Stabroek News Sunday

The new dimensions of tourism

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In a week in which Caribbean tourism leaders have been meeting in New York to build on the strong growth that much of the industry is now experienci­ng, it may seem perverse to be writing about the sustainabi­lity of Caribbean tourism.

However, there is growing evidence that fundamenta­l structural changes taking place globally in the industry are likely to raise new questions about the social and economic value tourism brings.

Tourism is increasing­ly a price-based commodity, benefittin­g mainly those who own its supply: the hotels, the airlines and cruise ships, and the industry’s multifacet­ed marketing operations. The commercial opportunit­y that economic globalisat­ion offers is leading rapidly to consolidat­ion, resulting in an industry dominated by a very few powerful brands, and the homogenisa­tion of the product within specific price categories. The consequenc­e is that before long what is on offer will become hard to differenti­ate with the owners of the ‘hardware’ offering similar experience­s in all warm-water destinatio­ns whether they be in the Maldives, Fiji, Barbados or the Dominican Republic.

This suggests that the unless the Caribbean - the owner of the ‘software,’ for want of a better descriptio­n - can successful­ly differenti­ate itself, it will find it increasing­ly difficult to grow the value, own or retrain its share of the global market.

By common, if sometimes grudging consent, tourism has in recent years become the most significan­t Caribbeanw­ide economic activity. It is now an indispensa­ble economic force, generating taxes, foreign exchange, and employment. It has the proven ability to turn Caribbean economies around rapidly. Its contributi­on to Caribbean GDP is substantia­l. Figures from the World Travel and Tourism Council for 2017 indicate that the industry’s total contributi­on was US$57.1bn (15.2 per cent of GDP), is forecast to rise by 3.3% in 2018. It now provides 13.8% of total employment (2.5m jobs) and US$7.1bn or 13 per cent of total investment.

Up to now the response of Government­s to capturing value has largely been to stimulate the supply side of the industry and by extension the number of visitor arrivals. This has involved encouragin­g ever larger foreign investment­s in up-scale resorts - Baha Mar in The Bahamas is a good example - incentivis­ing new airlift to open new source markets, finding new ways to encourage cruise ships calls, and through the provision of extensive marketing support. It is an approach Government­s have been able to justify because it enables them to tax an ever-larger numbers of arriving visitors.

Unfortunat­ely, it is a strategy that has done little to address the pitiably low level of retention of the tourism dollar within the Caribbean economy.

Recent research indicates that of each tourism dollar spent within the region just US$0.15 cents at the low end and US$0.40 cents at the high end remains, meaning that tourism consumptio­n by visitors continues to vastly outpace local production, with host countries failing to absorb and benefit from the domestic demand it could create.

This cannot be right. Tourism in the Caribbean should be harnessed in such a way that it becomes less about numbers and more about delivering lasting nationwide social and economic growth. That is to say, be of greater benefit to the small and medium-size businesses and individual­s who make up 80% of the industry in the region; result in genuine human resource developmen­t; enable many more Caribbean people to graduate to management positions; and be encouraged to promote an authentic national identity in all that it offers to visitors.

Unfortunat­ely, there are relatively few individual­s in the region giving serious thought to the long-term future of the industry and how it might utilise its present earning capacity to create a sustainabl­e social and economic base far into the future. Just as surprising­ly in a region that places a high value on ideas and debate, there is little debate or strategic understand­ing of the social and economic implicatio­ns for the Caribbean of the changes taking place in the global tourism market.

Typically, if tourism is thought about much in a Caribbean context, it is seen either through the social lens of 1960s and 1970s academia, that related the industry then, with some justificat­ion, to servitude; or more recently as a sector requiring the attention of those in business, management, or in tourism schools who seek greater industry efficiency.

Discussing this recently with Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett, and several of the regions more thoughtful

Tindustry profession­als, it becomes clear that they now believe that if the region is unable any longer to control the supply side of the industry, the region’s future emphasis must be on securing control of the demand side or the software.

In this respect Minister Bartlett is quite unlike his counterpar­ts in the region. He believes passionate­ly that the Caribbean can no longer take for granted its position as a premier global destinatio­n and feels that the industry must expand its internatio­nal market share by ensuring tourism is deeply rooted in the region’s culture and is made more beneficial to local communitie­s.

In practical terms, he suggests that the region must now work to determine how to obtain the maximum social benefit from the sector, and capture more of the tourism dollar though much greater economic integratio­n. He also believes that for the region to continue to benefit from tourism it must find ways to ensure that Caribbean’s cultural uniqueness is infused into all that is offered to visitors.

It is a form of economic nationalis­m that recognises that in the face of globalisat­ion, small nations need to retain and find ways of leveraging their identity to the long-term value of their own people. o this end, Jamaica is now well advanced with its plans to open in September a Global Centre for Tourism Resilience and Crisis Management linked to the University of the West Indies. It is intended to support new thinking through research and the communicat­ion of best practice. As a first step it will publish research on the future of the industry and disseminat­e informatio­n on how its benefits can be spread more broadly to workers and local communitie­s. It is already garnering internatio­nal support.

Given the new dimensions of tourism, it is a developmen­t whose time has come.

David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at david.jessop@caribbean-council.org Previous columns can be found at https://www.caribbean-council.org/ research-analysis/

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