Amid Caribbean slump, Curacao tourism booms
WILLEMSTAD, Curacao — In a grim season for Caribbean tourism, an island just north of Venezuela stands out: Hotel rooms are scarce and discounts unavailable.
That's largely because Curacao is crowded with Venezuelans, many fleeing their country's spiraling inflation and currency controls for a Dutch Caribbean island best known for its diving opportunities and historic city center, a U.N. World Heritage site.
While other destinations are slashing prices and laying off resort workers, officials in Curacao have been trying to find private apartments for surplus visitors.
"We're doing very, very well," Billy Jonckheer, vice president of the Curacao Hospitality and Tourism Association, said Tuesday. "Right now, you won't find a room on the island."
Curacao officials project 2008 visitor growth of 30 percent to about 390,000 people. The latest statistics from the Caribbean Tourism Organization show that rate would be the highest in the region at a time when the global economic crisis and airline flight cutbacks are eroding the key industry.
Cuba is also one of the region's bright spots, with the country predicting a record 2.34 million visitors, largely because the global financial woes have been softer on Canada, its top source of visitors.
But others are struggling.
Puerto Rico, for example, expects a decline of at least 3 percent in the number of its visitors, said Clarisa Jimenez, president of the island's Hotel and Tourism Association. The Dominican Republic and the Bahamas have also recently reported decreases in tourists.
The Netherlands is the largest source of tourists for Curacao. But Venezuela is second and rising fast, expected to double from last year and reach 100,000, Jonckheer said. The U.S. is third.
Curacao is a magnet for Venezuelans because it's close — only about 40 miles — and its shops are filled with duty-free merchandise that is much more expensive at home. Flights are plentiful to Caracas and other cities, but they are almost all packed these days.
Inflation in Caracas is running at more than 32 percent and currency controls imposed by President Hugo Chavez in 2003, aimed at stemming capital flight, require Venezuelans to obtain dollars through a government agency for purposes including travel abroad.
Venezuelans are allowed up to $5,000 a year on their credit cards and $600 cash for travel. Travelers get the money at the official rate of 2.15 strong bolivars to the dollar. But on the black market in Venezuela, U.S. dollars have been selling for more than twice that. (Curacao uses guilders, the Dutch currency, but U.S. dollars are widely circulated and acceptable everywhere.)
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