Jamaica Gleaner

Hotel import bill estimated at $70b

New tourism-demand study shows path to business for local companies

- steven.jackson@gleanerjm.com

HOTELS IMPORT about one-third of their food and fixtures, on which they spend around $70 billion, which equates to opportunit­ies for local business to explore, according to a new tourism-demand study released Tuesday by the Tourism Linkages Council.

Specifical­ly, the study found that the annual business leakage to imports amount to $65.4 billion in the manufactur­ing sector and between $1.6 billion and $5 billion in the agricultur­al sector. Jamaica earns about US$2 billion ($240 billion) per year from tourism.

“With proper planning and smart linkages with the local economy, we can reduce leakage and help to retain the economic benefits of tourism. This will result in a more inclusive sector built on partnershi­ps that benefit all Jamaicans,” said Dr Wykeham McNeill, minister of tourism and entertainm­ent, at the Tourism Linkages Council media briefing in New Kingston.

Over the last two years, the linkages project facilitate­d direct contracts valued at $129.9 million with local suppliers of products and services. In addition, agro-tourism farmers’ markets resulted in contracts between farmers and the hotel sector valued so far at some $35 million.

Council chairman Donovan Perkins argues t hat t he focus should not be on past figures, but on the business linkage opportunit­ies that the demand study has brought to light.

“The local manufactur­ers didn’t recognise the opportunit­ies available,” said Perkins.

COMPETE AWAY IMPORTATIO­N

The study was commission­ed by the Ministry of Tourism and Entertainm­ent and funded by the Rural Economic Developmen­t Initiative managed by the Jamaica Social Investment Fund. The study sought to determine and quantify the existing and potential demand for goods and services and access for the agricultur­al, manufactur­ing, and entertainm­ent sectors in Jamaica.

“You can’t block importatio­n, but you can compete away importatio­n ...” said Dr Derrick Deslandes, a University of West Indies lecturer, adding that with the tourism study, farmers now know the weekly produce demand for precise hotels.

Chief executive officer of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica Dennis Chung described the 60-page study as a landmark as it produced logistics informatio­n that could improve linkages.

“When people talk of logistics, this is it. Markets operate on informatio­n ... this brings it all together,” said Chung.

Brian Pengelley, past president of the Jamaica Manufactur­ing Associatio­n (JMA), welcomed the study along with the linkages programme.

“We are seeing manufactur­ing grow, and a lot of it is coming from the work t hat is going on i n tourism,” said Pengelley. “I think that Government is doing a lot more than it did before, and we are now seeing the realisatio­n of that work.”

Kingsley Cooper, chairman of modelling and entertainm­ent company Pulse Investment­s Limited, similarly indicated that the study and work of the council would fos- ter increased linkages in entertainm­ent. The latest project includes the establishm­ent of economic zones across Jamaica to facilitate stage shows. Cooper, Pengelley, Chung, and Deslandes are all members of the Linkages Council.

The tourism sector plays an important role in the Jamaican economy, accounting for 6.4 per cent of gross domestic product in 2012. In 2014, about 7.1 per cent of the workforce was employed in hotels and restaurant industry alone. This represente­d an increase from the previous year’s rate of 6.8 per cent, according to data from the Planning Institute of Jamaica.

The tourism-demand study was conducted using a combinatio­n of approaches t hat included desk research, a survey of tourism-related businesses, and elite interviews with tourism-sector stakeholde­rs.

The Tourism Linkages Council, establishe­d by the minister of tourism in June 2013, comprises public- and private-sector partners.

 ??  ?? Donovan Perkins, chairman of the Tourism Linkages Council.
Donovan Perkins, chairman of the Tourism Linkages Council.
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