Private investment activity across Guyana’s non-energy economy remains strong, supported by rising demand, improved infrastructure, and sustained policy stability.
Recent investment flows have been concentrated in housing, healthcare, logistics, tourism, professional services, and value-added agriculture. These sectors are benefiting from population growth, higher employment levels, and expanding domestic consumption.
Local investors continue to play a leading role, reinvesting profits into new developments and capacity expansion. Their activity reflects confidence in medium-term demand and operational conditions.
Foreign investors are also broadening their engagement beyond energy, entering sectors that support economic scale-up and diversification. Partnerships between local and international firms have become more common, facilitating skills transfer and capital mobilisation.
Financial institutions continue to support private investment through project financing, equipment loans, and working capital facilities. Credit growth remains closely linked to business confidence and investment planning.
Officials and analysts note that non-energy investment is increasingly critical to sustaining balanced growth and employment creation. As Guyana’s economy expands, diversification is helping reduce volatility and strengthen resilience.
The continued depth of private investment across non-energy sectors signals a maturing economy, where both public policy and private capital are reinforcing growth.