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MacLellan
Robert MacLellan, Managing Director, MacLellan & Associates

Can tourism dependent Caribbean governments learn something from oil producing countries? When relatively small and poor oil producing governments sought to get a fair price for oil – their main source of national revenue – they banded together to negotiate more effectively with the multi-national oil companies and the larger developed nations, which were the major consumers of their oil. In 1960 five of these countries came together to found OPEC – the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries – and were later joined by nine additional member states. As a result of their joint stronger bargaining power, oil prices have risen relatively steadily from US$1.63 per barrel in 1960 to an average of around US$77 during the last ten years.

The weak negotiating position of individual Caribbean governments versus the massive cruise line corporations, relative to port taxes, poses similarities to OPEC’s situation sixty years ago and the same potential “rebalancing” strategy should now be pursued in the Caribbean. If governments across the whole region, including Central America, come together and form OTEC – the Organization of Tourism Economy Countries – they can negotiate as a cartel from a position of greater strength with the cruise lines. Currently, when individual countries try to increase port taxes, they are threatened with being dropped from cruise itineraries and can be picked off one by one by the powerful cruise lines.

From a better bargaining position, state or national governments with single destination cruise itineraries – Alaska, Bermuda and Hawaii – have already negotiated higher cruise port revenues than those in the average Caribbean country. Cruise ships stay two nights in Bermuda and pay at least US$50 per passenger. For mainland United States and Canada cruise itineraries, an average of 33% of the cruise ticket price goes to port taxes, compared to an average 14% for a Caribbean itinerary. By negotiating together, governments in the Greater Caribbean region can achieve similar results to these destinations with higher port taxes.

A recent statement from the Government of Antigua & Barbuda summarized the history and current situation of regional cruise taxes, as follows. In 1993 Caricom countries initially agreed to impose a minimum US$10 port head tax for cruise passengers but this was never implemented because of internal disagreements. A range of today’s head taxes in the Caribbean is as follows: US$18 – The Bahamas and The British Virgin Islands, US$15 – Jamaica, US$13.25 – Puerto Rico, US$7 – Belize, US$6 – St Kitts & Nevis, US$5 – St Lucia, US$4.50 – Grenada, US$1.50 – Dominican Republic.

Imagine the economic benefit, if these cruise tax rates could be increased and standardized across the region at the higher levels listed. One directly relevant and current challenge could be addressed – the current sky-high airport and air ticket taxes in the region could be reduced to help increase the volume of stay-over visitors in the Caribbean.

Stay-over travellers, whether intra-regional or from outside the Caribbean, spend very much more than cruise ship passengers and generate considerably more local employment than today’s cruise ship business model, which is now highly exploitive of Caribbean countries. An increase in stay-over visitors drives the development of more hotels and marinas, as well as many other forms of real estate and tourism infrastructure investment. Reduced air ticket prices keep intra-regional airlines, like LIAT, flying and increase the number of airline seats in to Caribbean destinations from the rest of the world.

The cruise industry business model has changed radically and aggressively in the last fifteen years and should no longer be viewed as an ideal “partner” for the countries of the Caribbean. There is a growing sense in the islands with the highest cruise ship volumes, like St Thomas and Sint Maarten, that today’s port taxes are not adequate compensation for the overcrowding of down town areas, the pollution from the burning of heavy fuel oil and the minimal spend ashore of today’s cruise ship passengers. The mega ships now have multiple shops, casinos, restaurants and bars offering all inclusive packages that totally distract passengers from spending ashore. In the last twenty years ships’ commissions on shore excursions have risen from 10% to 50%, discouraging passengers from going ashore at all and squeezing any possible profit margin for local tour operators. Today, over 80% of a cruise ship passenger’s DISCRETIONARY spend is on board.

Most cruise ships enjoy a double high season – Caribbean for less than six months and the balance of the year in Alaska or the Mediterranean – operating virtually free of corporation taxes and with very low wage bills. The largest ships cost less than US$300,000 per cabin to build, while new hotel rooms in the Caribbean cost double that figure per room to develop and have only one high season. The cruise ship’s highly competitive business model and the further recent growth of cruise tourism in the region might be viewed as a direct disincentive for resort investment and re-investment in the Caribbean.

The total number of cruise ship passengers was over 27 million world-wide in 2018, up nearly 10% from two years earlier. In the next ten years, 106 new ships are expected to enter service and, currently, over 50% of the world’s cruise fleet is based in the Caribbean for the Winter. The hugely profitable cruise industry can afford to absorb higher port taxes in the Caribbean and will do so, once faced with a stronger negotiating entity.

Do not believe any cruise line threats that they can pull out of the region all together. The Caribbean is the only archipelago with natural beauty and sophisticated tourism infrastructure, located directly between the established feeder cruise markets of North America and Europe and the growth feeder market of South America.

Is it not now abundantly clear that, at the very least, there is an absolute logic to rebalance the tax burden between the Caribbean’s stay-over visitor and the cruise ship passenger?

Robert MacLellan
Managing Director
MacLellan & Associates
Note: MacLellan & Associates is the largest hospitality consultancy based in the Caribbean. Robert MacLellan is a veteran of the hotel and resort industry. In his early career, he was an onboard hotel officer with a major cruise line and, later, a Vice President of an explorer cruise line.
For further information: Contact robert@maclellancaribbean.com


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104 responses to “Call for Caribbean Governments to Tax Cruise Sector MORE AND Tax Air Passengers LESS”


  1. @ David July 5, 2019 12:00 PM

    “Caribbean is positioned as an exotic destination and so-called zone of peace. We should not mark ourselves so hard. There are alternative destination however the Caribbean differentiates itself.”

    I am bit nonplus about the zone of peace. The pre-Columbian Mayan and Inca civilization were not exactly peaceful areas.The whole area was the subject of genocides when Spain, the Dutch, British and French set up colonial empires. One only has to think about Cortez and Francisco Pizarro and the zone of peace goes out the door. Subsequent to the Conquistadors, there have been the dictatorships of the Caribbean, Latin America and Central America: More recently there was the Grenada affair as well as the revolution in Trinidad and now there is Venezuela , The area,historically has never been a peaceful area. Piracy why less publicized also happened in the Pacific, indeed, it has not stopped, one only has to think of Sulawesi( formerly called the Celebes) one of the Indonesian chain of islands is a well known pirate haven.
    The gist of the original comment was that, there was a need for an alternative to the slavish adherence to tourism only.


  2. @Dr. Lucas

    When we talk about some of peace and exotic it is all relative. I


  3. Cruise ships are like all inclusive hotels.

    Barbados needs to have more enticing quality attractions if they want increased benefits from this type of Tourism.


  4. @ dr July 5, 2019 1:46 PM
    “I am bit nonplus about the zone of peace. The pre-Columbian Mayan and Inca civilization were not exactly peaceful areas.The whole area was the subject of genocides when Spain, the Dutch, British and French set up colonial empires. One only has to think about Cortez and Francisco Pizarro and the zone of peace goes out the door. Subsequent to the Conquistadors, there have been the dictatorships of the Caribbean, Latin America and Central America: More recently there was the Grenada affair as well as the revolution in Trinidad and now there is Venezuela , The area,historically has never been a peaceful area.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    We can see that you are a person well-read when it comes to your “New World” history.

    The Caribbean region, especially within the last 500 years, has always been a zone of war among ‘international forces’ fighting over the plundering of the region’s resources.

    What we should be more concerned about is the massive threat imminently posed to the region’s economic bread and butter.

    The devil in the form of the Sargassum seaweed could turnout to be the archenemy of the go(o)d Neptune and the equivalent of the Apophis to the sub-region’s cruise ship business; especially Barbados with its heavily dependent beach-based tourism industry.

    It seems the region is about to find itself between a tourism highly-dependent rock and a geo-politically hard place.

    Would Venezuela be the land of the first modern outbreak of the curse of Montezuma’s revenge to engulf the tourism dream of economic salvation the same way El Salvador was to the lost Columbus and his mutinous crew of musty-smelling-starved–thirsty-disease-ridden Europeans?


  5. @Miller

    A country has to be able to deal with many problems at the same time. Do we allow the cruise ship sector to plunder our region? Theee is a reason why the Caribbean is a popular area for the sector.


  6. @ Miller July 5, 2019 5:16 PM

    Should be “San Salvador” the land of the saint who looked after lost sailors in the region with the biggest modern-day tourist industry in the many small islands of hedonistic pleasure.

  7. SirFuzzy (Former Sheep) Avatar
    SirFuzzy (Former Sheep)

    Agrophotovoltaic Farming? Maybe we should try this to offset our substantial dependence on cruise & land based tourist/tourism.

    Just thinking out aloud. Maybe it working on a few parcels of land on this island. If it is workable can be a step towards diversifying the economy.


  8. @ David July 5, 2019 5:28 PM

    And who would be that ‘party’ most likely to negotiate beneficially for the region, one of the most diverse areas on Pachamama?

    The current crop of politicians who would sell the own dead mothers’ underwear for a piece of dirty silver?

    Isn’t is laughable how easy it is for a home-grown pirate like the ‘Butchy’ Stewart to run rings around a bunch of political monkeys easily tricked by a bag of peanuts in exchange for the despoiling of their environmentally sensitive islands?

  9. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @John. Exactly my point .They do have the statistics on disembarkment. However, it sounds better to the ear when the total ship count on arrival is used. I heard you get more value for money with the much smaller boutique cruises, the only draw back is you only get one or two per week.

    @David. Not many people will agree with you on the region being tagged with the ‘zone of peace ‘ appellation. The caribbean and latin america region accounts for over 50% of all the murders committed worldwide. In some literature, the region is viewed as a CONFLICT ZONE because of the unusually high murder rate. However, very few tourists become victim. Without the all-inclusive model countries like Jamaica wouldn’t have been that successful.


  10. @fortyacres

    The label was earned more for not being a place where terrorism and traditional war games play out.

  11. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @David. Fair enough. In that context, I concur.


  12. All taxes must be lowered. We should also abolish property tax altogether. It discriminates the top performers in their villas and privileges the lazybones in their huts.

    Employee rights must also be watered down. For example, we need longer working hours of at least 50 hours a week in public service from Monday to Saturday.

    We must finally dump the rotten welfare state into the sea, so that the population of the island can finally breathe freely again.

  13. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    Woh loss.! We should abandon governments altogether. Then there would be no need for taxes. No welfare state. Just chaos.


  14. @ Vincent Codrington July 6, 2019 10:02 AM

    Tron might be going just a bit overboard but his call for less government intrusion in the people’s business is welcomed.

    Why educate the people to tertiary level if they still need a nanny-state to look after their own social and economic lives?

    Why does Barbados require 26 ‘career’ politicians to steer the wheel of State in an economic environment where the country’s banker of last resort is demanding that government withdraw itself from playing a direct participatory role in the commercial life of the country?

    Soon the Bajan SOE’s would be fossilized relics of a bygone commercial landscape.

    ICT would be their serum of decay and the IMF their coroner.


  15. @ Miller

    The sooner they fossilize the SOEs the better! They have all proven to be a waste of time and money as the boards are party loyals anyhow!

    They all want replacing with PPS entities with government owning no more than 49% of the company. Every SOE is no more than a board of puppets with government pulling the puppet strings. Don’t forget the board members are ” appointed by and serve at the pleasure of the minister”

    In bajan terms “do what I want or carry you ass”

  16. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    John A at 10 :56 AM

    Why have a PPS? Do you not think PLCs should do a better job? The SOEs came into being because there were no Public Liability Coys and Private Ownerships providing these goods and services at reasonable costs.


  17. If you wondering how I plan to get around government interference in the board of the company even if they only own 49%, I got that sort out too!

    The board will have 7 members appointed 3 by each shareholder, so government will appoint 3 directors and the private shareholder 3 directors. The chairman will however be appointed by the 6 sitting directors and not any minister. So the days of a minister putting a chairman there to do his bidding done too in my new entity BWA 2019 INC.

    See I even offer them a name free of charge for the first target followed by BTB 2019 INC.

    for wunna that might be wondering what BTB stand for it is Barbados Transport Board 😁

    Cuss me all you want I can’t hear you

  18. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    John A

    In an interesting main editorial in one of the dailies two days ago, it was pointed out that after their appointments by the Minister ,directors’ fiduciary responsibility is to the corporation and its stakeholders. Your belief in “party loyalty ” does not and should not carry any weight. Remember these persons are almost all professionals with a big stake in their personal and professional integrity.
    .


  19. @Vincent

    Normally I would agree with you on the PLCs for sure, my only concern is in the grips of the IMF agreement I don’t know how they would view Bim signing on for more liability under the PLC structure.

    Then again it is 6 of one and half dozen of the other and it would cut public liability in half but don’t know if fine print in the IMF loan agreement would allow them to do it. That would be for the “big up” lawyers to answer. You know when you put you head in the lion mounth you have to ask permission to sneeze!

  20. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A at 11 :16 AM

    We know that you are not listening ,therefore we will not throw any bowls made of precious metal at you ; nor drape you in cloths for special purposes.


  21. @ Vincent

    Show me any human being who is an entrenched party loyal that if appointed to a board would not at least ” favour” the proposal of a minister.

    Cud dear this is Bim we living in. You want me bring up the rental that was paid for a few plastic water tanks now? Don’t make me wash the BWA laundry in public this blessed Saturday. Assuming I got water by me this morning !


  22. @ Vincent.

    Lol you wake up ready to stir the proverbial pot today ain t you ?

  23. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A at 11 :25 AM

    Board of Directors do not consider proposals from ministers. Nor should ministers lay proposals before the BOD. BOD consider matters put before them by Management. The chairman and directors appointed by the minister are quite free to factor in GOB policy positions . Normally they do not have to do this since Management would have included this in the proposal/ paper and the merit or demerits thereof. A good chairman and a competent CEO agree on the Agenda for BoD meetings.


  24. @Vincent

    The perfect comment.

    Now back to reality!

  25. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David Bu at 11 :55 AM

    I live and worked in reality. What I have described above is reality. Of course your experience may be different. It will therefore inform your reality. So we will not argue on this.


  26. @ David.

    Vincent only putting forward what should happen and he is correct in what SHOULD happen.

    Of course if in real life these things DID happen they would not of been water tanks paying monthly rents similar to some small houses, nor a certain fellow stake out in Florida with an ankle bracelet on. Then again he had always like alot of jewellery.lol

    Had a certain insurance company adhered to Vincent’s points we would not of had the $36000 USD dental bill neither. So yes what is “supposed” to happen and what “happens” are 2 totally different animals.

    Then again to expect different in an island that has never prosecuted a single person for money laundering wunna surprise?

    It’s like you ask a guy ” you guilty of thiefing ” and he replies “I never get charge for it”. All he really mean is I ain t get catch YET.

  27. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David Bu

    Your comment at 11 :55 AM and previous but separate comments by DPD and Pachamama have clearly revealed to me where the real sources of Barbados problems over the past ten years are.


  28. @John A

    This blogsmaster is familiar with the obligations directors serving on Boards have under the Companies Act.

  29. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A

    The pot bubbling nicely. The views definitely making a difference. Thesis , antithesis, synthesis ?


  30. @David

    It’s like when we come out as one of the least corrupt places. If this analysis depends on cases of reported and charges laid for corruption, are we low on the scale because we are not corrupt, or because we have never charged anyone for any real corruption?

    That is why I pay little attention to some of these reports as they depend on domestic data being available for scrutiny. So lack of public data therefore gives those doing the survey’s a false reading.

    Similar story with the nonesence that goes on in the SOEs as outlined by the by the Auditor General. Clear breaches in accepted conduct, do we act on them? No. Does it mean we do not have a problem? Of course not it just means we too dam lazy to fix it!


  31. @ Vincent.

    I could of tell what you was up to from early! Lol

  32. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU at 12 :13 PM

    Are you of the opinion that Directors obligations under the Company Act are honoured in the breach, in Barbados,for the most part?


  33. @John A

    An apt analogy.

    Do not mind Vincent, his favourite TV show is the Twilight Zone.

  34. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU

    I seldom watch TV these days. Barbados Underground is more entertaining.


  35. Touche


  36. @ David

    @ Vincent

    Our problem is not laws or structure we got nuff of them. It is a lack of accountability and consequence that got us where we are.

    Unless that change 2 more filing cabinets full of new laws don’t mean one dam thing


  37. @Vincent.

    Why you don’t tell people the truth that BU also free! 😁


  38. Want to see you two gentlemen postings your views under the recent blog please. We need the wisdom of the old heads.


  39. @ Vincent.

    You going take that David just call you 2 old men!


  40. @John A

    That was phrased to be a compliment. Impatient reading the simplistic comments steeped in political gibberish or one dimensional.

  41. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A at 12 :32 PM

    I came to the same conclusion a long time ago. Some lawyers and law makers know law and they throw it at every conceivable problem in the hope that they will be solved. The human factor is often ignored.
    Implementation can only be done by competent and willing officers.
    @ David BU
    From my experience I know quite a few Boards and directors of Boards that take their responsibilities seriously. And some ministers of Government as well. One bad apple does not spoil the whole barrel,contrary to what you have been told or experienced.


  42. @Vincent

    We have to appraised based on the fruit of the environment we have to do business.

  43. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A at 12 :41 PM

    I have no problem being called an old man. I have for my whole life been comfortable in my own skin.( I hope that is not selective memory ) From time to time I do reflect on my life and have few regrets . I have accumulated some knowledge along the way which I share from time to time.

    @ David BU
    No problem.


  44. @ Vincent.

    @ David

    I lie you happy to of lived to get older. I only wish I knew what I know now, 30 years ago I could of avoided some mistakes. But we can only look forward and try not to get frustrated by some of the young ones ” that ain’t see a star pitch yet.”

    David I only ragging Vincent and thanks for the compliment. Much appreciated. He ain’t that old though cause he writing calypso for this cropover, so he say at least 😁


  45. First line was I like you. Sorry about that.

  46. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David Bu
    @ John A

    Thanks for your generosities. Thanks for providing the opportunity and the fora for keeping the grey cells grey. I do not give up on the young .I believe they are doing the best they can under tremendous pressures that we and the world at large is putting on them. They will survive .


  47. Enjoyed the many contributions of John A and VC.

  48. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    I wonder why this algorithm determined that “large “is a noun? the spell check is worse.


  49. @The0gazerts

    Thank you sir much appreciated.

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