In
the department of unforeseen
consequences, 9-11 had some strange
effects, quite beyond providing an
excuse for an invasion of
Iraq
. As Americans cancelled flights and
vacations, it finally dawned on many
developing governments, especially
those in the
Caribbean
, just how dependent they were on
tourism, in some cases for over
three quarters of their income. For
politicians and civil servants
brought up in the old economics of
steel and coal, or at least sugar
and bananas, it was a shock, but
also an opportunity. One of the
islands that learnt its lessons most
successfully is
St Lucia
. And of course, it was another
tough assignment, but Ian Williams
went to check it out.
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com/ -
12 May 2006 -
St Lucia
changed hands no less than fourteen
times in the wars between the
British and the French when its lush
tropical climate and its volcanic
soil produced the sugar and rum that
were the economic equivalent of
modern day oil.
For
centuries, the Caribbean was the
equivalent of the
Persian Gulf
- the source of most of the North's
wealth and a magnet for armies and
fleets.
And
then it was forgotten.
Economically,
if
St Lucia
had ended up with the French, its
inhabitants could have been enjoying
EU benefits and subsidies, like
Martinique, visible across the
Caribbean
swell from the North of the island,
which has almost three times the per
capita GDP.
What
it has left, is sun, sand, and some
of the most beautiful scenery in the
region – including the Marigot Bay
location for the original Rex
Harrison Dr Doolittle - and of
course its people, who have included
two Nobel prize-winners, Derek
Walcott, the poet, and Sir
Arthur Lewis, the economist who
half a century ago developed
"development" for the
UN.
Lewis's
insights need updating. He compared
the price of coffee to steel,
because in those days, countries
imported and exported tangible
commodities.
But
in his native St Lucia, the sugar
cane has gone, and following the
American case at the WTO against the
EU's banana preferences, this last
major export crop is in danger as
well.
While
for such a small island
St Lucia
has some successful manufacturing,
almost half its income and its jobs
now depend on tourists arriving with
money to spend
For
traditional economists and
governments, this often seems an
undignified way for a country to
earn its living.
But
as one of George Bernard Shaw's
characters once remarked, those that
talk most about the dignity of labor
are usually those that don't do
any.
There
is no rush of jobseekers from the
hotels and bars of the tourist
resorts seeking backbreaking work in
the cane-fields.
In
fact, British tourists alone take
more money to developing countries
than the government sends in aid and
those tourist dollars, Euros and
pounds usually go directly to locals
and have less risk of being siphoned
off by banks, consultants and
politicians who stand ready to
ambush aid money.
In
the case of
St Lucia
, each year there are over four
visitors for each inhabitant, which
could cause some culture clash, but
the St. Lucians seem to take it in
their stride.
As
for the
"Not-In-My-Back-Yard"
syndrome, tourism developments
usually bring better infrastructure,
roads, power supplies, water and
sewage plants to benefit the
neighbors.
It
may be true that there is a certain
percentage of tourists who are
obnoxious, but that is infinitely
preferable to having the more
traditional accoutrements of
development, a steel smelter,
coalmine or nuclear power station in
your backyard.
The
UN recognized that recently when it
accepted the World Tourism
Organization as an affiliate, albeit
with a slight name change, to UNWTO
to distinguish itself from the
unpopular World Trade
Organization.
As
Kofi Annan recognized, "Tourism
really has the potential of opening
up economic space for people around
the world.
We
should encourage tourist developers
to go and set up tourist
developments," he said pointing
out the infrastructure development
that comes in their train.
That
is not to say that tourism is all
wonderful, as anyone who has seen
the coasts of Majorca or some parts
of the
Dominican Republic
can testify.
For
example, cruise ships are usually
owned by companies that are so
offshored that they are almost
extra-terrestrial, paying no taxes
anywhere in the globe and ensuring
that almost every last cent of the
cruise dollars stays on board and
off-shore rather than being spent in
the islands they visit.
And
then there are international
resorts, which at least pay rent,
taxes and wages in the resorts, and
which more responsibly try to source
as much as they can locally.
What
makes
St Lucia
stand out is that many of the hotels
are locally owned. Last month, I was
there taking advantage of Air
Jamaica
's new non-stop service from
New York
.
St Lucia
's
Rodney
Bay
epitomizes how development can
work.
Medium
sized local hotels, like Coco
Resorts, Bay Gardens and Village
Inn, clustered around the
famous harbor employ local people
and send their guests to local
attractions, such as La Soufriere,
the active volcano, and the
rainforest, where the Rain Forest
Sky Rides chairlift allows what
James Joyce would call a
scrotum-tightening glide through the
canopy of the forest.
Allen
Chastanet, who used to work with Air
Jamaica
, has built the Coco Palm hotel
(part of Coco Resorts), which
typifies the local
resourcefulness.
Solar
heating panels save imported fuel
bills. Hotel wide internet keeps
travelers connected, and
arrangements with local restaurants
and bars allow guests to sign for
meals and drinks and pay with their
hotel bill.
Local
cuisine is
Caribbean
with a strong French influence and a
definite level above the usual
tourist destination fodder.
To
celebrate that, Chastanet and the
other local hoteliers are arranging
a Rum and Food Festival November
2-5, 2006 to balance the world
famous St Lucia Jazz Festival, which
also takes place nearby.
I
should declare an interest, I am
helping to organize the Rum Festival
– all in the interests of
Caribbean
development of course.
So
has all this tourism and
commercialism degraded the culture
and society? Not at all.
St
Lucia
now has a national health care plan,
which, it is worth noting, makes it
more developed than the
United States
in terms of access to hospital care.
The revenue that makes that possible
derives from tourism.
You
can go visit, and sink a tot, sure
in the knowledge that you are
helping development and the progress
towards the Millennium Development
Goals far more than your government
– and enjoy yourself at the same
time! Sir Arthur Lewis would approve
– in spirit as it were.
IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
The MaximsNews Global Pundit is
also an international journalist,
U.N. Correspondent for The Nation
and the past president of the United
Nations Correspondents Association.
See his blog: www.DeadlinePundit.blogspot.com.