, rent, fuel, transportation, and utilities. A household earning a little more but spending much more is worse off. When basic needs become unaffordable, poverty deepens despite growth.
Third, geographically uneven growth is another major factor.
Economic activity may boom in capital cities, coastal zones, or extractive regions while rural and hinterland communities stagnate. Imagine paying 15,000 GYD for a 20-lb cylinder of gas in parts of Region 7, for example. National averages hide local suffering. GDP goes up, but entire regions are left behind.
Fourth, not all growth creates job security.
Some growth produces insecure, informal work with no benefits or stability. Temporary construction booms fade, automation replaces workers, and livelihoods remain fragile. Poverty reduction should also focus on job security and sustainability, not just output.
Fifth, inequality allows a few to capture most of the gains.
When the top earners take the lion’s share of new income, the majority see little improvement. GDP may rise sharply, but if wealth pools at the top, poverty can expand at the bottom. This appears to be our present reality.
Sixth, poverty lines move upward with rising prices.
As the cost of basic needs increases, the poverty line itself rises. People whose incomes have barely changed can suddenly fall below the poverty line. This is not statistical trickery; it reflects real hardship.
Seventh, weak social protection magnifies the problem.
When minimum wages lag behind inflation, cash transfers stagnate, or public services deteriorate, households must pay more out of pocket for health, education, and transport. Their effective income shrinks, even in a growing economy. This too is the present reality of many Guyanese.
Taken together, these realities explain why many citizens feel excluded from the celebrated numbers. Growth without balance is not development. It breeds frustration, distrust, and inequality. The public deserves less cheerleading and more honesty. GDP is not the enemy, but it is not the destination either. Real progress requires policies that link growth to secured jobs, fair wages, affordable living costs, strong social protection, and regional inclusion.
Until that balance is attained, the economy may grow on paper while poverty rises in practice, and the fluff will continue.