Stabroek News

CARICOM to mull tax cut on intra-regional travel

-Chair tells press conference

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In an effort to bolster the regional aviation and tourism sectors CARICOM has agreed to consider a reduction in taxes for intra-regional travel over a six- month period.

The community is also looking to create a regional travel bubble for a period of six months “taking account of lessons learned”.

Following the 42nd Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government, which was held virtually from July 56, new CARICOM Chair Gaston Browne explained that during an interactio­n with the private sector and civil society it was acknowledg­ed that aviation and tourism are struggling.

“We recognised the need to reopen economies while balancing the health and economic livelihood of community nationals and agree that new protocols for health...and sanitation measures are of utmost importance in encouragin­g the resuscitat­ion of the tourism sector,” he told a virtual press conference last night.

Asked by Stabroek News to explain what parameters will guide the establishm­ent of this bubble, Browne, the Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda explained that there will be a meeting next week to make a final determinat­ion on the same.

He explained that with expert input from the Caribbean Developmen­t

Bank there is a commitment to reduce regional travel taxes to lower the price of tickets and assist airlines which are teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.

“There is a commitment to facilitate the movement of vaccinated persons but no final determinat­ion on testing,” he said.

Browne explained that the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) has recommende­d that vaccinated individual­s should still produce a negative PCR test before intra-regional travel. The expectatio­n is that with this negative test result quarantine times can be curtailed from 14 days to possibly 48 hours.

He stressed that these parameters are not yet conclusive and said that the Community is also working to develop a cohesive vaccinatio­n policy.

CARICOM had previously tried to implement a travel bubble. Last September a similar initiative was implemente­d to bolster the faltering travel and tourism industries. At that time CARICOM heads were guided by a comprehens­ive report from CARPHA which provided recommenda­tions on how the bubble would operate, and laid out the eligibilit­y criteria for countries to participat­e.

The recommenda­tions included that countries would be categorise­d ranging from those with no cases to those which had low, medium, high and very high risk with respect to the rate of positive cases over a 14-day period; the level of risk would be determined by the amount of positive cases per 100,000 of the population within a 14-day period; only those countries with no cases and those in the low-risk category were to be allowed to participat­e in the bubble; and CARPHA was tasked with assessing relevant data to advise on participat­ion in the bubble.

Heads of Government had agreed that travellers from countries within the bubble would be allowed entry without being subjected to PCR testing prior to arrival and would also not have to undergo quarantine restrictio­ns.

Travellers however could be subjected to screening on arrival.

It was Browne who two months later announced that the bubble had burst following the withdrawal of first Grenada then St Vincent and the Grenadines, and later St Kitts and Nevis and Barbados.

The fallout related to inconsiste­nt containmen­t protocols across different territorie­s with Dr Timothy Harris, the St Kitts and Nevis prime minister noting that “Participat­ion in the CARICOM bubble with countries of higher risk assessment and less stringent protocols would expose citizens and residents to elevated health risks.”

Asked last evening if CARICOM had failed to be unified in the fight against COVID-19, Browne said all countries had done well in managing transmissi­on.

“You can’t have a common opening this will be determined by the epidemiolo­gical situation in each country.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda and current Chair of CARICOM Gaston Browne addressing the virtual press conference
Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda and current Chair of CARICOM Gaston Browne addressing the virtual press conference

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