| SKN AMONG REGIONS STAR MACRO ECONOMIC
PERFORMERS
St. Kitts and Nevis is among six Caribbean nations
singled out as one of the regions macro-economic
performers.
Freelance writer and former managing editor of Business
Facilities magazine, Michelle Janowitz in a column
in the Special Advertising Section: Top Caribbean
locations: entitled: More Than Just Fun in the
Sun, noted the Caribbeans star economic
performers are Trinidad and Tobago, the Bahamas, the
Dominican Republic, St. Kitts and Nevis, Jamaica,
and Dominica.
While the countries located in the Caribbean vary
greatly in terms of population and levels of economic
development, they do have some common denominators.
For starters, these mostly small island economies
are pretty dependent on the United States, the European
Union (EU), and increasingly, China and other Asian
countries for trade, investment, and economic support.
The Caribbean countries also share the benefits of
access to major shipping lanes, being located close
to the U.S. market, and a climate that lends itself
to the production of various tropical crops and a
hearty tourism industry.
On the flipside, however, their location within the
hurricane belt makes these countries susceptible to
weather-related natural disasters that can greatly
affect economic performance due to damage to property,
crops, and infrastructure.
He wrote that despite the regions challenges,
its benefits have been attractive enough to secure
a substantial amount of foreign direct investment
(FDI) over the last two decades. FDI stands as an
important source of investment in the Caribbean, averaging
over 20 percent of gross fixed capital formation,
according to A Time to Choose: Caribbean Development
in the 21st Century, a report put out by the
World Bank. Based on the United Nations Conference
on Trade and Developments FDI Performance Index,
the region has been capturing two to three times more
FDI than was predicted based on its relative economic
activity in the world, excluding the late 1980s. (see
figures 3.1, 3.2 and 3.3).
Wendy Fitzwilliam, vice president of business development
at e TecK, an agency that assists with economic development
efforts in Trinidad and Tobago, cited political stability,
pleasant weather, low business costs, an educated
and skilled work force, and proximity to the United
States as reasons why the Caribbean is so attractive
to foreign investors.
Many places in the world offer what I call
the hard incentives, she says. What
sets us apart in the Caribbean is what sets us apart
as a tourist destination, and that is a very pleasant
environment in which to work, vacation, or live.
In terms of total economic growth, the Caribbean
has being faring well. Overall investment rates have
been quite high at about 30 percent of GDP since 1990,
asserted the report A Time to Choose.
The region as a whole experienced a healthy 4.2 percent
economic growth in 2007, according to Caribbean
Region: Review of Economic Growth and Development,
a report put out by the U.S. International Trade Commission.
In the past, many Caribbean economies have
been dependent on the production and export of a few
agricultural products, primarily sugar and bananas;
the creation and export of apparel and light manufactured
goods; and tourism. Countries such as Antigua and
Barbuda, Aruba, and the Bahamas rely heavily on tourism
to support their economies, with the sector representing
over 50 percent of their individual GDPs. Many of
the Caribbean countries also have developed a strong
financial services sector, the artcle.
With limited natural resources and sometimes
unpredictable tourism trends, many countries in the
region view the cultivation of a competitive financial
services industry as an avenue toward economic diversification,
stated the U.S. International Trade Commission report.
In Barbados and the Bahamas, banking has figured
as a primary revenue source for several years. In
some of the smaller Caribbean markets, such as St.
Kitts and Nevis, governments are pursuing policies
to help them develop that sector.
Many of the countries in the Caribbean are looking
to diversify their economies. According to the World
Bank report, higher value-added products such as fisheries
and organic vegetables look to be promising sectors.
Offshore education and information and communication
technology-centric activities are also areas of potential
growth, especially for English-speaking countries
in the Caribbean.
Trinidad and Tobago, whose economic well-being is
heavily reliant on its petroleum and natural gas reserves,
is taking steps to gain a footing in the information
and communication technology (ICT) sector. To that
end, Tamana InTech Park, which is scheduled to open
in 2009, was created. The park is designed to strengthen
local ICT businesses and to attract foreign companies
in that industry.
Many experts agree that continued infrastructure
improvements, especially in the realm of telecommunications,
and regional integration through the CARICOM Single
Market Economy are necessary to the future economic
health of the Caribbean. Enhancing the skills base
of the workforce through education and training programs
was also cited as a concern.
Fitzwilliam agreed that the continued development
of necessary infrastructure is important to the economic
prosperity of the Caribbean, noting that most of the
region has been aggressively improving infrastructure
to support investment in targeted areas.
She also says the time is nigh for more aggressive
marketing tactics to get the word out about the area.
There is a lot available here for investment
that no one knows about. We have done a good job in
promoting the region as far as tourism over the years
but the Caribbean offers so much more than
just fun in the sun.
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