1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910786473903321

Autore

Thacker Nita

Titolo

Caribbean Growth in an International Perspective : : The Role of Tourism and Size / / Nita Thacker, Sebastian Acevedo Mejia, Roberto Perrelli

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2012

ISBN

1-4755-1207-4

1-4755-1206-6

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (36 p.)

Collana

IMF Working Papers

IMF working paper ; ; WP/12/235

Altri autori (Persone)

Acevedo MejiaSebastian

PerrelliRoberto

Soggetti

Tourism - Caribbean Area

Economic development - Caribbean Area

Macroeconomics

Public Finance

Industries: Hospital,Travel and Tourism

Production and Operations Management

Multiple or Simultaneous Equation Models: Models with Panel Data

Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: General

Economywide Country Studies: Latin America

Caribbean

Sports

Gambling

Restaurants

Recreation

Tourism

Production

Cost

Capital and Total Factor Productivity

Capacity

Macroeconomics: Production

National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General

Labor Economics: General

Hospitality, leisure & tourism industries

Public finance & taxation

Labour

income economics



Total factor productivity

Productivity

Public expenditure review

Labor

Economic sectors

Expenditure

Production growth

Industrial productivity

Expenditures, Public

Labor economics

Economic theory

Barbados

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Contents; I. Introduction; II. Catching Up or Falling Behind? A Caribbean Tale; Figures; Figure 1. Caribbean: Ratio of Per capita GDP (PPP) to Relevant Comparators, 1970-2009; III. Accounting for Growth in the Caribbean; A. Analytical Framework; B. Growth Accounting Results; Figure 2. ECCU: Contributions to Growth, 1970-2007; Figure 3. Other Caribbean: Contributions to Growth, 1970-2007; C. Level Accounting Results; IV. The Tourism and Growth Nexus in the Caribbean; A. A Brief Review of the Literature; B. The Proposed Econometric Approach; C. The Impact of Tourism on Growth Levels

Figure 4. Caribbean: Factors Contributing to Caribbean Growth vis-à-vis the World D. The Impact of Tourism on Growth Volatility; E. Tourism, Size and Growth Accounting; V. Concluding Remarks; References; Appendix: Data and Variables; Tables; Table 1. ECCU: Growth Accounting 1970-2007; Table 2. Other Caribbean: Growth Accounting 1970-2007; Table 3. ECCU: Output Growth and its Components: Ratio to Barbados Values, 1970-2007; Table 4. Other Caribbean: Output Growth and its Components: Ratio to Barbados Values, 1970-2007

Table 5. ECCU: Output Growth and its Components: Ratio to U.S. Values, 1970-2007 Table 6. Other Caribbean: Output Growth and its Components: Ratio to U.S. Values, 1970-2007; Table 7. Tourism and Growth Estimations; Table 8. Tourism and Small Islands Interaction Estimations; Table 9. Tourism and Growth Estimations Robustness; Table 10. Growth Volatility Estimations; Table 11. Growth Accounting Estimations; Table 12. List of Countries

Sommario/riassunto

After earlier success, growth performance in most Caribbean countries has been disappointing since the early 1990s. With slower growth, output has fallen behind that of relevant comparator countries. This paper analyzes the growth experience of the Caribbean countries from a cross country perspective. Three findings stand out. First, the slowdown in growth is explained more by a decline in productivity rather than a lack of investment. Second, tourism has been a significant contributor to higher growth (through both capital accumulation and productivity) and lower output volatility, and in many countries there is



scope for further expansion of this sector. Third, the small size and the fact that most of these countries are islands have limited growth. Policies aimed at improving productivity, further development of the tourism sector, and regional integration could pay dividends in terms of higher growth in the region.