News

St Maarten PM: Caribbean Should Look at Tourism as “Tool of Development”

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - June 4, 2014

Above: St Maarten Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams (CJ Photo)

By Alexander Britell

NEW YORK — Caribbean is the major economic driver in the Caribbean. So it would be natural that it should be viewed as the major mechanism for dealing with many of the region’s developmental issues.

That was the view put forth here Wednesday by St Maarten Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams, who said the region should look at tourism “as a tool of development.”

The Prime Minister, who was addressing a group of journalists during a Caribbean Week media session here, urged the region to give tourism a new impetus and see the regoin’s leading industry in a new way.

“If we want to be successful in areas like combating crime, unemployment, human trafficking, corruption, environmental degradation, we need to strengthen the layer that provides opportunity for sustainable development, employment and social advancement,” she said. “Tourism for us is becoming and should become more and more of a developmental tool. If we want to combat all of these areas as islands and countries in the Caribbean seek furtherance of their development programmes.”

But she said it was crucial for the region to make this connection.

“When you talk about tourism, the largest percentage of our islands and countries depend on [it] to a larger or smaller degree,” she said. “And there is not a Caribbean island that I know of that could say we have absolutely no issue with unemployment and getting our young people into jobs in our countries. Once that link can be visualized, I believe that we can make more concerted agreements in terms of moving forward with tourism to assist other areas that will help our overall growth.”

In St Maarten, for example, tourism accounts for between 85 and 90 percent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product.

“Given the scale of St Maarten, we do not have any illusions that we can replace that pillar of industry,” Wescot-Williams said. “Rather than that, we look at a possibility of, albeit smaller, complementary activities to tourism, and we also look at the more sustainable aspects of tourism which includes looking beyond our traditional markets [or] issues like seasonality and new markets.”

The Prime Minister said regional collaboration, with tourism as a development tool, was a “win-win-win” situation for the Caribbean.

“We offer and are able to offer the most unforgettable experience to our visitors,” she said. “By doing that, and doing it right, we offer the opportunity for our islands to have growth and development.”

That would have another effect, she said — to position the Caribbean differently in a geopolitical sense.

“By doing that, we are providing to our biggest market, the United States of America, a strong ally in the Caribbean, an ally of strong, proud and confident people — willing to be assisted and willing to assist, where people recognize that they are assisting us in developing a stronger region, a more confident region and a region that can assist the other way around as well,” she said.

Popular Posts arrival st maarten

St Maarten’s Princess Juliana Airport Finally Has a New Arrival Terminal 

It’s been seven years in the making. First, St Maarten’s Princess Juliana International Airport unveiled its new departure terminal, an impressive reimagining of its pre-Hurricane Irma look.  Now, the long-awaited arrival terminal has officially made its debut, dramatically changing the […]


Aruba’s New Adults-Only Resort Has Swim-Up Suites, a Rooftop Bar and One of the World’s Greatest Beaches 

eagle beach cj photo

Eagle Beach. If you know Aruba, you know it. That wide, white, shimmering stretch of sand in the northwestern corner of the island is one of our favorite beaches in the Caribbean — and inarguably among the best beaches, well, anywhere […]


This Uncrowded Caribbean island Has Picture-Perfect Beaches, Countless Sandbars and the World’s Most Beautiful Water 

exuma caribbean island

It’s hard to see where the water ends and the sky begins. I’m wading on a sugar-white sandbar in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, with nothing around but turquoise-tinted clouds. There are shades of blue here I’ve never seen. […]


Related Posts mexico hotels rcd

This Top Riviera Maya Resort Brand Is Expanding to Montego Bay, Jamaica 

It’s one of the top all-inclusive resorts on the Riviera Maya in Mexico: UNICO 20°87°, which has earned rave reviews for its locally-focused, authenticity rich adults-only experience in the Mexican Caribbean. And now the UNICO brand is adding another latitude […]


There’s a New Way to Fly to the Caribbean Island of Martinique

saint pierre hotel martinique

The volcanos. The rainforests. The rum distilleries. The out-of-this-world restaurants. It’s hard to believe the Caribbean island of Martinique is still under the radar of most travelers — but that’s in part what makes it such a fascinating place to […]


The Dominican Republic Just Eclipsed 10 Million Total Visitors. Again. 

punta cana nonstop flight new

It seems like every month is another new record for the Dominican Republic of late. And the truth is, that’s precisely what’s been happening. The country’s breakneck tourism growth pace hasn’t slowed down in the last two years, as its […]