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Cuba - Tourism Threat to Jamaica?

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  • Cuba - Tourism Threat to Jamaica?

    Source: USA Today
    http://www.usatoday.com/travel/desti...-tourism_N.htm

    Cuba tourism reached record levels in 2008

    HAVANA (AP) — Cuba saw record tourism in 2008 that generated more than $2.7 billion in revenue, a 13.5% increase over the previous year, the government reported.

    Some 2.35 million foreigners visited the island last year, 9.3% more than in 2007, according to a National Office of Statistics report posted online this week. The visitor surge helped the industry earn about $326 million more than it did in 2007.

    The report did not say how much profit the sector generated.

    Cuban tourism has remained strong while visitors to other Caribbean destinations have dropped amid the world financial crisis. International travel operators say the island remains popular because many visitors can buy relatively cheap, all-inclusive packages and can budget trip costs well in advance. At the same time, the financial crunch has not yet hit hard in Canada, the top source of Cuba's visitors.

    Washington's nearly 50-year-old trade embargo effectively bans U.S. tourists from Cuba. But Britain, Italy, Spain and Germany follow Canada as the top suppliers of tourists.

    The banner year for tourism came after foreign visitor rates dipped in 2006 and 2007. The government offered no explanation for the decline, but the island has relatively low returning visitor rates. Some tourists complain of poor service, spotty infrastructure and lousy food, indicative of a communist system where shortages are common and state employees feel little motivation to excel at their jobs.

    State media reported Monday that Cuba's nickel industry out-earned tourism in 2008, becoming the top source of government revenue for the second straight year. The government didn't say how much income the nickel industry generated.

    Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  • #2
    More on the Cuban "Threat" (?)

    Source: Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/lifes...rpc=22&sp=true

    Taken from the article below: "A study for the International Monetary Fund estimated that as many as 3.5 million Americans could visit Cuba annually if the travel ban was lifted."


    Cuba readies for possible influx of U.S. tourists

    Sun Apr 12, 2009 1:10pm EDT
    By Jeff Franks

    VARADERO, Cuba (Reuters) - Behind the mangroves that skirt the blue waters of Cuba's Bay of Cardenas, a 1,500-slip marina is taking shape as the island's tourism industry braces for what could be its biggest challenge yet.

    The Americans are coming -- or they may be, soon.

    Rock jetties jut out into the bay and beyond them a plot of land the size of several football fields is taking shape, reclaimed from the water as part of a big new marina project at Varadero, a beach resort 80 miles east of Havana.

    "The Americans will come here in their yachts and they'll put them in the marina," said a security guard, gesturing to the earth-moving and sand-dredging behind the mangroves.

    "It's so close, they're expecting a lot of them," he added, referring to the United States just 90 miles away.

    The United States and Cuba have been separated by a wide ideological gulf since Fidel Castro's 1959 Revolution.

    For most of that time, Americans have been prohibited by their own laws from traveling to the communist-led Caribbean island under a 47-year-old U.S. trade embargo.

    But that may change. Legislation to free travel by Americans to Cuba is pending in the U.S. Congress, and backers expect it could be approved in what they see as a developing thaw in U.S.-Cuba relations under U.S. President Barack Obama.

    "If the travel ban is lifted, you'll probably see hundreds, hundreds of American yachtsmen going to Cuba the next day," said Timothy Ashby, a former U.S. Commerce Department official who studies Cuban commercial issues.

    Cuba's government and people have been anticipating this moment for a long time, but questions about their readiness for an onslaught of American visitors are being raised.

    The doubts focus on the capacity and quality of Cuba's tourist infrastructure, but also on possible political effects on an island that has resisted U.S. influence for 50 years.

    After years of animosity with the United States, Cuban leaders do not like to say that developments such as the Varadero marina, and other big golf and leisure projects, are being built with the American market in mind.
    The official line is that Cuba is preparing for visitors from the whole world and if that includes Americans, so be it.

    But the United States is the natural market for Cuba, whose economy is reeling from the damage inflicted by three hurricanes last year and the ongoing global financial crisis.

    CONTROLLING A TOURISM BOOM
    A study for the International Monetary Fund estimated that as many as 3.5 million Americans could visit Cuba annually if the travel ban was lifted.

    But travel experts say 500,000 is a more likely maximum the Cuban government would allow in the early years because it does not have enough facilities for more.

    "Cuba is ready to absorb another half million visitors a year, but not another million, just because of hotel capacity," said a foreign businessman in Cuba's travel industry.

    "I'm sure they will try to control as much as they can in order to avoid a boom that nobody can control. Every country in the world would try to do the same," he added.

    One of Cuba's biggest sources of cash in recent years has been foreign tourism, which brought in 2.3 million visitors and $2.5 billion in revenues in 2008.

    According to government statistics, the island had about 55,000 hotel rooms in 2007, the last year for which numbers are available. At least 10,000 more are under construction, and others are on the drawing boards.

    Experts say Cuba will need more four- and five-star hotels for Americans, but also more and better restaurants, shops, rental cars and other tourist amenities.

    Before Fidel Castro took power on January 1, 1959 in a guerrilla uprising, Cuba was a U.S. playground where Americans swilled booze during Prohibition and gambled and partied the night away in Mafia-built casinos and nightclubs in the 1950s.

    They came in boats and planes, and ferries carried them back and forth across the Straits of Florida from Key West. They filled up Havana hotels like the Plaza and the Inglaterra and hung out at Sloppy Joe's bar or the Tropicana night club.

    "AMERICANIZATION" DEBATE
    In 2007, Cuban government figures show just 40,000 people visited from the United States, although the overall figure is said to be far higher because many come to the island through other countries on visits that are illegal under U.S. law.

    By comparison, 660,000 came from Canada, the top supplier of tourists to the island, followed by Europe.

    Opponents of the Cuba embargo hope more American visitors could open up future opportunities for U.S. investors in a Cuban market now dominated by Europeans and Canadians.

    "I think there's going to be a lot more pressure from the likes of Marriott and Hyatt and Starwood and others to allow U.S. investment," said Ashby.
    Because of its proximity, travel experts say it is inevitable the United States will one day dominate Cuba tourism again. Within 10 years, said one industry source, perhaps 70 percent of the island's visitors will be American or Canadian.

    When that happens, said Nigel Hunt, head of Cubaism Ltd, an Internet travel sales site, Europeans who currently make up about 40 percent of Cuba tourists may go elsewhere.

    "If Cuba becomes Americanized, it would probably be less attractive to Europeans ... That's what makes Cuba interesting, modern American culture is not so pervasive here," he said.

    The possible "Americanization" of Cuba is a selling point in Washington for lifting the travel ban. Supporters say the more Americans who visit the island, the more pressure there will be for an economic and political opening on the island.

    While Cuba's leaders may fret over the prospect of large numbers of Americans arriving, ordinary people in Varadero who depend on tourism for a living seem much less worried.

    "Not one person here has anything against the Americans," said hotel cook and taxi driver Jorge Mendives as he puffed on a cigarette outside the stately Mansion Xanadu hotel, built in the 1920's by U.S. millionaire Irenee du Pont de Nemours.

    "Let them come to Varadero in their boats or whatever because for us the Americans mean one thing -- more money".

    (Additional reporting by Nelson Acosta, Esteban Israel and Rosa Tania Valdes in Havana and Pascal Fletcher in Miami; Editing by Pascal Fletcher)

    Comment


    • #3
      Or an opportunity?

      Imagine getting Conga and reggae all on one trip!

      Comment


      • #4
        I agree, it is not a threat but an opportunity. DR gets 3 million tourists a year, dem naw threaten Jamaica. Ja's biggest threat is crime, inadequate hotel rooms, and tourist harassment etc.
        Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Hortical View Post
          I agree, it is not a threat but an opportunity. DR gets 3 million tourists a year, dem naw threaten Jamaica. Ja's biggest threat is crime, inadequate hotel rooms, and tourist harassment etc.
          I thought the Spaniards fixed that?!


          BLACK LIVES MATTER

          Comment


          • #6
            Rooms are not our problem. I think tourist harrasment is a bigger problem than even crime. Many tourist can tell you that they get very good service inside the hotels but once on the streets they get harrassed in one way or another.

            Also we need to cater for more than just the top middle income tourist. The downturn shows that there is a huge market for low middle income tourist who want to enjoy a vacation and don't have 5,000 dollars especially for a family of 4 or 5. Too many of Jamaican model themselves after Sandals, and Exclusive resorts like Halfmoon. When the recession is over we should still cater for some of the 2000 dollar market.
            • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

            Comment


            • #7
              Depends how we go about it - The opening of Cuba could be a boon to Jamaica tourism. There could be great to-ing and fro-ing between both...by visitors!
              "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

              Comment


              • #8
                Rooms not a problem? No growth in hotel rooms needed?
                Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

                Comment


                • #9
                  We have to stop seeing consumer demand as a zero sum game. It is not!
                  "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    room come with the growth.

                    Right now a nuff small property a shut their doors. We can hole another 1 million tourist without anymore new rooms.
                    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                    Comment

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