Politics, Business & Culture in the Americas

Guyana: A 2026 Snapshot

AQ tracks key indicators and political and economic trends to watch in 2026.
Reading Time: 2 minutes

This article is adapted from AQ’s special report on the Trump Doctrine

Guyana

PRESIDENT

Irfaan Ali

IN OFFICE

Since 2020

Ali continues to navigate Guyana’s oil boom following his reelection for a second five-year term last September, and his People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) is facing a new opposition party, We Invest in Nationhood (WIN). An ally of the Trump administration, Ali posted on social media following the U.S. military operation in neighboring Venezuela that “Guyana supports efforts that uphold democratic norms and ensure that the region remains a Zone of Peace.” His government aims to fully digitize most state services by mid-2026, modernize the public assistance system, establish daycare centers around the country, and launch a $200 million development bank targeting small and medium-sized businesses. The IMF projects an average 14% GDP expansion annually over the next four years, driven by growth in both oil and non-oil sectors. Last year, crude output reached 900,000 barrels per day, up from just 15,000 barrels per day in 2019, after ExxonMobil’s fourth oil project started production. 

GDP GROWTH

INFLATION RATE

KEY FIGURES

Population (2026, millions)0.8
Poverty rate (2023, IDB definition, see note below)58.0%
Unemployment rate (2024)10.2%
Informal employment rate (2019)51.0%
Secondary education completion rate (2021)56.4%

ECONOMIC INDICATORS (2026 PROJECTIONS)

GDP growth (annual % change)23.0%
Inflation rate (annual % change)4.4%
Fiscal balance (% GDP)-4.5%
China’s share of total export value (2024)0.6%
U.S. share of total export value (2024)15.0%

NOTES: Poverty line is $6.85 per day in 2017 PPP. Percentages rounded to nearest decimal point.

SOURCES: GDP growth, inflation, fiscal balance, population: IMF (Oct. 2025); Share of total export value: International Trade Centre; Poverty rate: IDB (2024); Unemployment rate, informal employment rate: ILO; Secondary education completion rate: IDB. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Emilie Sweigart

Reading Time: 2 minutesSweigart is an editor at Americas Quarterly and a policy manager at the Americas Society/Council of the Americas

Follow Emilie Sweigart:   LinkedIn  |   X/Twitter


Tags: 2026 Trends to Watch, Guyana, Irfaan Ali
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