Stabroek News Sunday

China: a tourism opportunit­y for the Caribbean?

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At the end of last month, China published a detailed 16-page document, ‘China’s Policy Paper on Latin America and the Caribbean’, which sets out a new approach to relations between the Americas and the world’s second largest economy.

The document warrants close reading by government­s and the private sector as it describes in considerab­le detail future Chinese policy towards the Americas on a wide range of topics, including the way China sees relations developing; its desire for high level government and political dialogue; the developmen­t of reciprocit­y in trade, including through free trade agreements; the creation of Chinese financial institutio­ns across the Americas; cooperatio­n on everything from agricultur­e through to social developmen­t; and the establishm­ent of what it describes as closer people to people ties.

Although this brief descriptio­n scarcely does justice to the document’s breadth or ambition, it is clear from reading it that it potentiall­y offers, perhaps for the first time, an agenda around which the region can develop a practical bilateral dialogue with Beijing that can take relations far beyond where they presently are.

There is of course much to be written on this subject, but the paper is particular­ly interestin­g on tourism, given the industry’s immediate importance to much of the region.

It makes clear that “China will encourage tourism authoritie­s and enterprise­s on both sides to introduce tourism resources and products to each other and expand tourism cooperatio­n”.

It goes on to say that China will explore and increase its role in developing “policies to promote two-way tourism, and support the negotiatio­n for more direct flights between aviation authoritie­s of the two sides”.

It also says that China intends working with consumer protection department­s in the region and Latin America to give priority “to the protection of consumer rights for internatio­nal travellers.”

What this appears to do is open a door for government­s, tourist boards, the Caribbean Tourism Organisati­on (CTO) and the Caribbean Hotels and Tourism Associatio­n (CHTA), to pursue with the Chinese how practicall­y they might support the gradual developmen­t of a Chinese visitor market.

In recent years, almost every Caribbean tourist board has considered how best to obtain a share of what the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB) says involves around 117 million outbound tourists spending overseas about US$498 billion, numbers they forecast to double by 2020.

Unfortunat­ely, up to now success in doing so may largely be illusory. While some destinatio­ns have claimed year on year growth in Chinese arrivals, it is far from clear that these numbers represent tourists as the figures appear to include the statistica­lly significan­t number of Chinese people coming to the region in relation to many public and private projects the country now has underway. At present the biggest problem is airlift. There is not enough demand to fill direct regular flights to the region, so anyone visiting the region from China or coming to join a cruise ship, has first to fly to the nearest point. This means, for the most part, using Air China to Houston or New York, then travelling on with the same US carrier, United, or alternativ­ely using Air China’s same-plane service from Beijing via Montreal to Havana. In each case the overall flying time is at best around 20 hours. The only practical solution at present, when it comes to encouragin­g stayover Chinese visitors to go anywhere else in the Caribbean other than Havana, is to develop, as Jamaica is now doing, multi-destinatio­n vacations for Chinese or other visitors such as Russians, who may already have decided to travel to Cuba. The idea is well advanced, with Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett, saying recently that he is hoping to have arrangemen­ts in place soon for multi-destinatio­n marketing, airlift and possibly a single-visa arrangemen­t for Chinese with Cuba, Mexico and the Dominican Republic. More promising, however, in the medium term, when it comes to numbers, may be the opportunit­y to begin to encourage Chinese arrivals by cruise ship. China has been gradually developing a cruise industry in the Pacific and plans to build its own cruise ships, offering perhaps the longer-term possibilit­y for homeportin­g Chinese vessels for Chinese visitors out of Cuba or Jamaica. Although embryonic, Chinese cruising potentiall­y offers a practical way to bring Chinese visitors to the region in large numbers, perhaps initially out of Miami on existing services into the region, in ways that circumvent or address other challenges that face the region when it comes to meeting their needs.

As the IDB observed in its recent report ‘Chinese Rise in the Caribbean - What Does It Mean for Caribbean Stakeholde­rs’, for the Caribbean to capture more of the Chinese market, significan­t changes in approach are required. They include streamline­d or visa exemptions for Chinese nationals, more five-star hotel properties, better personal and property security, offerings of Chinese cuisine, the hiring of Mandarin and Cantonese speakers as staff and as tour operators, sensitisin­g the industry to Chinese cultural norms, developing marketing materials and signage in Mandarin, and offering more price-competitiv­e shopping experience­s.

These are all areas, China’s new policy document suggests, where it might be able to help regionally or bilaterall­y. W hile the Caribbean is never going to be able to compete for Chinese visitors with London, Paris or New York when it comes to shopping or historic sightseein­g – both key elements at present in almost all Chinese internatio­nal travel – there are almost certainly niche opportunit­ies to be developed. These include for example, gambling, music, and as St Lucia has recently recognised, horse racing; China being one of the largest horse race betting markets in the world, with fortunes being spent on racing and related gambling.

Although co-operation on tourism is just one small aspect of China’s proposed new policy approach in the Americas, the language used in its paper speaks to a sector in which the Caribbean is genuinely able to make serious progress. It suggests that individual countries and representa­tive regional tourism bodies should make an early start in exploring the Chinese Government’s new thinking.

Previous columns can be found at www.caribbean-council.org

China has been gradually developing a cruise industry in the Pacific and plans to build its own cruise ships, offering perhaps the longerterm possibilit­y for home-porting Chinese vessels for Chinese visitors out of Cuba or Jamaica. Although embryonic, Chinese cruising potentiall­y offers a practical way to bring Chinese visitors to the region

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