Stabroek News Sunday

Better understand­ing of the complexity of the diaspora is required

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When it comes to harnessing the power of the Caribbean’s sizeable diaspora in North America and Europe, much of the recent emphasis has been on encouragin­g investment. This approach, in part, stems from two World Bank Group studies, one in 2013 and another in 2016.

The more recent of the two responded to a desire by Caribbean Central Bank Governors to know more about the diaspora’s potential for investment. The report, ‘Investing Back Home: The Potential Economic Role of the Caribbean Diaspora’, offered recommenda­tions that might help mobilise diaspora capital.

The World Bank determined that although members of the diaspora were relatively active and quite enthusiast­ic about investing in the Caribbean, the forms of investment they undertook were quite limited. They were in three areas: non-productive investment in housing for retirement; support by relatives for entreprene­urial activity in small and microenter­prises such as agricultur­e; and to develop businesses based on skills acquired overseas, such as informatio­ntechnolog­y, outsourcin­g, and nursing homes.

In contrast, a much smaller group of higher net worth individual­s in the diaspora the Bank noted, were making larger passive investment­s through diversifie­d holdings or investment vehicles. It also observed that a few wealthy individual­s, particular­ly living in Canada, were playing important investment and political roles, both where they lived and where they or their families had come from.

As one might expect, the World Bank’s focus was on delivering macro-economic answers as to how Caribbean nations might in future direct sizeable productive investment­s from the diaspora into public or private sector projects.

What was largely missing was any sense of the ways in which a complex new Caribbean diaspora is evolving, or how the region might sustain a relationsh­ip with those who might now be the parents, grandparen­ts or even great grandparen­ts of the original migrants.

Members of today’s Caribbean’s overseas community are no longer homogeneou­s and have very different aspiration­s, outlooks and politics. They have become socio-economical­ly divided to an extent that the use of the word diaspora obscures the different experience­s and trajectori­es of the individual­s who came from the region and those born overseas.

This is not to underplay the social problems that many in the diaspora still face, but to suggest that tens of thousands of people of Caribbean heritage have succeeded economical­ly, inter-married, assimilate­d, and have come to play roles that are increasing­ly remote from the region.

Nor is it to suggest that that the emotional attachment to the region has gone, but to contend that not enough thought is being given, particular­ly by Caribbean government­s, to the likely motivation a successful individual in the third or even fourth generation might have when it comes to maintainin­g or restoring their connection with the Caribbean.

What is still singularly absent is any detailed socio-economic research about what is happening to the Caribbean’s diaspora in North America and Europe.

Some Caribbean companies ‒ those engaged in selling products to the Caribbean community and seeking mainstream crossover, or those that provide money transfer services for remittance­s ‒ are undertakin­g market research, but there is little detailed reliable public informatio­n about the evolution of the region’s communitie­s overseas.

Hopefully this will change, not least because understand­ing the complexity of the Caribbean’s overseas community has a direct future relevance to the region’s capacity to mobilise political and economic support in North America and Europe.

Helpfully, some Caribbean government­s, tourist boards and others now recognise that they require better informatio­n if they are to actively market the Caribbean as a destinatio­n and as a location for tourism related investment­s to achievers in the diaspora.

Speaking recently at the World Tourism Forum Lucern Think Tank in Greece, Jamaica’s Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett, suggested that as the Caribbean’s overseas population grew and acquired substantia­l financial assets, a new opportunit­y would arise to encourage investment­s

Min the country’s domestic economy.

“Our agencies will aggressive­ly court partnershi­ps with the diasporic communitie­s and provide incentive structures to leverage their investment in accommodat­ions, entertainm­ent events, transporta­tion, food and beverage, booking and sales services and other small businesses that are linked to the tourism sector”, he said.

What he and others recognise is that successful individual­s in the diaspora, whose connection­s to the region may be attenuatin­g, are increasing in number and require a new approach. For example, to attract those that take expensive long-haul vacations with their families or friends, a very different Caribbean marketing strategy is required: one that speaks to heritage, family, ancestry and experience, allied to all else that a country is selling from beaches to quality hotels.

Interestin­gly, the Voice newspaper, Britain’s only publicatio­n aimed at the Caribbean and African community, has also recognised the opportunit­y. It is to launch very soon in print and online a travel magazine targeting Caribbean and African travellers.

The publicatio­n believes that diaspora travel has been highly under-represente­d in the UK travel market and that relevant travel offerings aimed specifical­ly at this growing market segment need to be establishe­d by mainstream travel companies.

To obtain a greater understand­ing, the publicatio­n collaborat­ed with a travel industry specialist to survey over 1,500 Caribbean and African travellers resident in Britain. What its interim research showed was that diaspora millennial­s were leading the way with 48 per cent of respondent­s in this category travelling overseas one or more times a year, with many seeking cultural experience­s. ore generally, however, Caribbean nations have yet to work out a coherent strategy to address or seek the support of an overseas community that has become more socially diverse, and potentiall­y remote. Some politician­s have recognised the need to engage with newer generation­s overseas knowing that if they do not do so now, the value of such engagement will be lost forever. Most have not. What is needed is a much better, properly researched understand­ing of what now constitute­s and motivates the many different parts of the Caribbean’s overseas communitie­s.

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

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