Skip to main content

FM
Former Member

There is no evidence of five per cent GDP growth

 

Posted By Staff Writer On April 28, 2014 @ 5:05 am In Letters |

 

Dear Editor,

The halfway point in the Ramotar administration term in office has now passed. Unfortunately we cannot find any public policy or strategy that has permanently and positively transformed the well-being of the people who make up the 40 per cent at the bottom of the economic ladder.

During the 2011 campaign, the PPP leaders outlined their philosophy and guiding principles in their manifesto as “Freedom, Democracy and Rights”; “Upliftment of All…”; “Equal Opportunity and National Unity”; and “Integrity and Accountability.” Words and more words but clearly without substance.

It was John Adams, the second President of the United States who said, “Abuse of words has been the great instrument of sophistry, chicanery and division of society.”   These empty words from President Ramotar’s regime continue to divide the society since they have delivered very few of their promises so far.

Is that 40 per cent at the bottom more free, do they have more rights, feel more uplifted politically, socially and economically than two years ago? Do they feel that they have an equal opportunity to enjoy the patrimony of the nation? Do they feel that they live in a more united country today as compared to 2011? Certainly not!

 

Politicians with good rational judgment would seek balance and progress; lack of it eventually finds imbalance and economic and social degradation.   This economic imbalance is driven by the irrationality in how we arrive at the GDP figures in Guyana.

There is an accumulation of evidence that the GDP figures have been fudged since before 2011 and 2013 was no different. But they cannot fudge the GDP figures forever. The majority in that 40 per cent at the bottom of the economic ladder will confirm that their lives have not improved since 2011. In other words, the trickle down effect they promised in the 2011 PPP manifesto did not happen. In fact, it trickled up to their rich relatives and friends, thus making them richer and the poor poorer.

 

In support of our conclusion, one only has to look at the macroeconomic numbers for 2013 and one can easily find indisputable evidence that the 5 per cent growth rate was an act of economic illusion. In 2013, the overall balance of payments recorded a deficit (shortfall) of US$119.5 million compared to a surplus of US$32.9 million in 2012. The deterioration was primarily due to an expanded current account shortfall and a lower capital account surplus for 2013.

Today, the current account deficit (shortfall) has widened by 16 per cent or US$58.6 million, worsening to US$425.3 million at the end of 2013. This bloated deficit was mainly on account of lower capital inflow of current transfers and higher service payments. Bottom line, lower capital inflows and higher outflows of cash from the economy have deeply influenced the overall deficit.

 

A real concern to us is that the regime is not telling the people the truth. The country’s exports have declined by some 3 per cent to US$1,375.9 million. Except for rice, exports from all the other main sectors (gold, sugar, bauxite, timber) have contracted over the past two years.

During this period, the deficit on the services account expanded by 50 per cent or US$102.5 million to reach US$307.1 million on account of higher payments for non-factor services (outflow of cash from the Guyanese economy). Remittances decreased by 30 per cent or US$141.1 million to US$328.2 million when compared to 2012.

The capital account surplus also decreased by 25 per cent to US$314.8 million in 2013 on account of lower foreign direct investment and local investment by the private sector. Foreign direct investment actually declined by US$80 million or 27 per cent in 2013 confirming the economic meltdown in Guyana. Inflows from bilateral and multilateral agencies have decreased by 27 per cent to US$221.4 million.

 

If one should read this scorecard, one will have to really search between the weeds for this 5 per cent GDP growth. The Minister of Finance should clearly know better. It is either the technicians are fudging the figures for political purposes or they are grossly incompetent at their basic arithmetic.

In light of all this, we challenge the Minister to illustrate to the nation how he arrived at the 5 per cent GDP growth rate. But what is worse is that this act of economic illusion is that the majority political opposition does not curtail the squandermania adequately. We found evidence of billions voted on by the majority opposition that will only serve to feed the greed machine in Freedom House. Why are they constantly capitulating to the Minister of Finance?

The principal role of the opposition is to interrogate every action of the government and hold them accountable to the public. Hopefully in the process of safeguarding the people’s assets, the people will be convinced that they can better run the country. Can we say the majority opposition has taken on its responsibility to the people well? Certainly not!

 

We recommend not a cent more for the Ramotar administration until and unless they put greater internal controls in place to save the nation from the Freedom House greed machine. We can start by renewing our long overdue local government system with local government elections.

We urge the opposition to take the fight to President Ramotar’s administration. That is the only solution so that all the people can secure justice and equality all the time.

 

Yours faithfully,
Sase Singh
Vincent Nauth
Derrick Arjune
Asha Balbachan
Devita Khan
Aubrey Reteymer
Chandra Deollal
Reginald Watkins
Rohit Misir
Terrence Simon
Donna Mathoo
Noel Moses
Vicki Rampersaud
Guilianna Jacobs
Asquith Rose
Ramesh Sookram
Harish Singh

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Challenge of country’s growth estimate was undertaken without single reference to the economy’s sectoral sources of expansion

 

Posted By Staff Writer On May 4, 2014 @ 5:03 am In Letters |

Dear Editor,

 

I must refer to the article carried in your Monday edition of the 28th April under the caption ‘There is no evidence of five per cent GDP growth’ under the pen of Sase Singh, Vincent Nauth et al. I have no problem with persons disagreeing with an official estimate, indicator or projection of any variable but when the effort to justify such disagreement becomes personal and seeks to disparage the ability and integrity of young public officers who have been trained, and continue to be trained in the complexities of National Accounting, as Chief Statistician I have to intervene in defence of my staff and say that I find such aspersions as ‘technicians are fudging the figures for political purposes or they are grossly incompetent at their basic arithmetic’ to be highly offensive and I and staff unequivocally reject such uninformed comments.

One strange phenomenon is that most of those who seek to disparage National Accounts estimates or give their lordly opinions of the lack of quality, acceptability of such basically do not have a clue of what goes into the compilation of the complete set of a country’s national accounts, much less the sources and sources of data and methodologies used to derive same. Let me make it clear that National Accounts is a career and even the best economist is not a trained National Accountant and cannot put together a detailed set of National Accounts. On the contrary, he/she is at best and hopefully a good interpreter and analyst of those accounts. The best ones are the proven sound economists who have had exposure in some degree to the compilation of the National Accounts. I cannot say in which category the contributors fall as I have no personal knowledge of any.

 

What I can say is that in a System which is based on an integrated system of Accounts, among them being accounts by industries and institutional sectors, and of which the GDP rate of growth is just one measured indicator, though one of the most important as it measures the performance of the economy over a fixed and continuous time frame, I found it rather disingenuous that the authors sought to focus almost exclusively on just one account (the Rest of the World Account), to justify or disparage the estimation of the GDP growth which is independently estimated based on the institutional/sectoral production performances which in many cases are independently reported in the media by the sectors themselves even prior to the calculation of the GDP growth and without a semblance of challenge from dissenters who subsequently emerge.

 

Thus as I kept reading and looking I could not believe that a challenge to a country’s growth estimate was being undertaken without a single word or reference to the economy’s sectoral sources of growth. An economy’s expansion as measured by GDP growth is an output concept. That is why it is defined at constant prices i.e. based on a specific year of measure so that all subsequent price movements relative to that year are neutralized and what is therefore captured is a measure that is as close as possible to an output (quantum) change only in all sectors and/or industries. As is the norm and as an Appendix to the Budget speech a GDP table at constant 2006 prices by Industrial Origin (see note immediately above) is annually presented (from the re-benchmarked year 2009).

Just to take a few examples from that table, and given that all of the components (sectoral performances) contribute to the whole (Overall growth) the table under reference shows, inter alia:

Sugar – Output declined by 14.4%. Thus if the overall growth of 5.2% is challenged, then sugar’s output decline of -14.4% has to be challenged also.

 

Rice – Output increased by 26.9%. Given all that is known and reported about Rice, do the challengers accept this reported growth in rice output?

Mining and Quarrying – A sectoral output growth of 8.0% has been measured and reported. But again, if the overall Real growth of 5.2% is unacceptable, then the dissenters have to reject the M&Q output performance. However, as a note of caution, included in this sector’s performance is Gold output which as reported by the oversight administrative agencies for the Gold sub-sector, grew by 9.7% (Is this accepted or rejected?). Bauxite suffered a 11% decline in output (Again – is this accepted or not?) And what of ‘Other Mining’ which recorded a 30.2% output growth (again Accepted or Not?). Note as the Hon. Minister reported in his Budget presentation that following the slide in gold prices there was a consequential improvement once again in Diamond Production, up over 2012 by 56.9% and stone continuing to support the construction boom up by 47.8%, solid contributors to the ‘Other Mining’ growth performance.

 

I ask these questions of the dissenters because sectoral economic activities and output do not occur at the Bureau here in Guyana nor in any Central Statistical Office globally, but rather and expectedly in the sectors themselves as reported by the sectors. So if the writers are debunking the measure of growth am I to understand that they are debunking the sources of all growth viz: the economic and output performances as reported by our specific sectors. Moreover in addition to the above, would they for example dispute the double-digit growth in the construction sector given the supportive data at our disposal and all that is being observed around in ongoing construction activity, even by them? Or the sustained robust growth of the Financial sector (an average growth rate of 11.2% over the last 6 years). Net domestic credit by the banking system was estimated to have expanded some 25.2% in 2013 alone, as reported by the Bank of Guyana. (Accepted or not?). What about the Reports from some of our industry leaders about the profitability of their performances over the past year, Banks DIH, DDL, the commercial banks, could these logically be achieved in an economy that is not even achieving moderate growth?

So in trying to debunk and query the rate of growth the writers have chosen to query not the source, the sector performances of growth, but rather one of the areas of potential manifestation of that growth ‘the Rest of the World Account’ and the components thereof.

It is very important that the Balance of Payments account is at all times interpreted accurately and conclusions drawn reflect the reality on the ground. I remind the writers that the Balance of Payment is an accrual and not a cash flow account as is clearly their interpretation when one reads their article.

 

Guyana is a very open economy (current trade/GDP ratio as high as 148.8%) and it is the mix of domestic and foreign market conditions which influences a close correlation between the external and production accounts. A close correlation does not necessarily always happen nor happen in a particular year. For example, despite the slide in gold prices from the lofty heights of 2012 to present we did not see a correlative decline in production in 2013.   Business decisions would have been taken by entrepreneurs within the sector to sustain activities – the authors must have noted that ‘Credit to Mining & Quarrying Sector’ increased by 13.9% in 2013 alone (pg. 10 of Budget Speech).

 

End result – despite sliding prices in 2013, production in the end still surpassed the then record 2012 levels even though 2012 production was favoured by the peak prices. That is from the production side. For purposes of selling however the value of gold exports in 2013 was down on 2012 levels, prices being just one of the factors. Because a whole set of different parameters defining the world market come into play, when a policy/management decision is made when to sell/export and in many cases export sales are made out of stocks accumulated rather than from current production (the measure of GDP growth) as is also the case in other commodity sectors which have the capacity to accumulate significant stocks, such as Rice, Bauxite, Forestry. On the flip side, an increase in commodity imports is not just a straightforward indicator of increased demand by the Rest of the World on the Guyana economy to pay. Some imports may in fact be temporary imports and in fact precursors of service activities in the domestic economy rather than an indicator of increased intermediate or final consumption as such imports are ultimately cancelled out as Re-exports, a line item in the Balance of Payments. Further, for an open economy like ours, the concern will always be not just if overall imports are increasing or declining, but the composition of all imports, and the policy perspective will always favour a shift towards increased intermediate and Capital imports at the expense of Final Consumption imports. You have to be intimately acquainted with the data and knowledgeable of the compilation thereof before even attempting to analyse or just comment.

This country’s economy is measured and calculated according to the International Standard, the United Nations’ System of National Accounts. If there is a different standard or measure that the contributors know of or wish to share, we at the Bureau will be eager recipients of this additional knowledge. Our work and the input data received from sectors in the calculation of the GDP is subject to review and recheck by and submission to several international Agencies. In closing I remind the authors that the rebasing of the National Accounts in 2006 established and confirmed the shift in the axis of growth of the economy from the traditional commodity to the services sectors in addition to providing the updated benchmarks of the sectoral contributions to the overall economy. A cursory examination will show our services sectors especially the main ones are not export-oriented and their strong growth performances will not be reflected as a mirror-image in the external accounts, which by itself can only provide a partial image of the production performances.

 

The growth of this small open economy of ours is clearly driven by domestic consumption, more importantly domestic consumption of domestically produced goods and services, as I mentioned before the concentration by the writers on the Rest of the World Account was at the expense of examination of all of the other integrated accounts and key variables.

 

Finally, I must return to the fact that not only at the Bureau, but in many other key institutions of Government which are mandated with the task of monitoring, measuring and analyzing the macro-economy and social parameters within the economy, the key technicians are our young graduates of our own University who continue to distinguish themselves by their ability to absorb and learn quickly, and perform to levels of expectation. Some over years past have further distinguished themselves by moving on to regional and the very international institutions which themselves monitor our work. So it is a matter of extreme concern when persons such as the writers of the article can only see our graduate staff as persons who have an innate and wicked proclivity to be corrupt (they are supposed to fudge numbers for political purposes as soon as they start to work with Government) and now by definition have been allowed to graduate by UG despite their declared ‘basic arithmetic incompetence’ by the knowledgeable authors. Knowledgeable but not a whisper from them or sharing of what the economy’s growth has to be if it is not 5.2% as reported. Could it be also that the writers are just contemptuous of the ability of graduates put out by our own University? The statement by the writers that in their opinion those at the bottom 40% of the economic ladder cannot associate with the measured growth of the economy over the years is by no means a scientific approach to disparage the measured level of growth. A completely different aspect, the welfare aspects of growth and policy approaches to ensure the trickle down effects of growth is now being opened by the authors, by focusing on the wrong indicator, when we all know that there are several different specific and complementary measures and indicators that have to be used in order to assess the welfare aspects of growth.

 

Yours faithfully,
Lennox Benjamin
Chief Statistician

FM

Chief Statistician did not explain how he arrived at 5.2% GDP growth

 

Posted By Staff Writer On May 6, 2014 @ 5:06 am In Letters |

 

Dear Editor,

We refer to a letter to the editor in the last Sunday Stabroek News from the nation’s Chief Statistician Mr. Lennox Benjamin `Challenge of country’s growth estimate was undertaken without single reference to the economy’s sectoral sources of expansion’ in response to our letter captioned `There is no evidence of five per cent GDP growth.’

 

While we welcome the intervention from Mr. Benjamin, we clearly were amazed that he failed to explain to the people of Guyana how he and the Minister of Finance have arrived at the 5.2 percent GDP growth rate. Rather, Mr. Benjamin has not only chosen to hide behind the complexity of the methodology but has accused us of denigrating his young staff; which is clearly a figment of his imagination. To set the record straight, our letter has nothing to do with his young staff but has everything to do with this GDP growth rate.

 

Mr. Benjamin’s accusations are not only false but a convenient cop-out as he attempted quite skillfully to deflect from addressing the core issue and indulge in semantics that only he understands. We are asking Mr. Benjamin to do the honourable thing and explain to his paymasters; the Guyanese people how he arrived at the GDP growth rate of 5.2 percent. In a normal democracy, the final GDP growth rate is owned by the Head of the Bureau of Statistics and is presented to the Minister of Finance for planning purposes. Therefore the buck stops at his desk, not the young statisticians and we are not convinced that he has explained the issue to the people of Guyana in his confusing and long-winded response with very little substance and much propaganda.

The GDP growth rate is of critical importance to all stakeholders since they will have to use it in their debates and research, yet Mr. Benjamin chose to hide behind the complexity of methodologies as his only armour of defence without giving even a half-baked explanation as to how he arrived at this questionable statistics. All Mr. Benjamin has to do is to explain himself! How difficult is that? Or is he above accountability? Why is he trying to change the topic of the conversation? Or is he embarrassed because we have exposed the fudged GDP growth rate figure?

The two principle methods for computing GDP are the Expenditure Approach or the Income Approach and we are satisfied that Mr. Benjamin has been able to clear this up by stating that the National Computation is “based on the institutional/sectoral production performances.” But Mr. Benjamin has failed to state what his growth estimate for consumption was in 2013? What was the growth in investment in 2013?

What was the growth in government purchases in 2013? What was the growth in net exports in 2013? From all the data we have perused for 2013, it is clear that 5.2 percent is outside of the GDP growth range and that is why we question the numbers coming out of the Office of the Chief Statistician and until he comes clean, we shall continue to question them. Please do not play with our intelligence Mr. Benjamin by hiding behind your methodologies as your only armour of defence. A responsible Chief Statistician will not throw figures out just to show that Guyana is performing well economically.

We urge Mr. Benjamin to please provide to the nation the evidence of his source data to support this 5.2 percent growth in GDP. Until then our position on the GDP remains intact – the arithmetic is incorrect or the computation was fudged or both.

 

Mr. Alex Michalos, a former chancellor at the University of Northern British Columbia was quite correct when he said “the main barrier to getting progress has been that statistical agencies around the world are run by economists and statisticians and they are not people who are comfortable with human beings” (Source NY Times).

Well, we are very comfortable with human beings especially that 40 percent that exist at the bottom rung of the economic ladder in Guyana and it is our vested interest to look after their interest against those in authority who continue to use fudged statistics to pretend that all is well for the nation’s economy when the empirical evidence in the kitchens of most Guyanese tell a different story.

 

We will not be deterred in our work of exposing the shenanigans that pass for reality under the PPP regime. We call on Mr. Benjamin to come clean.

 

Yours faithfully,

Sase Singh,

Vincent Nauth,

Asquith Rose,

Dr. Devita Khan

Aubrey Reteymer

Chandra Deollal, Esq.

Derrick Arjune

Asha Balbachan

Dr. Reginald Watkins

Rohit Misir

Dr. Terrence Simon

Donna Mathoo

Noel Moses

Vicki Rampersaud

Guilianna Jacobs

Harish Singh

FM
Originally Posted by Mr.T:

The 5% growth has been in the drugs export trade.

He just about says that.  He stresses how small and open Guyana's economy is, so if exports arent up much, imports are up significantly, FDI is down and remittances are down then where did the grwoth come from?

 

Our economy is too small and poor to make us think that domestic private consumption was responsible, unless he admits that there are significant unmeasured goods/service producing sectors which are not measured.  If the govt is responsible, then how is it paying for it.  If private consumption is being sustained by borrowing, then how sustainable is it?

 

Civil servants are civil servants and do as they are told.  If the directive is to make "optimistic assumptions" then this is what they will do.

 

The fact remains that Guyana has a small and very open economy, so if our external accounts (net cash inflows) are mediocre then this will impact the economy. If not now, as soon as the bubble (real estate mainly) pops.

 

In addition we measure an economy, not only by its growth, but by its distribution.  It is quite clear that Guyana is suffering from growing income inequality.  Rice is booming, yet the rice farmers complain.  Why?  Who is making the money?

FM

The Mystery of Guyana’s GDP growth rate

 

Posted By TarronKhemraj On May 15, 2014 @ 5:01 am In Daily,Features | No Comments

Recently several letter writers have questioned the veracity of Guyana’s GDP statistics, including the rate of growth of GDP. We have here a classic case of asymmetry of information. The Bureau of Statistics knows more than the public about the sources of the data, aggregating methods, and the sector weights chosen to calculate Guyana’s GDP. As public servants, the statisticians could do the nation a great service if they explain clearly how they arrive at a particularly sensitive data point such as the inflation rate or GDP growth rate. The Bureau has the inside information and therefore should not expect the burden of proof to fall on the public. It is also important that political aspirants lift up the quality of public discourse when questioning the data.

Responding to a letter co-authored by several writers, the Chief Statistician Mr Lennox Benjamin argues that anyone challenging the GDP statistics has to take into consideration the growth of individual sectors of the economy. He is right. However, there are still unanswered questions regarding the growth of various sub-sectors and their relative weight in computing the final growth rate. A few issues have to be cleared up if the present debate is to move from heat to light. First, the Bureau of Statistics uses mainly the production method when calculating GDP, which is structured according to the following core sectors: (i) agriculture, fishing and forestry; (ii) mining and quarrying; (iii) manufacturing; and (iv) services. The Bureau uses the expenditure method to calculate …..To continue reading, login or subscribe now.

FM

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×