Minister Bartlett Calls for Caribbean Tourism Bank

  • Tourism Minister, Hon. Edmund Bartlett, has formally called for the creation of a dedicated Caribbean Tourism Bank. He’s urging the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) to champion a region-specific financial institution that can develop tailored products and financing solutions to meet the unique needs of the Caribbean tourism sector.
  • He made the call during remarks at a luncheon hosted in his honour, following his meeting with members of the IDB Board of Directors in Washington DC.
  • Addressing senior development finance officials, Minister Bartlett argued that the Caribbean has long suffered from the absence of an investment framework tailored to tourism – an industry he described as “the world’s fastest and most immediately convertible economic activity”. “We think that the time has come for a regional financial institution dedicated to tourism in the Caribbean… a Tourism Bank where products can be crafted and developed, that are responsive to tourism’s demands and supply dynamics,” he stated.
  • Bartlett used the occasion to highlight what he described as a persistent ambivalence towards tourism investment in the Caribbean – an outlook he linked partly to historical and psychological legacies that have obscured the sector’s true economic power.
  • He further underscored tourism’s proven role as a catalyst for community development, pointing to the visible transformation of townships across Jamaica and the wider Caribbean where tourist activity has brought roads, water, electricity, and economic opportunities to communities that once lacked such infrastructure.
  • In urging the IDB to take a leadership role in advancing the Tourism Bank concept, Mr. Bartlett noted that the institution’s regional presence, capital base, and development mandate uniquely position it to partner with Caribbean governments in building the financial architecture the sector needs.
  • The call aligns with Jamaica’s broader advocacy for stronger regional financial institutions and underscores the country’s leadership in global discussions on tourism resilience, particularly in the wake of Hurricane Melissa’s devastating impact on Jamaica’s western parishes in 2025 and the sector’s remarkable recovery heading into 2026

(Source: Reuters)