Searchlight Logo
special_image

    • News
      • Front Page
      • News
      • Breaking News
      • Press Release
      • Features
      • Special Features
      • From the Courts
      • Sports
      • Regional / World
    • Opinions
      • Editorial
      • Our Readers’ Opinions
      • Bassy – Love Vine
      • Dr. Fraser- Point of View
      • R. Rose – Eye of the Needle
      • On Target
      • Dr Jozelle Miller
      • The World Around Us
      • Random Thoughts
    • Advice
      • Kitchen Corner
      • What’s on Fleek this week
      • Health Wise
      • Physician’s Weekly
      • Business Buzz
      • Hey Rosie!
      • Prime the pump
    • ePaper
    • Obituaries
      • In Memoriam / Acknowledgement
      • Tribute
    • Contact Us
      • Advertise With Us
      • Letters To The Editor
      • General Contact Information
      • Contact our Webmaster
    • About Us
      • Interactive Media Ltd
      • St. Vincent & the Grenadines
    • Subscribe
    • News
      • Front Page
      • News
      • Breaking News
      • Press Release
      • Features
      • Special Features
      • From the Courts
      • Sports
      • Regional / World
    • Opinions
      • Editorial
      • Our Readers’ Opinions
      • Bassy – Love Vine
      • Dr. Fraser- Point of View
      • R. Rose – Eye of the Needle
      • On Target
      • Dr Jozelle Miller
      • The World Around Us
      • Random Thoughts
    • Advice
      • Kitchen Corner
      • What’s on Fleek this week
      • Health Wise
      • Physician’s Weekly
      • Business Buzz
      • Hey Rosie!
      • Prime the pump
    • ePaper
    • Obituaries
      • In Memoriam / Acknowledgement
      • Tribute
    • Contact Us
      • Advertise With Us
      • Letters To The Editor
      • General Contact Information
      • Contact our Webmaster
    • About Us
      • Interactive Media Ltd
      • St. Vincent & the Grenadines
    • Subscribe
One Region
April 1, 2014

Re-thinking Caribbean tourism again

Most of the Caribbean tourism groups have claimed the recent change in the Air Passenger Duty (APD) as “a complete victory” for the Caribbean. The ‘victory’ is hardly ‘complete’, if it is a ‘victory’ at all.{{more}}

Essentially, the British Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, has eliminated bands C and D from the APD application. There are now only two bands, A and B. Band A covers Europe and Band B now covers all long-haul flights. This new policy will take effect from April 15, 2015.

Flights to the Caribbean from Britain will fall into Band B and this means that the level of the APD applied by the British government will be reduced. However, the unfairness of the procedure for measuring the APD will still apply, and that is one of the crucial factors about which Caribbean governments and authorities had complained bitterly.

The unfairness is that the APD is measured from London to the capital city of the destination to which an aircraft is flying. Therefore, passengers on flights to Jamaica, Barbados or Antigua and Barbuda will pay an APD rate that is higher than passengers flying to more distant destinations, such as Los Angeles or Hawaii. The reason is that the APD on all flights to any part of the US, however distant, is calculated only to Washington.

Given that, when the APD was introduced, it was justified as “an environmental tax,” the higher taxes on destinations in the Caribbean that are shorter than longer flights to far points in the US, reveal its disingenuousness. Pure and simple, the APD was introduced as a revenue measure. In 2012/2013, it brought £2.9 billion into the British Treasury.

But the earnings from the APD may have cost the British economy more in lost revenues from tourists to the UK who opted to go elsewhere because of the effect on the tax on the cost of their airfares. For instance, Dale Keller, chief executive of the Board of Airline Representatives UK, said: “The government has finally acknowledged what the industry and business knew all along – that the highest rates of aviation tax in the world were a brake on driving the UK’s economic growth with emerging markets.” In other words, the British government’s decision in adjusting the bands was motivated much more by its domestic financial welfare than as a response to lobbying from external interests, including the Caribbean.

A coalition of groups campaigning against the APD in the interest of British tourism told the British Chancellor earlier this year: “We believe strongly that increases in three of the four APD bands, and year-on-year rises in the APD take are making the UK economy increasingly uncompetitive.” British Air Transport Association also pointed to actions taken by Britain’s nearby competitor nations: “Germany has frozen its equivalent tax and the Republic of Ireland has scrapped its version.”

Britain’s national tourism agency, ‘VisitBritain’, says that tourism is Britain’s fifth largest industry, supporting three million jobs and over 200,000 small and medium sized enterprises, as well as contributing £127 billion to the country’s GDP each year. Therefore, the British economy needs tourism and the APD applied to tourists from long-haul destinations, such as China, India and Japan, was restricting an increase in their numbers. The British Prime Minister David Cameron, has publicly stated that tourism “is one of the best and fastest ways of generating the jobs we need so badly.”

So, while Caribbean tourism bodies are right to have fought as hard as they did for a change in the APD and this will help to ease the strain on British tourists coming to the Caribbean, the region should recognise that the British government was acting in its interest, not theirs. Further, getting a reduction in the APD charged by one of the destinations from which tourists travel to the Caribbean is a mere scratch on the surface of a deeper problem with Caribbean tourism that needs a holistic and urgent approach if the industry is to expand and thrive for the benefit of Caribbean economies.

Here is a statement made by a Prime Minister: “We’re going to be a government that understands the huge potential of our tourism industry, that gets tourism and that gives the industry the backing that it needs.” That statement was not made by a Caribbean leader whose country depends on tourism for more than 60 per cent of its GDP – as is the case now in most of them. It was made by the British Prime Minister in relation to Britain.

In the Caribbean, tourism is increasing to two destinations – Cuba and the Dominican Republic. Such growth as the English-speaking Caribbean counties has witnessed has been marginal and not sufficient to create the number of jobs or earn the extent of foreign exchange that they require. Realistically, Caribbean tourism is in the doldrums, despite the best efforts and deep commitment of leaders of regional organisations such as the Caribbean Tourism Organisation and the Caribbean Hotels Association.

There is an urgent need for new thinking by all, but especially by planners and decision-makers in Caribbean governments. The tourism plant in the region requires rejuvenation and reinvigoration – and this applies not only to large resorts, but also to small and medium-sized hotels; there also has to be a complete re-think of incentives provided by governments to enterprises in all aspects of the industry on a common basis throughout the region in order to achieve the high level of product development that is absolutely necessary; issues such as safety have ratcheted up the scale for priority attention, and so, too, has the matter of service – a deeper, more psychologically educational approach should be adopted; expanded and more comfortable airports are useful, but they will quickly become white elephants if the more important aspects of tourism with which the tourist interacts once in the country do not match or surpass the facilities offered by competing countries. Recognition by Caribbean governments that reduction or elimination of their own myriad taxes imposed on air fares would also boost tourism would be an immediate benefit.

Then, there is the matter of overseas representation, both at the diplomatic and tourism levels. Since tourism contributes more than 60 per cent to Caribbean economies, its vital importance demands that the region’s best people be in the forefront of its advancement – the purpose and composition of all overseas representation should also be tackled as part of “re-thinking Caribbean tourism.”

(The writer is a Consultant, Senior Fellow at London University and former Caribbean diplomat)

  • FacebookComments
  • ALSO IN THE NEWS
    Former MP Selmon Walters to be laid to rest Today
    Breaking News
    Former MP Selmon Walters to be laid to rest Today
    Forrest 
    November 1, 2025
    Former Minister of Government and Diplomat, Selmon Walters, will be laid to rest on Saturday, November 1,2025 following a funeral service at the New L...
    PM Gonsalves confident  of election victory in  November
    Front Page
    PM Gonsalves confident of election victory in November
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    With general elections set to take place in St Vincent and the Grenadines on November 27,2025 leader of the Unity Labour Party, Dr Ralph Gonsalves, is...
    Tax reductions, increased pay  top list of  Independence ‘goodies’
    Front Page
    Tax reductions, increased pay top list of Independence ‘goodies’
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    Tax reduction, increase in allowances, and promotions are among the main features in what is commonly referred to as the Independence “goodies bag” an...
    Election  machinery  in high gear
    Front Page
    Election machinery in high gear
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    As the Vincentian electorate prepares to go to the polls in general elections on Thursday, November 27, 2025, the wheels involved in the electoral pro...
    Man found in Fenton Mountain was strangled, devastated family says
    Front Page
    Man found in Fenton Mountain was strangled, devastated family says
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    The family of a 24- year- old male, who allegedly was strangled to death and his body left at the Fenton Mountains in a car alongside that of a woman,...
    Cultural Ambassadors ‘Elated’ on their elevation
    Front Page
    Cultural Ambassadors ‘Elated’ on their elevation
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    Recognised among eight cultural ambassadors last Monday, October 27,2025, carnival mas band leader of High Voltage, Kingsley “Whiteman” Collis, and mu...
    News
    NDP’s Shevern John outlines plans for North Windward
    News
    NDP’s Shevern John outlines plans for North Windward
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    New Democratic Party(NDP) candidate, Shevern John, has outlined numerous plans for the constituency of North Windward which she is contesting in the u...
    Gibson-Velox proclaims longevity for a victorious NDP
    News
    Gibson-Velox proclaims longevity for a victorious NDP
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    The candidate of the New Democratic Party (NDP) for the West St George Constituency, Laverne Gibson-Velox claims that St Vincent and the Grenadines is...
    Civil war in Venezuela a problem for SVG says PM Gonsalves
    News
    Civil war in Venezuela a problem for SVG says PM Gonsalves
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    A civil war, or any war in Venezuela will not only be problematic for the Nicolas Maduro-led nation but will create serious security concerns for coun...
    Chauncey/Kingstown man breaks into prison, gets one year jail time
    From the Courts, News
    Chauncey/Kingstown man breaks into prison, gets one year jail time
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    A man from Chauncey and Kingstown who broke into His Majesty’s Prison and was trapped inside for approximately two hours after he was unable to escape...
    Government dissatisfied with developers on Canouan
    News
    Government dissatisfied with developers on Canouan
    Webmaster 
    October 31, 2025
    Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves has indicated the need for a serious conversation with the developers in the north of Canouan, as things are not goi...

    E-EDITION
    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    Subscribe Now
    • Interactive Media Ltd. • P.O. Box 152 • Kingstown • St. Vincent and the Grenadines • Phone: 784-456-1558 © Copyright Interactive Media Ltd.. All rights reserved.
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok