Kingston, Jamaica, 15 July 2026. A few hundred miles to the south, one of the world’s most dramatic economic transformations is under way. Guyana, a country of fewer than a million people, has gone from first oil discovery to lifting more than 900,000 barrels a day in barely a decade, and its economy has grown at rates almost without parallel. The question for Jamaica is not whether it can follow, it cannot, but what this nearby boom teaches about land, wealth and housing.
The honest starting point is difference. Guyana’s rise rests on an enormous offshore find and a small population over which to spread the proceeds. Jamaica has no such discovery and a very different economy. But regional booms send ripples, and the Guyanese experience offers a live case study in what sudden resource wealth does to a property market.
How a boom reshapes property
The most visible effect in Guyana has been on real estate. Office rents in the capital have multiplied since the boom began, and demand for housing, serviced land and commercial space has surged as international companies and workers arrived. This is the familiar pattern of resource-driven property inflation: activity concentrates in a few places, prices rise sharply, and the people already living there find their neighbourhoods transformed and, often, less affordable.
Guyana has also faced a labour dimension with regional reach. Its rapid growth has created skill shortages, and it has drawn technical workers from across the Caribbean, including Jamaica. For Jamaica’s housing market, the effect of skilled emigration is subtle but real: it can ease pressure at home while shifting remittance flows, which in turn shape who can afford to buy and build.
The lessons that travel
Beyond the direct effects sit the cautionary ones. Guyana’s boom has been shadowed by the classic concerns of resource economics, the risk of inflation, of institutional strain and of wealth concentrating in ways that leave ordinary citizens behind. Debate there has centred on how aggressively to draw down the sovereign wealth fund, a reminder that the hard part of a windfall is not earning it but managing it for the generations that follow.
For Jamaica, watching a neighbour navigate these questions is more useful than dreaming of the same fortune. It shows what happens to land values when capital floods a small economy, and it underlines the importance of housing supply, planning discipline and intergenerational thinking, the transfer of secure ownership from one generation to the next, which is where lasting household wealth is built. A boom that is not matched by supply and sound institutions tends to enrich holders of existing assets while pricing out everyone else.
Dean Jones, founder of Jamaica Homes, said the value lies in observation rather than envy. “Guyana is running an experiment the whole region can learn from,” he said. “The lesson for Jamaica is not to wish for oil, but to see clearly how quickly money can distort a housing market, and to build the discipline that protects ordinary owners before, not after.”
A neighbour worth watching
Guyana’s boom will keep reshaping the regional economy for years, influencing investment flows, labour movement and the confidence of capital across the Caribbean. Jamaica’s most sensible response is neither imitation nor indifference but attention. The island’s property future will be decided by its own choices about supply, planning and resilience. A neighbour’s windfall is a chance to learn those lessons at someone else’s expense, and to apply them at home before any comparable pressure ever arrives.
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