Region looks at multi destination tourism

over 1 year in TT News day

Antigua and Barbuda’s Minister of Tourism Henry Charles Fernandez has a simple message for Caribbean governments.
He wants regional leaders to be as committed to regional interconnectivity as they are willing to pay international airlines to fly to their countries, often times “half empty.”
“And so, we need to convince our leaders and by extension our people who put our leaders and ourselves there, the importance of this regional connectivity,” he said.
Fernandez’s comment comes amidst the ongoing debate in the Caribbean about the taxes that regional governments impose on the aviation sector and visitor arrivals.
[caption id="attachment_976122" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Tourists walk along a beach in Negril, Jamaica.[/caption]
He was participating in a panel on Multi-Destination Tourism as part of the Caribbean Tourism Organisation (CTO) Business Meetings and Caribbean Aviation Day conference held in Georgetown, Cayman Islands last week. It was jointly organised by the Barbados-based CTO, the Cayman Islands Government and the International Air Transport Association (IATA).
Fernandez, who also has ministerial responsibilities for economic development, said it is unacceptable for Caribbean governments to pay a US carrier to fly to their countries, “quite often half empty, but then say I have nothing to put into a regional carrier…
“There has to be a commitment that we must do it. We have to do it,” he said, noting “everything costs money, but we need to look further down as to what happens as people travel through the islands. Because when you travel to an island in the Caribbean, you’re really travelling to the Caribbean, and we have so much to offer, so many different experiences to share. And why are we holding back on that?”
He said that in addition to commitment, taxes are often cited as an issue affecting regional connectivity.
“I think it’s important to note that a lot of the airports, the taxes are hypothecated to pay back for that. So, you have everybody’s cramming to put a new airport and to put a new cruise port and so on. And to get the money you have to sign off your taxes.”
But he said despite that situation, the region must be willing to consider whether reduced taxes would translate to higher visitor arrivals, which would mean even more money from visitor spend.
[caption id="attachment_976125" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Caves in sedimentary rocks created by the Atlantic Ocean at North Point, Barbados. Phot by Pat Ganase[/caption]
Economist Marla Dukharan, who also participated in the panel discussion, said government ministers were better positioned to speak on whether their countries can afford to reduce the aviation taxes and if so, by what percentage.
She, however, said there are already “pockets,” such as the ABC Islands – Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao – as well as Dominica, Martinique and Guadeloupe, that have multi-destination tourism.
“You have this happening and perhaps that might be the answer – little pockets as opposed to one big pocket… It’s really about what we have to lose. Let’s look at that as opposed to also looking at what we have to gain.”
Dukharan said the Caribbean is “the most open region in the world” in terms of exports as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) and “for that reason, our economies depend so heavily on connectivity, air and sea connectivity.” But she noted that the Caribbean is also the most tourism-dependent region in the world.
“And so, for that reason, for the tourism sector, we need to solve this problem,” she said. She added that according to the Caribbean Policy Research Institute in Jamaica, in 2019, the tourism sector contributed a third of the region’s GDP directly, 53 per cent of total exports, 43 per cent of total employment and 40 per cent of the informally employed, noting that 40 per cent of all jobs in the Caribbean is in the informal sector.
“So, this sector needs to work well,” Dukharan said, adding that the Caribbean’s also the most expensive tourism destination in the world.
[caption id="attachment_976126" align="alignnone" width="930"] Economist Marla Dukharan[/caption]
To illustrate, Dukharan said that she went to the travel website Expedia and chose a random date – October 23 to the 29 – and looked at flights from Barbados to various destinations.
“We have in excess of 30, 40, and in some cases more, per cent of the total ticket cost that’s just taxes,” Durkaran said, adding that this is “just one slice of the pie but it is an important slice of the pie.
“This is something we absolutely have to address in this region, because it seems to me like instead of being a race to the bottom, we are a race to the top as it relates to taxes in this region,” she said, adding that regional air connectivity is important not just for tourism but also because the region is the most open in the world.
“We really have to think very seriously about this tax structure… And those who are the most profitable are the ones who need to shoulder a relatively larger share of the taxes than those who are least profitable when you are taxing the ticket,” Dukaran said, adding that she did not know which sector this is – whether aviation or accommodation or something else.
“You’re taxing everybody in the destination equally regardless of if you’re a taxi driver, or a five-star hotel – and that doesn’t make sense. And so, that is something I think we need to get right: the progressive nature of the taxation regime as opposed to what I see as a regressive taxation regime.”
Jamaica’s Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett acknowledged that the tax discussion is an important one that has been long in coming, recalling that in 2010, there was a discussion in the Cayman Islands that focused on convergence in the northern Caribbean.
He told the panel, tourism is a highly consumption-driven activity.
“And so, the question of, for example, taxation shouldn’t be a serious consideration for tourism because of who and what we are and what we do. Tourism for us is an export, but it’s an export that we import. So, it means that you have to provide the incentives for the import of your export.
“And taxation is, in my mind, anathema. And the reason that we can’t avoid the direct taxation, which increases the cost of travel, is that the purpose of travel is to consume and consumption is laced with economic returns and responses. At every step of the consumption chain, there’s revenue, revenue, revenue, revenue,” Bartlett said, noting also that in most instances there is the general consumption tax (GCT).
“The capacity to generate revenue from GCT is endless because it is linked directly into the consumption patterns.”
Bartlett said global economies that had been predicated on minerals and oil and other commodities are morphing into tourism.
[caption id="attachment_976118" align="alignnone" width="1024"] File photo/Roger Jacob[/caption]
“Dubai is your best example,” he said, adding that Saudi Arabia is spending enormous amounts of money to create the products of the Red Sea and Neon to build Jeddah “in a manner that you will never imagine.”
Bartlett said the covid19 pandemic has given the Caribbean the opportunity to reimagine tourism.
“Traditionally, tourism happened, it wasn’t structured, wasn’t programmed; it wasn’t planned… Now is the moment and we also realise that tourism and travel is influenced by economies of scale. So small destinations in non-contiguous locations across the Caribbean cannot benefit fully from the impact of tourism and travel,” Bartlett said, adding that the region has to find a way to recover from the pandemic and to recover well.
“And we cannot recover alone. It will not happen. So, the question is can we do it? The answer is an unqualified yes.
“But do we have the political will to do it? That’s the big elephant in the room. Because it means that we will have to forgo our great sense of sovereignty and nationalism. And begin to look at how we can collaborate and co-operate and stop competing and start ‘copeting’. Nice new word; ‘copetition’ instead of competition. And that’s the essence of what multi destination is going to be.”
He said to gauge multi-destination tourism which is to provide multiple experiences on one visit, at package price, it means the harmonisation of various protocols and policies.
“It means that our political leaders have got to understand that there is now going to be something called a single airspace in the Caribbean. So, we’re not charging to fly in Jamaica, over in Grenada, over in St Lucia … and the airlines have to pay for multiple air space planning as you move island.”
[caption id="attachment_976116" align="alignnone" width="1024"] File photo[/caption]
He said multiple-destination tourism in the Caribbean means that the region will have to look at visa facilitation so that there can be a single visa that allows for touristic travel.
“It means pre-clearance arrangements. So, when you land in Jamaica and you clear customs and immigration, you’re domestic into Barbados and St Lucia and Trinidad,” he said, acknowledging that reducing or eliminating aviation taxes in the Caribbean region is “a very touchy subject and it might cause a little problem somewhere else…
“I’m not saying taxes are to be eliminated. I’m saying taxes are to be reconfigured. In other words, instead of putting the tax to the visitor before they arrive, in other words, tax the import, tax it when it comes as the export because it is consumption.”
CTO chairman and Cayman Islands Tourism Minister Kenneth Bryan says he does not think it is “correct that we put all the pressure on my political colleagues.
“There’s other stakeholders in the room that also have to do some compromising here, because we do have our constituents to take care of.”
Bryan and his chairman of the CTO board, Rosa Harris, the Cayman Islands director of tourism were present, last Wednesday, when IATA vice president for the Americas, Peter Cerdá, said travel and tourism in the sector needs “more than just good sounding words and declarations.”
“We need action,” Cerdá told the conference as he presented a case for marketing the region as a single destination.
Barbados Tourism Minister Lisa Cummins was concerned that 56 per cent cost of an airline ticket to Barbados is made up of taxes, even as she sought to explain the reason for the situation.
“But let us break down where fees and charges go to in-country because the things that we want and the things that we have to be able to provide him with a price tag. That helps to support the airlines where we have incentive programmes and co-operative marketing programmes in the source markets,” she argued.
Cedar said to fly from Port of Spain to Barbados, taxes and fees account for 40 per cent of the ticket prices. In comparison, Lima, Peru to Cancun, Mexico, another beach destination, taxes and fees only represent 23 per cent.
Cummins suggested that “perhaps” the taxes should be reduced.
“Will they be reduced? That’s possible too, but at the same time, the other side of that is that what Barbados has experienced is that there has to be a balance between asking your destination to remove those charges and to reduce those charges that then contribute to the profitability margins of the private sector carriers which will be the airlines.
[caption id="attachment_976117" align="alignnone" width="1024"] File photo/Roger Jacob[/caption]
“So how do we find that balance between ensuring that airlines are profitable, and they are also able to benefit from the best support mechanisms that are being provided by the destinations?”
Bryan told the panel that the end game is “success,” adding, “but when we asked ourselves to say we are going to reduce our taxes, I want to know that they are just as committed to the long-term benefit for them from a sustainable standpoint of the aviation community than it is for us politically. So, this is not a one-side show.
“I am the representative and the chairman of the CTO and I represent my members. So, the stakeholders are going to have to come to this conversation and talk as well because they, too, will have many benefits.”
Bryan said that having pockets of multi-destination tourism in the region “is probably going to be the best way to get to this very difficult task as the whole region, but it might take a hub and spoke approach.
“We have about three to four pockets within our Caribbean region with some great infrastructure to facilitate the spoke and hub theory.
“We have Barbados, we have Jamaica, we have Bahamas and Cayman ready to compete and that allows the opportunity to service the other islands who are not necessarily in the position to do so. And see if those pockets work in its own right because the other factor we haven’t considered is the customer. Who’s the customer? What does the customer want?”
He said the pockets system can work along lineage lines, for example, noting that Dutch, English, French and Spanish are spoken among the 24 CTO member destinations.
 
 
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