Skip to main content

FM
Former Member
 

After studying documents released by the government on the proposed hotel for Kingston, AFC MP Khemraj Ramjattan today likened it to a grand Ponzi scheme which he said will leave taxpayers in the lurch.

 

Ramjattan in a statement said that from even a perfunctory reading of the documentation supplied and the answers to the questions he posed in Parliament, there is every indication that this proposed Marriott-managed Hotel is a sort of “Ponzi scheme in the making where Guyanese taxpayers are going to be ripped off and some crony of the PPP will be fattened with a good deal”.

 

He noted that taxpayers’ monies, which are in NICIL’s accounts, are going to be used to substantially underwrite the financing of this proposed project and that from all indications the sum will be US$21M comprised of subordinate loan stocks of US$15M, US$4M in equity and US$2M which allegedly is already spent on design fees paid to, from reliable AFC’s sources, a  New York-based Pakistani Mike Ahmad and his team.

 

Ramjattan said that an additional sum of $27M, rated as a senior debt, is to be syndicated by a Trinidad bank but there is no disclosure as to who will be guaranteeing this. The AFC, he said, believes that ultimately this debt will be a Government obligation.

 

He argued that in the case of a default, “which is inevitable, the people of Guyana will lose, at the very least, US$21m. Why in configuring this arrangement our Government, who we trust to act in our interest and who are obligated to do so, would have NICIL’s interest (US$15m) subordinated” to that of the Trinidad bank, he queried.

 

He added that the government seems to think that NICIL and Atlantic Hotels Inc (AHI) are private companies as evidence by the claim that “agreements between Atlantic Hotels Inc and Shanghai Construction Group International (Trinidad and Tobago) Ltd (SCG) prohibit disclosure of specified contract documents”. Ramjattan pointed out that both NICIL and AHI are State companies created with taxpayers’ resources and therefore all transactions and commitments are subject to public scrutiny.

 

He said the terms and conditions of the Trinidad bank’s syndicated debt, terms and conditions of AHI’s subordinated debt, the feasibility study by Marriott and the unnamed American firm must be submitted for public review. He declared that the Economic Services Committee of Parliament will review this deal and conduct a risk analysis to evaluate the “huge burden” the Government is bringing to future generations.

 

Another major question to be answered he said is why did AHI, “without being properly capitalized, and therefore without the capacity to deliver, enter into a contract with SCG for the construction of a US$52m Hotel and a management agreement with the Marriott Chain?” and on the other hand why Marriott, SCG and others would enter binding agreements with AHI when it had no track record.

“The AFC feels that this only happened because AHI is an instrument of the PPP Government! Lift AHI’s veil and aha it is PPP and its cronies!”, Ramjattan declared.

He charged that there was no commercial justification for the planned massive spending on a hotel when occupancy rates are so low in Guyana.

 

He noted that many investments in the local hotel industry have gone bust because of low occupancy as well as the issues of crime, unreliable and uncompetitive electricity, a dirty city, poor drainage, etc. which retard any development of local tourism, even among overseas Guyanese longing to visit their homeland.

 

“I recall the case of one investor group failing in its quest to buy Guyana’s iconic Pegasus Hotel for US$14m. They could not raise the required financing because the Banks viewed it as too risky at that price. The proposed US$52m for the Marriott, a far cry from US$14m, have for 5 years failed to attract credible investors for the same reason. Two hotels are up for sale on Main Street, Georgetown and another on the East Bank (in which the Government put money) with no takers even at discounted prices!”, he stated.

 

Ramjattan asserted that at US$52m (amount tendered by SCG) and taking three years) with US$42m in fixed debt at minimum of 10% interest per annum (more like 15% for that level of risk), AHI would have accumulated US$12.6m in three years without any income to pay Debt-holders, and all of this  even before the start of operations.

 

“This gives a cost of US$64.6m (without escalation in prices). With electricity cost of more than 20% of sales, labour cost of more than 15% of sales, management fees of 10% of sales to Marriott, and interest cost of US$5.4m per year, this project would not last 3 months of operation. In fact it would not even cover 20% of its interest cost if it were to attract all the tourists who visit Guyana.  A taxpayers’ bailout will then be needed, just like the Skeldon Sugar Project and CLICO. And what will follow will be a sale to some friend of the Government at a knock down price!”, the MP and AFC Chairman argued.

 

Further, he contended that no bank, local or overseas, would even consider a hotel in Guyana where the equity contribution is less than 50% (AHI only has proposed 22% equity). He argued that if the government believes in the Marriott’s and the unnamed American firm’s feasibility studies, “let them put their own money on this project, not poor taxpayers. If indeed the feasibility is so glowing, why is the Marriott International not putting its money on this project? How paradoxical that a working class Government is going to fund a huge multinational!”

 

The MP said that Guyana has a strong private sector which given a good investment climate would invest in any viable venture with a healthy good return. He added that the local banks are flush with cash and hunting for such opportunities. “The hotel sector must be invested in by these private sector companies if the feasibility is so good”, he said.

 

Ramjattan advised that rather than focusing on building a hotel for Marriott International,  and then paying them 10% to operate it, Government should focus on addressing the everyday problems of poor roads, drainage, unreliable electricity, crime, public health, unemployment, poverty and hopelessness among youths and migration. Money should also go into the University of Guyana to enhance a tourism programme.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I wish the AFC and PNC had commented on the Berbice river Bridge similarly since some 16 million dollars and possibly more plus the  using the national insurance system was co-opted to facilitate and enrich PPP coneys.

 

The taxpayers should not be used as a hedge against lost by investors in any system benefiting private investors.They should endure the same risk as any other person in a business venture. Further, when they are facilitated it should not be subsidy as we see with Buddy and the BRB. They should be accountable to repay any Government funds used in the project. I wish they look into the handling of the cable being brought in from Brazil or that again will subsidize another cash cow of the PPP cartel.

 

I am glad their plan for Health tourism is on ice since that specialty hospital was another of their schemes. We cannot maintain a good bed to patient count, provide maternal care to expectant mothers or properly deal with simple childhood diseases and they want to divert the nation's money to a specialty hospital to cater to foreign clients!

 

Lets have a good trauma and maternity center first and meet primary care needs  before we go down the road to these novelty health schemes. Let these crooks learn to invest their own money rather than piggybacking their entrepreneurial schemes on the taxpayers.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by D2:

. We cannot maintain a good bed to patient count, provide maternal care to expectant mothers or properly deal with simple childhood diseases and they want to divert the nation's money to a specialty hospital to cater to foreign clients!

 

Lets have a good trauma and maternity center first and meet primary care needs  before we go down the road to these novelty health schemes. Let these crooks learn to invest their own money rather than piggybacking their entrepreneurial schemes on the taxpayers.


 

 The main  contention of the specialty hospital is the source of funding , transparency and accountability . However , the idea of developing a state of the art specialty facility is a solid idea .

 

You simply cannot have effective primary care without supportive specialty services . Sure it would be easy to manage diabetes on a pimary care level but when a patient presents with an acute MI and there is no speciaist available to put in a cardiac stent which is superior to thrombolytics then there is a severe issue with patient mortality . Similary , it would be impossible for a primary care doc to manage Aoritic Dissection and other such emergent cases . Thus there exists an urgent need for specialists . Specialists in such a proposed specialty hospital would more than likely offer their expertise to the local population pro bono .

 

One of the reasons maternal care is at a poor level is beause of shotage of expertise . A patient presenting with an abruptio placenta for eg needs an urgent c section.. again a specialist would be the best person ..

 

Trauma cases ? Specilaist again . Don't expect the pcp to be able to perfrom a craniotomy on an epidural hematoma ?

 

Hydrocele ( favortite disease of some distasteful posters here ) , the pediatric or adult pt would most benefit from the expertise of a urology specialist  both outpatient and emergent .

 

The bottom line is that qualitty of life , adult , pediatric and  puerperal  mortality is enhanced by having specialists who are coordinated with primary care providers . And it is these same specialists who cater to an overseas clienetle who would be offering services to the local population , hopefully pro bono or at least at  extremely reduced cost . Local guyanese and the economy as well would benefit .

 

As long as there is transparency with regards to funds and expenditures , such a venture is a much needed initiative. 

 

 

FM

Why Build new hospitals? That create redundancies and immediately sets up the perception of separateness in providing health services. Let them add the facility to one of our present hospital and in that way bootstrap both if primary care is to be given comparable footing.

 

This is a medical tourism scheme. Its primary intent is not to service the local population. If that is the case let the entrepreneurs spend their own money. At minimum we can offer land and tax credit not our funds. That is what makes it a grift.

FM

I believe the PPP have the country's best interest at heart, however the way they are going ahead with encouraging economic development should be transparent. Right now they do not have the blessings of the tax payers to fund these projects as evidenced by their minority status in parliament. 

 

Naysayers and those looking to hold back Guyana for political gain must not be discounted as they too may have a point even if facetious.  Remember any development that is good for Guyana will be bad for the opposition, so one would not expect Ramjattan to cozy up to plans for development. The PPP have in the past squandered good will by being secretive and involved in shady deals.  

 

Ramjattan has many valid points in his analysis, however you will note that it is not entirely unusual for govt to step in and spur development by financing projects for the good of the nation.  It happens all the time, the various govts in the Carribean currently subsidizes the local airlines to squeeze out the competition. Hence the fall of Red Jet recently and soon to be fall of EZ jet. 

 

FM

Anyone who relives that Ramjattan knows anything about the feasibility of this project is delusional. This crap came straight from Robert Badal, owner of the sub-standard Pegasus.

Ramjattan in opposing this project is merely repaying Badal for helping to finance the AFC 2011 campaign.

 

Robert Badal endorses AFC

 

Businessman Robert Badal yesterday endorsed the Alliance For Change (AFC) to lead the next government, calling the party “the most credible option” to take the country forward.

“Today we have not only a clear choice but a responsibility to ourselves and to each other to support a change in government,” Badal said at an AFC news conference. “I am a businessman not a politician, but as a businessman and a citizen of this country it is my duty to say something is wrong when it is wrong, free of any fear of intimidation or victimisation,” he added.

According to Badal, an AFC-government led by Khemraj Ramjattan, Raphael Trotman, Moses Nagamootoo and adynamic team of young professionals would “restore decency and integrity to government, ensure transparency and accountability to Guyanese, and halt the accelerating web of corruption.”

FM

The use of government resources to boost the private sector is justified if it creates jobs and generate revenue for the state. This is a practice very common in the Great U S of A. I like the PPP of today. They no longer see the private sector as solely a repressive machinery against the working man and an enemy of the nation. The engine of economic growth must be maintained well.

 

 

Billy Ram Balgobin
 

Dear Editor,


Consequent upon what was released in Parliament, pursuant to questions asked concerning the proposed Marriott Hotel, the AFC feels vindicated in its original call for a thorough examination of NICIL and serious cross-examination of its Executive Director, Mr. Winston Brassington and even the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ashni Singh, who since ten years ago were two of the prime movers behind all the transactions and deals at NICIL. 

 

This examination must be done in the Economic Services Sector Committee as soon as possible. The AFC now understands too the reluctance of the PPP Government in accepting the new arrangement the Opposition parties seek to have in this Committee. It is afraid of the muck and grime which any such scrutiny will bring out.   As is well known, the Opposition parties want a 4/3 Committee rather than a 3/4 one.

 

From even a perfunctory gleaning of the documentation supplied and the answers to the questions, there is every indication that this proposed Marriott Hotel will result in Guyanese taxpayers being ripped off and some crony of the PPP will be fattened with a good deal.

 

Taxpayers’ monies, which are in NICIL’s accounts, are going to be used to substantially underwrite the financing of this proposed Hotel project.  From all indications the sum will be US$21M comprised of subordinate loan stocks of US$15M, US$4M in equity and US$2M which allegedly is already spent on design fees paid to, from reliable AFC’s sources, a close friend of former President Jagdeo, New York-based Pakistani Mike Ahmad and his team.

 

An additional sum of $27M, rated as a senior debt, is to be syndicated by Republic Bank. There is no disclosure as to who will be guaranteeing this. The AFC believes that ultimately this debt will be a Government obligation.

 

Documents released by the Minister of Finance on the proposed Marriott Hotel Project demonstrate clearly the PPP Government’s disposition of compromising the interest of Guyanese tax dollars.

 

In the case of a default, which is inevitable, the people of Guyana will lose, at the very least, US$21m. Why in configuring this arrangement our Government, who we trust to act in our interest and who are obligated to do so, would have NICIL’s interest(US$15m) subordinated to that of Republic Bank? Perhaps Mr. Jagdeo, Mr. Brassington or Mr. Ashni Singh would explain.

 

The next issue is that the Minister seems to think that NICIL and Atlantic Hotels Inc (AHI) are private companies in his claim that agreements between Atlantic Hotels Inc and Shanghai Construction Group International (Trinidad and Tobago) Ltd (SCG) prohibit disclosure of specified contract documents.

 

The Minister needs to be reminded that both NICIL and AHI are State companies created with taxpayers’ resources and therefore all transactions and commitments are subject to public scrutiny and must be made available for such. The terms and conditions of Republic Bank’s syndicated debt, terms and conditions of AHI’s subordinated debt, feasibility study by Marriott and the unnamed American firm, etc. must be submitted for public review. The Economic Services Committee of Parliament will review this deal and conduct a risk analysis to evaluate the huge burden the Government is bringing to future generations.

 

The next issue is why did AHI, without being properly capitalized, and therefore without the capacity to deliver, enter into a contract with SCG for the construction of a US$52m Hotel and a management agreement with the Marriott Chain? On the other hand, why did SCG, Marriott Chain and Republic Bank,  reputable entities, enter into “binding” agreements with AHI, a company with no business history, inadequate capital, and therefore no capacity to deliver? The AFC feels that this only happened because AHI is an instrument of the PPP Government! Lift AHI’s veil and aha it is the PPP and its cronies!

 

There is no commercial justification for this massive spending on a hotel when occupancy rates are so low in Guyana.

 

The foregoing issues are compounded by the lack of viability of this project. Many investments in the local hotel industry have gone bust because of low occupancy as well as the perennial issues of crime, unreliable and uncompetitive electricity, a dirty city, poor drainage, etc. which retard any development of local tourism, even among overseas Guyanese longing to visit their homeland. I recall the case of one investor group failing in its quest to buy Guyana’s iconic Pegasus Hotel for US$14m. They could not raise the required financing because the banks viewed it as too risky at that price. The proposed US$52m for the Marriott, a far cry from US$14m, has for 5 years failed to attract credible investors for the same reason. Two hotels are up for sale on Main Street, Georgetown and another on the East Bank (in which the Government put money) with no takers even at discounted prices!

 

At US$52m (amount tendered by SCG) and taking three years) with US$42m in fixed debt at a minimum of 10% interest per annum (more like 15% for that level of risk), AHI would have accumulated US$12.6m in three years without any income to pay debt-holders, and all of this  before commencement of operations.

This gives a cost of US$64.6m (without escalation in prices). With electricity cost of more than 20% of sales, labour cost of more than 15% of sales, management fees of 10% of sales to Marriott, and interest cost of US$5.4m per year, this project would not last 3 months of operation.

 

In fact it would not even cover 20% of its interest cost if it were to attract all the tourists who visit Guyana.  A taxpayers’ bailout will then be needed, just like the Skeldon Sugar Project and CLICO. And what will follow will be a sale to some friend of the Government at a knock down price!

 

In any case, no bank, local or overseas, would even consider a hotel in Guyana where the equity contribution is less than 50% (AHI has proposed 22% equity). It is therefore interesting to see the terms and conditions of Republic Bank’s syndicated loan.

 

If the Minister of Finance and the powers within Freedom House believe in the Marriott’s and unnamed American firm’s feasibility studies, let them put their own money on this project, not poor taxpayers. If indeed the feasibility is so glowing, why is the Marriott International not putting its money on this project? How paradoxical that a working class Government is going to fund a huge multinational!

Guyana has a strong and progressive private sector which given a good investment climate would invest in any viable venture which makes a good return.

 

The local banks are flush with liquidity and hunting for such projects. The hotel sector must be invested in by these private sector companies if the feasibility is so good. And unlike investments by the State, private sector investments have beneficial fiscal effects to the economy because import duties, VAT, corporate taxes etc will be paid.

 

Rather than focusing on building a hotel for Marriott International,  and then paying them 10 % to operate it, Government should focus and commit the very resources in addressing the everyday problems of poor infrastructure of roads, drainage, unreliable electricity, crime, public health, unemployment, poverty and hopelessness among our youths and migration. Some of this money should go into the University of Guyana to enhance a programme on Tourism.

 

The arrangements involving NICIL, AHI, Marriott, SCG, and the Government of Guyana raise serious questions of governance in the use of taxpayers’ money. NICIL has been used as a conduit for shady deals involving the powers that be in Government and their friends. This company headed by Winston Brassington and controlled by a board of Government Ministers under the direction of the President has diverted billions of taxpayer’s resources away from the consolidated fund and therefore away from Parliamentary oversight. No audit report on this entity was presented in the last 10 years.

 

The AFC is demanding that all funds of NICIL be transferred to the Consolidated Fund and a forensic audit be done. Instead President Donald Ramotar seemed averse to such enquiry in his recent declaration that NICIL has done nothing illegal. Mr. Ramotar needs to be reminded that his first duty is to the Guyanese people and there is no bigger urgency facing his administration than dismantling the thick web of corruption that has robbed the people of this country of a decent standard of living.

 

Yours faithfully,
Khemraj Ramjattan

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

I believe the PPP have the country's best interest at heart, however the way they are going ahead with encouraging economic development should be transparent. Right now they do not have the blessings of the tax payers to fund these projects as evidenced by their minority status in parliament. 

 

Naysayers and those looking to hold back Guyana for political gain must not be discounted as they too may have a point even if facetious.  Remember any development that is good for Guyana will be bad for the opposition, so one would not expect Ramjattan to cozy up to plans for development. The PPP have in the past squandered good will by being secretive and involved in shady deals.  

 

Ramjattan has many valid points in his analysis, however you will note that it is not entirely unusual for govt to step in and spur development by financing projects for the good of the nation.  It happens all the time, the various govts in the Carribean currently subsidizes the local airlines to squeeze out the competition. Hence the fall of Red Jet recently and soon to be fall of EZ jet. 

 

 

I agree 100 percent with BGuard on this.

He should be appointed deputy finance minister or presidential advisor. LOL

I always call a spade a spade.

Guyana can now move forward if politicians put the interest of Guyana first.

 

It appears that while the AFC was elected to create a balance in parliament, they are now behaving like the "old school politicians" and neglecting their role in parliament and this will harm them in the long run if the Guyana's economy continue to grow.

 

With serious allegations surfacing against RUMjattan, it has created serious doubts in the minds of many as to the role of this man in parliament and the image of the AFC.

FM

He read the proposal and is pointing out where it is a scheme. If you know otherwise tell us. The PPP has not denied the Government would not be the hedge to these business men loss while providing them with the lions share of the funding. The PPP has found a great way to finance its croneys...use government resources to help fund them  and guarantee their debts.

 

For once, let business men finance their own project and if the government is to be involved it is to use incentives that does not leave us with liabilities if these enterprises fail. We afford them reasonable rates on choice real estate and give them some tax incentive but we are not to collateralize their projects. That seeds  corruption and crony capitalism.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Accept one thing - the AFC and APNU will have to work with the same private sector that the PPP is working with. The private sector faltered and sunk under the PNC. The PPP has gone along with the wishes of the U.S. to strenghten Capital and abandon its uncompromising pro-working class stand. APNU's bullying ways will hinder progress and sink us deep into an abyss of economic destruction.

Does the AFC want to be part of APNU's scheme???

 

Billy Ram Balgobin

Like Buddy's Hotel, the nation only 5 *****, full to capacity that mek dem bais want build another hotel. Oh wait, they don't have any guests in there, and that was a Fagdeo-donated hotel, from the land up. Now these damn PPP fools want build another hotel? Full up the blasted Buddy's first to show that hotel rooms are needed to cater for all those eco-tourists.

FM
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Bruddaman,

 

Wait until the Tourists come then go and build more hotels.

 

That's strategic thinking.

 

Alas, building hotels in an already glutted market will not cause the tourist come running. I note Ramotar thinks he is preparing for the certainty of a discovery of oil! I guess we  are all entitled to our dreams but that does not mean we must allow the government to collateralize its crones against losses with the states money.

FM

Building new hotels that meet international standards will bring down the exhorbitant prices for rooms in those hotels that offer 1 star service at 4 star prices. More Guyanese returning home will choose to stay in hotels once competition hits the market. Smaller hotels will drop their prices and offer more deals on other things such as meals and drinks to attract people. For now, the little hotels are more focused on digging deep into the pockets of tourists without offering bargains to lure.  This is sad and must be corrected.

Billy Ram Balgobin
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Building new hotels that meet international standards will bring down the exhorbitant prices for rooms in those hotels that offer 1 star service at 4 star prices. More Guyanese returning home will choose to stay in hotels once competition hits the market. Smaller hotels will drop their prices and offer more deals on other things such as meals and drinks to attract people. For now, the little hotels are more focused on digging deep into the pockets of tourists without offering bargains to lure.  This is sad and must be corrected.

 The point is the government is not in the business to collateralize business. It facilitates them or should facilitate them in ways that does not incur debt to taxpayers. Address that which Ramjattan contested and quit wandering in the weeds to nowhere. The argument is not as to the cost of building hotels or even their demand. It is about crony capitalism by the PPP.

FM

Don't believe everything you hear that comes from the mouth of the opposition. They are there to oppose and opposing they are doing it without considering the interest of the nation. People have to be naive to believe the AFC and PNC can form a gov't that will do a better job than the PPP.  Ramjattan is on a campaign of misinformation and he will be exposed. PPP's protest votes that helped the

AFC did not come about as a result of corruption in national politics. It came about as a result of a feud between the executives of the party over leadership. This led to a small but significant split in the PPP.

Don't get too excited.  The PPP votes will return home in the next elections.

Billy Ram Balgobin
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Don't believe everything you hear that comes from the mouth of the opposition. They are there to oppose and opposing they are doing it without considering the interest of the nation. People have to be naive to believe the AFC and PNC can form a gov't that will do a better job than the PPP.  Ramjattan is on a campaign of misinformation and he will be exposed. PPP's protest votes that helped the

AFC did not come about as a result of corruption in national politics. It came about as a result of a feud between the executives of the party over leadership. This led to a small but significant split in the PPP.

Don't get too excited.  The PPP votes will return home in the next elections.

I not only believe them but have the example of the Berbice River Bridge where the strategy was in play.

FM

The Berbice River Bridge is a great investment in the future of the ancient county. I agree the tolls are too high, but that can be corrected. The US gov't has been attacked by its citizens and other institutions for wasting taxpayers money. I don't expect perfection the PPP but it's still the best deal we can find in the Guyana. The AFC's faith will tested on Friday. The Guyanese people will send them off in the horizon if they only connive the PNC.

 

Billy Ram Balgobin

It is as crooked a deal as a hakyia stick. No one disputes its necessity but the burden it has become as the people are fleeced by PPP implanted parasites.

 

 

Guyana is not the US. It makes nothing buys everything and with funds from the begging bowl economic strategy.

FM
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Bruddaman,

 

Wait until the Tourists come then go and build more hotels.

 

That's strategic thinking.

 

There are enough hotel rooms in GT and on the outskirts of GT to accomodate visitors/tourists. You don't build hotels at taxpayers expense and then HOPE that people will come. You gotta DO SOMETHING that will make people want to come.

 

*Cut down crime rates

*Keep the city clean

*Keep beggars out of the airport

*Develop a tourist-friendly atmosphere (signage, good roads, lighted streets, stoplights that work, constant electricity, building codes, cops that help without asking for bribes,) that's for starters

 


 

FM

Gmoney, d2 and others are factious. If the situation was reversed and the AFC were in power then these same critics would be making the argument that an international hotel is needed to provide the consumers with reputable lodging. Almost every nation in the Caribbean has international hotels except Guyana. And those nations face the same problems with crime, beggars, roads etc. I believe that the Marriot brand will put Guyana on the map for many who would thing about visiting but wary about the accommodations.  A flower shop man and dollar store owner are not strategic thinkers, they are in bunker down mode.

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

Gmoney, d2 and others are factious. If the situation was reversed and the AFC were in power then these same critics would be making the argument that an international hotel is needed to provide the consumers with reputable lodging. Almost every nation in the Caribbean has international hotels except Guyana. And those nations face the same problems with crime, beggars, roads etc. I believe that the Marriot brand will put Guyana on the map for many who would thing about visiting but wary about the accommodations.  A flower shop man and dollar store owner are not strategic thinkers, they are in bunker down mode.

Bai, abie need dah hotel donk hay like alyuh need datt moon station wah Gingerman waan gi alyuh.  Dem lil ilands gah nuff nuff tourist, and dem a pay alyuh rates up deh.  Princess deh always 50%, wah yuh tink anada wan gon do.  Abie tink PPP a tek revenge pon dem Pegasus bais.

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

Gmoney, d2 and others are factious. If the situation was reversed and the AFC were in power then these same critics would be making the argument that an international hotel is needed to provide the consumers with reputable lodging. Almost every nation in the Caribbean has international hotels except Guyana. And those nations face the same problems with crime, beggars, roads etc. I believe that the Marriot brand will put Guyana on the map for many who would thing about visiting but wary about the accommodations.  A flower shop man and dollar store owner are not strategic thinkers, they are in bunker down mode.

------------------

 

All fine. Let's have the Marriott. But why must the government out up the money. We must look after the flooding first.

FM

I borrowed to purchase Pegasus and do refurbishment and that’s how it should be with Marriott, President Jagdeo

 

Posted By Stabroek staff On July 28, 2010 @ 5:02 am In Letters 

 

Dear Editor,

 

Every country in the Caribbean takes pride in its hotels for the role they play in the local tourism industry, the backbone of its economy. Their industry has been built over many years of careful planning and execution. One thing the governments of these countries have in common is that they provide the infrastructure both physical and fiscal to spur private initiative of both local and foreign investors to invest in hotels and other components of the Hospital industry.

 

None of these Govern-ments use taxpayers’ money to build hotels for foreign companies and discriminate against local entrepreneurs. They encourage and support local hotels to refurbish, improve their standards, add rooms and build new hotels as the demand increases. There is no better policy strategy at a national level than providing a stable, certain and attractive fiscal environment that attract investments to particular industries.

 

Governments building hotels using taxpayers’ money for leasing to foreign Hotel Chains is not the best use of taxpayers’ money. Guyana with its narrow economic base and poor infrastructure of roads, unreliable electricity, poor drainage, rising crime, and uncontrollable migration should not even be thinking of building hotels for wealthy multinationals. Of more pressing need are clean water, reduced electricity rates, better health care, computers in schools for every secondary school child, a real highway to the airport, roads to the intermediate savannahs, and improved drainage in the city and the rest of our country. In addition, Government must, as a matter of priority restore long eroded independent democratic institutions to ensure transparency, accountability and fairness in the use of the national patrimony and resources. The repeated request by the private sector and other stakeholders for an independent integrity commission along the lines of the Trinidad model and the call for a Freedom of information Act have fallen on deaf ears while the President misuses our tax dollars for the benefit of his friends.

 

In my comments to the press last Friday I raised the issue of the increasing evidence that the Government of Guyana is squeezing out the private sector by unfair competition, and more directly that of the use of our taxpayers’ money to build a Hotel for the Marriott Group.

 

I take serious offence with Mr. Jagdeo’s outburst, among other comments, on the quality of water at the Pegasus Hotel and condensation in the rooms in reaction to my comments of serious governance issues in his misuse of our tax dollars. Let me remind the President that his Government has been a shareholder in the Hotel from its inception and that the primary responsibility for the supply of water to the nation rests with the Guyana Water Inc., a 100% state-owned entity. And is it not public knowledge that Pegasus is currently undergoing a US$8M upgrade that will bring this national forty-year-old icon to the very best of international standards of comfort and hospitality? Even as we do this no guest of the hotel has recently complained of room comfort or water quality. I invite President Jagdeo to stay at the Pegasus for a weekend with my compliments to see firsthand how guests enjoy themselves and why they keep coming back. It is highly unpatriotic for a President to criticise his country’s flagship hotel amid an audience that knows and fully appreciates the iconic role it has played on the Guyanese business landscape.

 

The Pegasus enjoys the highest level of occupancy of all hotels in Guyana, averaging 55-60% per annum compared with a national average of approximately 35%. If the demand for rooms increases we will mobilize the resources from local banks to add more rooms and expand facilities. It does not make economic sense to do so until then. When we do so the entire economy benefits, including the banks as well as the national coffers. Why since the President feels that the Marriott will bring more tourists doesn’t he ask his private partners and the Marriott to do likewise and borrow money instead?

 

A country whose people pay among the highest level of taxes in the world ought not to have their sacrifice squandered by its President for the benefit his friends and wealthy multinationals. If the Marriott’s shareholders so desire let them buy land on the open market and build their own Hotel. A Govern-ment’s overriding responsibility must be to its citizens and any public official who discriminates against any of them must be asked to resign.

 

Let me address a few issues that the President raised. Firstly, rates and taxes owed by Guyana Stockfeeds Inc. This company is always prompt in its discharge of rates and taxes obligations. The amount the President referred to relates to the land housing the Oil Mill transferred in late 2003 with accumulated rates which the Government did not settle on transfer of the land. The rest is the subject of  discussions with the Minister as the rates were arbitrarily increased 1000% after I took over the oil mill.

 

The Wharf the Company built cost $140m and benefits the livestock, rice and coconut industries tremendously by reducing the cost of transportation. It uses an access road 30ft by 100ft which my company has been using for the past 15 years. This narrow strip is not owned by NICIL as the President alleges. Why would the President have a problem with this?

 

The President claimed that I stole the Government’s shares in Guyana Stockfeeds Inc. He was referring to an issue of rights shares in 2002 in which the Government refused to take up the shares offered to it and which under the terms of the issue were purchased by other shareholders. This matter is the subject of litigation in the High Court. In addition to retaining some shares to harass the majority shareholders, it is now using its political bully pulpit to try to influence the court.

 

Mr. Jagdeo also alleges that I am afraid of competition. May I remind him that I have successfully dealt with competition all my life and have built highly competitive businesses even in the midst of deliberate and well known obstacles from his administration. He would recall refusing Guyana Stockfeeds concessions which he extended to another company owned by one of his friends.

 

My company has invested close to $4b in the last 12 years and is the market leader whose investments, careful planning and creative strategies spurred the rapid growth of the local livestock industry. The company boasts the most advanced value-added technology in the rice industry with its brand of parboiled rice, Angel, the Caribbean’s number one brand in supermarkets after just four years. In contrast the company which received lavish concessions went out of business for a long time and only by a Government guarantee (taxpayers’ resources) has it re-entered the market.

Competition is a way of life and every Government must ensure that competition in every sector is clean, fair, and non-discriminatory. I had to borrow money to purchase Pegasus and do refurbishment. Therefore the Marriott and Mr. Jagdeo’s undisclosed private partners must. Who really is afraid of competition by using taxpayers’ money?

 

No Head of State in the region abuses its private sector the way Mr. Jagdeo does. The very private sector which generates the economic activity that stimulates the economy, creates the funding for Government, and provides employment that builds and sustains families. In turn, these ensure social and economic stability and progress. In Jamaica, Trinidad and Barbados, the private sector plays an integral role in shaping the economic agenda of the country, is treated respectfully and as a partner, not a competitor.

 

Hopefully the Presidential hopefuls both within and outside the governing party will protest this aggression and abuse and make known their promise of accountability, transparency and prudent use of our taxes. This would finally signal a new order of politics in this dear land of ours.

 

Yours faithfully,


Robert Badal

FM

Ramjattan wants to be president BUt LACKS basic knowledge of Branding, Brand Name, GOODWILL COST, Franchise and basic Business Practices. He surely has a lot to learn. Hope by 2050 he will be up to speed

Nehru

Gov't is going the extra mile to encourage private investment in an industry that has a future in Guyana. What's the difference between reducing taxes levied on the hospitality industry vs. using taxes to spur growth in the industry??? Does it not translate to the same -- tax payers $$$ being used???

Billy Ram Balgobin
Originally Posted by Nehru:

I think any sane person will conclude that you ARE in FACT a DUNCE and is learning for FREE on GNI.

 

Our local ignoramus believes all caps can rescue his poor grammar.  

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

YOU ARE A DUNCE AND WILL ALWAYS BE ONE. TRY BRAIN SURGERY BUT I DOUBT IT WILL BE OF ANY HELP TO YOU.

--------------------------------------

 

I feel so sorry for our Richmond Hill ignoramus and buffoon because all caps do not add an intelligence content to his one liners. Please relax and try again. 

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

You ARE the one displaying IGNORANCE and STUPIDITY!!!

 

Try again. The all caps and one line are insufficient. Can you write one paragraph? Surely there are many bright people at community colleges in the US. Prove to us you are one of them. Thank you. 

FM

Add Reply

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