Resorts located all around the Caribbean saw record-breaking travel numbers last year. More regions have been working to add additional hotel rooms to meet growing demand, with hundreds of thouands of new rooms being introduced throughout the Caribbean.
It was one of the most successful years for tourism last year for regions like the Bahamas, as records show that they successfully set a new tourist record for themselves, with the impressive number of arrivals that they welcomed to the region.
From the Cayman Islands, to Grenada, the Bahamas, Jamaica, and elsewhere, a variety of Caribbean destinations were more popular than ever last year with tourists.
Compare that to Jamaica that reportedly saw 4.3 million , a region which has continued to strengthen itself as a leading Caribbean destination among the many other choices that are available.
For many of these regions they have gone through incredible stress in recent years because of hurricanes and the damage they've brought with them, and for those regions who have had to come back from that they've shown incredible resilience.
What do they credit for the rise in interest?
Valuable marketing relationships with tour agents, increased packages and flight offers from airlines, and help from pursuing more aggressive and effective marketing campaigns.
More people are coming and they are allegedly spending more money on their vacations too.
They are getting plenty of practice when it comes to rebuilding and rebranding after serious natural disasters hit, and considering the number of hurricanes they have had it is impressive the numbers that they have seen.
It's estimated that almost 15 percent of all the people in the Caribbean are working in the tourism sector, it's a big business that contributes greatly to the standard of living for people all over the region.
The Caribbean has previously outperformed many other regions all over the world with its record-breaking tourism numbers in previous years.
It has also been dubbed as one of the most tourism-dependent regions in the world because of how much these countries rely on that market for their wealth.
For Antigua and Barbuda it is estimated that tourism makes up more than half their GDP, for Barbados it's roughly 13 percent of GDP, for the Bahamas about 50 percent, and for the Jamaican economy the tourism accounts for roughly 70 percent GDP. Hopefully while various regions are so focused on boosting those market areas they won't make the mistake of gravely neglecting a myriad of other areas that could also use attention and investment.
Pics:
pixabay