They Adjusted the Percentage. The Dollar Amount?

Belize’s leading business advocacy group is pressing the national government to deliver broader relief to strained consumers and enterprises, after a months-long push for fuel pricing transparency yielded only partial progress. Over the past two months, the Belize Chamber of Commerce & Industry (BCCI) has sent two formal communications to Prime Minister and Finance Minister John Briceño, centered on longstanding public and business frustration over the opaque system that sets retail fuel prices across the country.

The first advocacy effort came in an April 21, 2026 letter, where the BCCI laid out its core demands: the government should provide a full breakdown of how domestic pump prices are calculated, detailing the individual contributions of excise taxes, General Sales Tax (GST), environmental charges, fuel supplier commercial margins, and imported landed costs. The business group also called for the resumption of regular public publication of detailed fuel price structure schedules, a practice that had previously been discontinued.

In the letter, BCCI President Giacomo Sanchez emphasized that greater transparency would serve all stakeholders: it would allow the chamber to accurately update its member businesses, facilitate constructive public dialogue around energy policy, and empower ordinary Belizean households to make financial decisions based on clear, reliable information. He also requested a formal technical explanation of any active fuel price stabilization programs, including how the policies are activated, managed, and reflected in final prices paid by consumers.

By late May, the government had partially responded to the BCCI’s request, reinstating the publication of fuel price composition breakdowns. The chamber welcomed this step in a follow-up letter dated May 27, 2026, but made clear that core problems with the country’s fuel pricing system remain unaddressed. Fuel costs still rank as one of the top drags on household finances and business competitiveness across Belize, the chamber stressed.

The most pressing issue highlighted in the May correspondence is the disconnect between shifts in global crude oil markets and the retail prices Belizeans see at the pump. In recent adjustments, policymakers have cut the percentage-based tax burden on fuel, but the BCCI found that absolute dollar-denominated excise duties have held steady. This structure means that when global oil prices decline, the full benefit of those drops never reaches consumers or businesses at the pump.

According to the BCCI’s analysis, this pricing dynamic has kept transportation and energy costs artificially high across the country, feeding into broader nationwide inflation and raising operating expenses for every economic sector from agriculture to tourism. To address this imbalance, the chamber is urging the government to implement targeted short-term interventions to ease pressure on the productive sector and ordinary households. Its key proposal is a temporary cut to fuel excise duties, a change that would allow more of the savings from falling international oil prices to pass through to retail consumers.