News Maharishi in the World Today

How We Present
the News







  
Report: Caribbean tourists spent more money in '13
by Danica Coto

The Associated Press    Translate This Article
11 February 2014

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - Caribbean tourists are spending more money during their visits to the region, with the jump in expenditures surpassing the rise in arrivals for the first time in three years, according to new statistics.

The U.S. remains the Caribbean's core market, while there was a drop in visitors from the United Kingdom and Europe and nearly zero growth in Canadian travelers, according to a statement issued Tuesday by Johnson JohnRose, spokesman for the Caribbean Tourism Organization.

Visitors spent more than $28 billion last year, a more than 2 percent increase from 2012, CTO chairwoman Beverly Nicholson-Doty announced Monday. The hotel sector also reported a more than 7 percent rise in room revenues.

However, the region saw only a 1.8 percent increase in arrivals last year, compared to a 5 percent increase in 2012. Overall, more than 25 million people visited the Caribbean in 2013, in part thanks to a surge in tourists from new markets, Nicholson-Doty said.

'While the main source markets are sputtering, tourists from South America are flocking to the region in large numbers,' she said.

Some 1.5 million tourists from South America visited the Caribbean last year, an increase of 13 percent from the previous year and of 70 percent compared with 2009, with many drawn to the Dutch Caribbean.

Brazilians in particular have been exploring the Caribbean, but only a portion of it, said Richard Doumeng, president of the Caribbean Hotel & Tourism Association.

'Statistically, it looks very encouraging, but if you really look at it, almost all of that growth is going to the Dominican Republic and Cuba in general,' he said in a phone interview.

Cruises also remained popular, and last year's summer months were the best ever for the Caribbean, Nicholson-Doty said. Twice as many destinations saw an increase in activity last year compared with 2013, with the Dutch Caribbean island of Curacao seeing the biggest jump in cruise ship passengers for the region last year. Some eastern Caribbean islands, however, struggled to attract cruise ship passengers, including Grenada, which saw a 22 percent drop.

Copyright © 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Every day Global Good News documents the rise of a better quality of life dawning in the world from good news reported by the press; and highlights the need for introducing Natural Law based—Total Knowledge based—programmes to bring the support of Nature to every individual, raise the quality of life of every society, and create a lasting state of world peace.



Translation software is not perfect; however if you would like to try it, you can translate this page using:

(Google)
(Altavista babelfish)

Send Good News to Global Good News.

Your comments.


business news business-more

World News | Genetic Engineering | Education | Business | Health News

Search | Global News | Agriculture and Environmental News | Business News
Culture News | Education News | Government News | Health News
Science and Technology News | World Peace | Maharishi Programmes
Press Conferences | Transcendental Meditation | Celebration Calendars | Gifts
News by Country | News in Pictures | What's New | Modem/High Speed | RSS/XML