Tourism and Underdevelopment

Grynbaum, Gail

Discover a continent before all the others do. A playful, mysterious world twice the size of Western Europe. Towering snow-capped mountains and unexplored jungles. An incredible marriage of...

...Our fellow Puerto Ricans have no business there...
...A recent magazine ad for Forbes in The New York Times claims hotel chains and airlines would virtually "curl up" without conventiongenerated revenue...
...Overseas Business Reports, U.S...
...travelers checks...
...They are bombing all over the world...
...Whether this was ever true, it is certainly not the case now...
...MAGAZINES FOR TOURISM PROMOTION, 1967 Selected Countries (Thousands of Dollars) The major beneficiaries of promotional expenditures in the U.S...
...With the view that the people who need the rest are the workers, rather than the ruling class, workers' resorts have been developed...
...The United States controls over 80 percent of the total industrial development...
...The reality, however, is that only small amounts of money actually stay in Latin America, since most of the revenue is going to the foreign concerns...
...All of these loans must be guaranteed, usually by the host country government or a strong bank...
...Hilton, owned by TWA has 11 hotels...
...also handled the Braniff account...
...Leisure time is every country's national hobby...
...Department of Commerce study notes that Tourism activity will create a further demand for hotel and restaurant equipment that offers an opportunity for U.S...
...It has replaced an ignorance of the region and people with racist, sexist, paternalistic portrayals packaged for the white upper and middle class people who stay in the first class and luxury hotels...
...corporations such as the First National Bank, The Grand Union, Hertz Co., Woolworths, have all been targets...
...market are magazines and newspapers aimed at specific income groups...
...IV, Sentember, 1970, p. 5.- 12 - 16...
...use of 747's the surplus of 707's will be sold to the Latin American domestic lines...
...Some Latin American governments have refused to give guarantees to foreign investment and have lost the opportunity for guaranteed foreign loans...
...With American ingenuity, efficiency, management and capital, it did not seem too difficult a task...
...Tricontinental Bulletin, no...
...Many businesses have private protection...
...Most of the loans come from the United States or at least through U.S...
...Copyright Q 1971 by the North American Congress on Latin America, Inc...
...It does not, however, solve any of the problems of underdevelopment, but rather, it creates greater underdevelopment...
...And the ancient ruins and primitive peoples who still worship the airplane as god will shock us...
...V, No...
...This policy -- followed so as not to give foreigners an advantage over domestic investors -- is being eliminated as the absence of adequate gmestic investment capital becomes more evident...
...A Miami-based group, South American Travel Organization (SATO), which has all the South American government tourism agencies as members, pools funds to finance combined U.S...
...Servan Schreiber in the American Challenge, when the local tourist sector may become almost entirely the domain of foreign capital...
...San Francisco Chronicle, travel section, March 7, 1971...
...If we did, we couldn't build at all...
...controlled agencies...
...Two of the most active are the Armed Commandos for Liberation (C.A.L...
...He is also president of Terrybukk, a consulting firm which has recently finished a study of tourism in British Honduras...
...Readers are urged to send any information to: NACLA Tourism Project, P.O...
...States is by creating a market for U.S...
...The hotels that are needed in Latin America, notes a Bank of London & South America study of tourism, are in the luxury and first class categories, until air fares are reduced to such an extent that middle-income tourists can afford to visit Latin America...or until the annual holiday away from home becomes an integral part of the way of life of middle-income Americans...
...6 Can these "benefits"of tourism really alleviate and deal with the urgent problems facing Latin America-problems such as lack of decent housing and health facilities, illiteracy, malnutrition, unemployment, high infant mortality, undemocratic and unresponsive governments, and foreign control of vast sectors of the nations' social, political and economic life...
...Department of Commerce, December, 1970...
...The sun is 93 million miles away hfiom most pbces At El San Juan Hotel itsyours for the basking- 11 - IS THERE AN ALTERNATIVE...
...1-13, and May-June, 1970, pp...
...In Latin America, tourism is a relatively underexploited industry, the major exception being Mexico...
...Lucia, Feb...
...The Cuban people found that tourism was only bringing them vice and degradation...
...What in actuality has the promotion campaign done to clear up "misconceptions...
...Come with American Express on an adventure of a lifetime...
...Natural Resources, Inc...
...5When tourists go to Latin America filled with lovely thoughts from Cook's Travel or Diner's Club about rhythmic Latin Americans, this does not promote a "national identity", or constructuve relationships between North and South Americans...
...per capita income of Mississippi (the nation's poorest state) ten years ago was 81 percent higher than Puerto Rico's...
...Lucia is having some second thoughts about her rapidly growing tourism industry...
...The primary U.S...
...Hereinafter cited as SRI Report...
...which plans to place $2 million to encourage development of non-luxury facilities, entertainment, shopping centers, sports activities and ground transportation in Latin America...
...construction firms will probably get most of the contracts and much, if not most, of the infrastructure development financing will be secured from U.S...
...Although total tourist receipts for Latin America esti"The day is not far distant when weary Americans will be able to sip a dry martini and look across bazaars and thatched roofs of far-off cities to see the familiar signatures of Howard Johnson, Holiday Inn, Ramada, Marriott, Sheraton, Sonesta, TraveLodge, Western International, Intercontinental and a host of others...
...Americans also have established institutions, such as casinos, in Latin America--institutions that are forbidden in the United States (except in Nevada...
...Lucia...
...Since the volume of tourism has jumped in the last three years, it is safe to' assume that the expenditures have also increased...
...Cosmopolitan cities will startle us...
...Long distances between cities and relatively poor surface transportation benefit the air industry...
...See Table I and accompanying diagram for breakdown of expenditures in the United States for tourism promotion...
...It is usually only American-owned hotels that can accomodate such huge numbers of people...
...11 Institutional and attitudinal racism of the United States, like a disease, is carried to Latin America with the influx of tourists...
...But despite the obvious employment gains, government officials are expressing concern about the industry"s role in St...
...We hope to publish separate studies on the impact of tourism on Mexico and preRevolutionary and Revolutionary Cuba in future newsletters...
...IHE BEST THINGS INLIFE-ARE FREE...
...Caribbean Report,"Black Power and the Hotel Business," September, 1970...
...Most U.S...
...industry now has an opportunity to move in and build new hotels and provide additional services...
...The Miami Herald, January 3, 1971...
...The infrastructure (such as roads, restaurants, shops, transport facilities) needed to support the hotels would amount to at least an additional $300 million...
...4) providing employment--by developing a laborintensive industry with jobs at all scale levels," 5 (emphasis in the original...
...Even Establishment writers have noted that when tourism development is left to foreign enterprise, it tends to destroy the physical and moral character of the countries it dominates: The greatest danger faced by the tourist sector, as by other sectors of the economy, is the situation described by M. J-J...
...Since then numerous armed attacks and bombings of U.S...
...5. Terrance Cullinan, "Tourism Beyond the Rio Grande," Texas Business Review, August, 1969, p. 4. 6. Crompton de Calvo, op cit., p. 211 7. Terrance Cullinan, Tourism in Latin America, Long Range Planning Service, Menlo Park, California: Stanford Research Institute, 1969, p. 6. This booklet was one of our major sources of information, however it is now out of print...
...Lima...
...Pre-Revolutionary Cuba was the dominant Caribbean/ Latin American tourist destination and is often held up as a model for tourist development...
...Interview with Armed Commandos of Liberation (C.A.L...
...How can they be developed...
...A total boycott of the Condado zone, that is the watchword...
...Many have experienced irregular transportation, scarcity of comfortable hotels, complicated entry documents, general incompetancy among tourist industry personnel...
...Usually only foreign capital has the resources to build the large capacity, first class accomodations that are called for...
...a California based international corporation with interests in oil, timber and land, and in recreational development...
...Advance Reservations, Swimming Pool, Ice, Parkin& Holiday Inn Magazine and Baby Bed...
...The United States is an important factor for the markets of Latin America...
...Most of San Juans' hotel operators are worried...
...14 There is a general scarcity of investment capital in Latin America for tourist infrastructure development...
...advertising companies such as J. Walter Thompson, Grant, McCann-Ericksson and Compton landed the large public relations contracts to promote Latin American tourism...
...The people who provide services in the Caribbean have become less happy than they used to be," admits the head of Holiday Inns, "but this is not unique in the Caribbean...
...2 / April 1971 Published monthly, except May-June and July-August, when it is published by-monthly, at 160 Claremont Ave., New York, New York 10027...
...SRI Report, p. 14...
...1-17...
...43.2 percent for Honduras: 37.7 percent for Chile...
...16 In 1969 the World Bank, through its International Finance Corporation, began granting loans for tourism development...
...airline companies such as Braniff, Pan Am or Eastern...
...Beginning in 1968 numerous industry studies were made to see how these three problems could be overcome...
...Gambling casinos are an additional lure...
...Former President Johnson t s 1968 appeal to American tourists discouraging travel to Europe and encouraging travel to Latin America was justified on the grounds of helping the U.S...
...many of whom they cannot name, as mixtures of unsafe water, unpleasant revolutions, uncontrolled graft, uninspired backwardness and immitigable poverty, with a lot of steamy jungles and the Andes thrown in...
...When the facades of tourism are bared, some people still say that tourism is important for foreign economies with few developed resources because it provides employment...
...They prefer to stay in familiar name JU.S.hotel chains-"brand names inspire confidence...
...Since the triumph of the Rebellion, sectors of the economy are beginning to be developed that will serve the Cubans and begin to alleviate the problems of underdevelopment caused by unresponsive oligarchies and years of foreign domination...
...28 What are the Latin Americans gaining...
...Soon additional profits for advertising firms with tourism experience will be obtainable by providing technical help to Latin American travel organizations in designing and planning promotional programs...
...Worth...
...goods...
...As other industries, it requires a stable investment climate and uses its vast commercial, political and financial powers to maintain open markets, dependent economies and friendly regimes to ensure profit and control...
...For stance...
...emphasis added) The primary function of these agencies is to increase U.S...
...Tourism promoters actually make a concerted effort to maintain quaint primitive villages, even to the extent of making them National Landmarks, so they can not be changed...
...3) preservation of national culture--by utilization of folk art and culture, establishment of protected museums, and provision of funds for guarding monuments and retention of artifacts...
...Aristocratic Bellhops The third factor given for the undeveloped nature of Latin American tourism is the relative disinterest of Latin American governments...
...This is certainly not what is considered serving the peoples' needs...
...In most tourism promotional literature there is an emphasis on local crafts...
...Lucia will be a mere conduit pipe for the re-export of the tourist dollar.' JOURNAL OF COMMERCE, February, 12, 1971...
...The Latin Americans, on the other hand are left with the bills for debt payments on tourism infrastructure loans-in 1967 Latin America hard currency service payments on all debts outstanding amounted to more than $2 billion, about half the total for the entire developing world...
...Montevideo...
...and the Revolutionary Armed Independence Movement (M.I.R.A...
...36.5 percent for Guatemala...
...WHOSE ECONOMY BENEFITS...
...advertising programs for all of its members...
...The same ad agency that ran LBJ's campaign'(Wells Rich Green Assoc...
...American advertising agencies, airline companies and tourist organizations began to step up promotion of Latin America in the United States...
...flag ships...
...concerns...
...Is there an alternative...
...As conventions and other business-related travel increases, the luxury hotels will add another lucrative source of profits...
...Hotels in Latin America U.S...
...At least there were permanent basic resources: no matter how intensive the exploitation of sun, snow, water, scenery or history, there was no danger of depleting these resources, as is the case with the oil and raw materials that American industry has traditionally gone after...
...The New York Times, April 28, 1970...
...An important event in the history of the U.S...
...28, April, 1969, p. 202...
...Puerto Rico: Colony in Revolution," no...
...1 T h is ous an Am: The Wings of Imper development...
...20 With a developing tourist industry, Latin America will be taking out even more loans...
...FOOTNOTES 1. This article will focus on Central and South America plus the Spanish-speaking islands of the Caribbean: Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic...
...Most of the tours include meals at hotels (organized tour travel is expected to triple in the next five years...
...Overseas Business Reports, U.S...
...In many ways the prospects for foreign travel are exciting...
...UNITED mm AV 141 fJ4s...
...Increased travel also stimulates purchases of additional aircraft from the U.S...
...Braniff Style...
...48, March 1970 and "Puerto Rico and the struggle against colonialism...
...6mated (at constant 1967 prices) at $3 billion for 1975 and $6.2 billion for 1980,compared with approximately $1.4 billion in 1967, these receipts go primarily to foreign interests...
...These comprehensive systems of services aid in keeping the money circulating within U.S...
...multinational corporations which construct and/or manage hotels and resorts...
...Peru (not clear whether all terms still in effect) has a ten year exemption from import duties on tourism-related machinery and equipment and provides 5gr tax-free reinvestment in hotel construction...
...TOURIST RECEIPTS As used in this article,"tourist receipts" include the total spending in a country by tourists who reside in other countries...
...Export-Import Bank...
...13 A 1969 report noted that for tourism to add sufficiently to the Latin American economies, the total minimum financing required over the next five years would be $1.5 billion to account for a shortage of 75,000 rooms at an average cost of $20,000 per room...
...these include the aircraft, construction, communications, advertising and banking industries...
...15 and 16...
...Braniff International...
...4. Terrance Cullinan is with U.S...
...AID Shapes the Dominican Police...
...SRI Report, pp...
...For example, Compton recently landed a contract with the government of El Salvador to do advertising and public relations in the U.S...
...Even if they have only a few pesos, they wouldn't think of going to a fiesta in last year's dress...
...The tourism infrastructure developments -- roads, airports, electricity, communications systems -- are all important for opening up countries for U.S...
...Journal of Commerce, January 28, 1971...
...Intercontinental Hotels, owned by Pan Am, has 17 hotels in Latin America and plans several more...
...The executive said that Holiday Inns can't let local unrest upset its future plans...
...The EXIM Bank may lend up to 50 percent of total project costs...
...manufacturers...
...To get things moving inTexas, just mention our name...
...Tricontinental Bulletin, published by the Executive Secretariet of the Solidarity of the Peoples of Africa, Asia and Latin America, Havana, Cuba...
...The Condado, the principal area in San Juan for American hotels and tourists, has been declared a war zone and Puerto Ricans are told not to venture into the area...
...Undoubtedly it provides jobs, but what kind...
...BRASILIA SPURS HOTEL TOILETS BRASILIA (AP)- New hotels here cannot qualify for special tax exemptions unless they have a bathroom in each room or suite, a lack that "discourages our most frequent tourist, the American," according to Joaquim Xavier da Silvera, president of the Government tax agency...
...Currently the pleasure-business travel ratio is three to two...
...Colorful Indian markets beg us to bargain and white beaches invite us to unwind...
...but "What are the correct priorities...
...For example, 62.5 percent of foreign imports to Mexico were from the United States...
...Rich white tourists tend to concentrate in large hotels or resorts which local populations often find are, for all practical purposes, off limits to them...
...the U.S...
...At first, prior to 1968, the major advertising for Latin America was done by the U.S...
...In these circumstances the net gain to the country, at any event to the balance of payments, will be very small and may possibly even have a negative quantity...
...HASA drafted a tourism development program that called for the investment of $150 million over the next ten years to increase luxury and first class hotel accomodations by 60 percent, either by expansion of existing hotels or by new construction...
...In late 1967 he had asked the Alliance for Progress to give priority to Latin American tourism development...
...11 (UPI)The little island of St...
...tourist industry studies: Major advertising campaigns by the primary U.S...
...3 0 JOBS OR SLAVERY...
...accomodations industry and in general enlarging the market for U.S...
...One aim is to disrupt business and another aim is to force insurance companies to pay more money in indemnities than they receive in payments, thus discouraging such types of investment and insurance...
...This infrastructure could be potentially important for the growth of Latin American industry, yet under the present conditions the Latin American governments are primarily helping the growth of foreign investors and lenders...
...Whose economy is being stimulated...
...He spent three years working in Latin America on tourism and manpower development projects in conjunction with the Stanford Research Institute...
...SRI Report, p. 12...
...from an American Express tour promotion ad) Tourism is often seen as an important tool for curing the economic ills of Latin America...
...goods, tourism development in Latin America will also give a boost to the U.S...
...Indeed, Puerto Rico is considered a model for tourism development just as preRevolutionary Cuba was once considered a tourist paradise...
...Ibid., p. 11...
...tourist concerns, which either reinvest their profits into more U.S.-owned services or repatriate the earnings...
...Why aren't other sectors developed...
...ilrWLI-9 - If South American countries are to meet announced tourism development objectives and reduce the present northward flow of Latin America dollars, they will probably have to renegotiate existing bilateral trade agreements restricting U.S...
...Take for example, the following: The prettiest women in Mexico are in Oaxaca state...
...35 Fearing more terrorism, some 300 police are assigned to protecting leading politicians and businessmen on the island...
...agencies...
...What does tourism really promote...
...Although tourism in the form that it took before the Revolution is ended in Cuba, a different approach is being taken...
...Crompton de Calvo, op...
...Experienced U.S...
...They love clothes...
...Braniff fared quite well during the Johnson administration, winning several new routes to Latin America...
...Although the travel ban was "never put into effect, it had an impact...
...Crompton de Calvo, op cit., p. 202...
...Business Week, August 8, 1970...
...Even with gambling around every corner, most of the hotels and big nightclubs are empty," reports The Miami Herald...
...The government estimates only 10 cents out of every tourist dollar stays in St...
...Argentina has a deduction from taxable income of amounts spent to buy land and construct and equip buildings servicing the tourist sector...
...Ibid., p. 14...
...But what else does Puerto Rico have...
...IV, April, 1970, pp...
...penetration is sanctioned...
...Aside from some countries such as Bolivia and Uruguay creating ministerial posts for tourism directors, doing regional tourism promotion with groups like the Central American Common Market, declaring tourism a basic industry in Brazil, recently many Latin American elites in government have instituted various tourism incentive programs which make investment in this sector increasingly attractive to foreign capital...
...8 NACLA NEWSLETTER Vol...
...The Miami Herald, December 3, 1970...
...Information from International Finance Corporation Annual Reports for 1969 and 1970...
...III, no...
...property have occurred...
...17 Loans for Latin American tourism development were also extended by the Inter-American Development Bank, the U.S...
...For example, out of six hotels able to accomodate conventions in Caracas, at least four are American owned...
...carriers and their hotel affiliates are expected to double by 1972 if substantially increased landing rights are granted by Latin American governments and if those governments begin to bear some of the necessary overall promotional expenditures (emphasis added...
...Western International, owned by United Air Lines has 41 hotels in Latin America...
...airports comes from or goes to Latin America...
...sources which will insist on "Buy American" clauses in their loan contracts...
...30 percent of the labor force is either un- or under-employed...
...The chart below gives a rough idea of how tourists spend their money: Expenditures by tourists at the major luxury and first class hotels will be the primary source of all tourism income to Latin Americans in the 1970's22 North American tourists spend more than other travelers...
...It is often argued that tourism is an important industry for nations that have few other resources...
...Department of Defense is the largest landowner with 13 percent of the arable land, nine military bases with 25,000 troops, two atomic bases and training grounds for the Green-Berets...
...ADELA's primary role is to generate investment opportunities in Latin America for large multinational corporations and to improve the climate for foreign private investment...
...THE PEOPLE FIGHT BACK: PUERTO RICO Puerto Rico is often pointed to as an example of a country with a well developed tourist sector...
...An incredible marriage of preChrist Indian cultures to the Spanish life that conquered them...
...Los Angeles Times, December 12, 1970, UPI release...
...It has over 98 projects in 19 Latin American countries...
...transportation industries--particularly airlines, since 97 percent of the travelers arrive by air...
...Sure we're building in Madeira, and that's peaceful right now, but we can't limit ourselves to the peaceful backwaters of the world...
...For this reason, the road taken by Cuba and the radical shift in its priorities--from servicing the needs of foreigners to servicing the needs of its own people--is of particular interest to the Puerto Rican "independistas...
...Military Assistance Programs - Totals From All Sources, 1950-69..29- 2 - International tourism is the largest volume service industry in world trade...
...or: An additional way tourism benefits the United Type of expenditure Percent of total expenditures accomodations 30 food and drink 25 purchases 25 sightseeing and entertainment 10 local transport 5 others 5- 7Major U.S...
...The second factor said to hinder the tourist industry is the high cost and lack of services for tourists...
...Now, Latin American governments are paying U.S...
...27 One of the reasons for the growth of air travel is that Latin American governments have been allowing North American carriers more routes...
...both of which were formed in the late 1960's...
...Where is there peace today...
...Who are the real beneficiaries...
...Who pays for it...
...In 1970 an estimated $17 billion was spent worldwide on foreign travel and transportation.2 Encompassed by the tourism industry are several "smaller" industries: accomodations industries(hotels, resorts...
...Ibid., p. 209...
...So now, in the middle of The New York Times travel section or Holiday magazine, we find an article on how repression in Brazil is not really that bad and tourists should, by all means, still go there...
...It appears they are financing their own exploitation...
...For example, Holiday Inns owns Continental Trailways and Sheraton owns Carte Blanche credit cards and Avis Rental Cars...
...carriers to Latin America are Pan Am and Braniff...
...At this point it is interesting to note that some of the power of the multinational corporations is derived from the intricate web of services they provide...
...When people go to Guatemala they notice that in each village people are wearing different "costumes", but they fail to notice the uniformity of poverty...
...The majority of these inducements and incentives favor foreign, rather than local firms...
...48, March, 1970, p. 17...
...10 for institutions...
...transport industries (air, bus and ship lines...
...7 (See boxes on p.5) Most arguments for tourism development claim it is a significant method for channeling dollars into an underdeveloped country and for diversifying their economies The United States has consistently pushed tourism development as an important way to expand markets and investments...
...leader, from Claridad, San Juan, Puerto Rico, November 22, 1970...
...33 Luxury hotels in the Condado Beach area and U.S...
...18, September 1967...
...Cullinan, "Tourism Beyond the Rio Grande," p. 3. 13...
...19 I ss u e . U.S...
...Agency for International Development, and the U.S...
...One C.A.L...
...Several questions will be raised here: Why is tourism important...
...The reasons given for these small totals are: (1) Misconceptions of Latin America by outsiders-mainly from the United States...
...One of the men instrumental in landing this plum was Cliff Carter who had been active in Johnson's political campaigns since 1937, served on Johnson's personal staff in the 50's and 60's and who became executive director of the Democratic National Committee in 1964...
...market...
...As many Latin Americans say, "Are we throwing everything we've got into a nation-building effort simply to produce a crop of waiters, guides and drink-mixers for rich tourists...
...companies to do promotion...
...There are also the industries that are "secondary" to these but which are of strategic importance to the economy...
...takeover of Puerto Rico continue, several "independista" groups have recently stepped up their resistence activities...
...corporations hold over 50 percent of the original capital subscription...
...The "misconceptions" of Latin America are described by one writer who noted that North Americans often view their 'Good Neighbors...
...balance balance of payments position...
...They swing along slowly and gracefully, their loose dresses swishing to and fro, and they roll majestic hips from side to side...
...2) establishment of national identity -- which in some Latin American cases might serve both outsiders and the nation itself...
...Like most American industries expanding abroad, the tourism industry is dominated by well-known multinational corporate giants such as Pan American Airways, Ling-Temco-Vought, International Telephone & Telegraph, Trans World Airlines, and American Express...
...And once gambling is established, gangsters, drug traffic and prostitution are usually close behind...
...Even when local firms attempt to get financial aid, leaders consider the large multinational firms better credit risks...
...Box 226, Berkeley, California 94701 2. San Francisco Chronicle, February 9, 1971, AP release 3. Doreen E. Crompton de Calvo, "Tourism in Latin America," Bank of London and South America Review, Vol...
...In this report it is noted that in some cases bacause of the extended U.S...
...23 But business travel is growing in importance and conventions, conferences and exhibitions are providing large amounts of income...
...Sincd 1968 funds have come from three primary sources: (1) investments by U.S...
...Carlos Sanz de Santamaria, Chairman of the Alliance for Progress Coordinating Council, stated at the InterAmerican Tourist Congress in 1967 that "tourism can become the most effective weapon in South America for redistribution of national, regional and international income...
...SRI Report, p. 9 17...
...50.15 percent for Venezuela...
...food, drink and catering services...
...Cullinan, "Tourism Beyond the Rio Grande," p. 4. 32...
...The luxury hotels import everything from butter to entertainers and, according to one government official, 'unless substantial effort is made to retain the tourist dollar by way of production, packaging and marketing of local handicrafts and foodstuffs, and the presentation of local talent, music and drama, St...
...Many Puerto Ricans see great similarities between present day Puerto Rico and pre-Revolutionary Cuba because of the degree of penetration and control by the Americans and the abysmal poverty of their country...
...In Puerto Rico, for example, it is nearly impossible for Puerto Ricans to use their own beaches when Americans or U.S.-owned hotels are nearby...
...one million people out of a total population of 2.5 million in 1966 lived off surplus government food...
...A recent Texas Business Review article (August 1969) entitled "Travel Beyond the Rio Grande" reported that Texas may be affected more than most states by the impact of a more developed tourist industry in Latin America...
...In addition, American food product lines will be necessary to supply U.S...
...tourist industry occured in January of 1968 -- President Johnson appealed to Americans to restrict their international travel to the Western Hemisphere to aid in the balance of payments problem...
...Subscription price: $5 per year for individuals...
...Bills are aften put on convenient U.S...
...tourists expected to fill hotels...
...13 Exclusive: How U.S...
...31 Is it in the line of correct human and national priorities to be preserving archeological and historical sites, natural scenery, game reserves, and sporting facilities while vast numbers of Latin Americans do not have decent housing, health or education...
...For more on ADELA and IFC, see "Funding the Empire," NACLA Newsletter, Vol...
...International travel from the United States to Latin America is expected to rise more than 14 percent annually 26...
...SRI Report, p. 9. 19...
...carriers serving Latin America -- Braniff -- is based in Dallas-Ft...
...Is this some of the idea behind preserving national culture...poverty as a tourist attraction...
...2) Poor relationships with those tourists who do come--including high costs and lack of services (3) Lack of interest in and support for tourism by Latin American governments...
...visitors fly by their national lines...
...There is discussion on in Cuba that a section of the Isle of Youth (formerly the Isle of Pines, the island where Fidel and others were imprisoned after the 1953 attack on Moncada) is going to be developed for some foreign visitors: progressive people from all over the world, many of whom live lives of constant harassment, will be offered a place in Cuba to gain strength for the struggles that they are waging in their homeland...
...This is not to argue that the former are not important, rather that they should not be undertaken at the expense of the basic services for the people's welfare...
...This is South America...
...investors...
...Although there have been tourists in Latin America as far back as Cortes, as of 1968 tourist receipts for Argentina amounted to only 2.3 percent of national income, for Colombia 4 percent and for Ecuador, 3.9 percent...
...SRI Report, p. 7,10...
...30.1 percent for Brazil...
...In 1969-1970, the first years when IFC was granting funds for tourism development, Colombia received nearly $2 million from the IFC to help finance Intercontinental hotels being constructed in Cali and Medellin...
...Colombia has a program whereby 15 percent of the cost of a goverment-approved tourist facility is granted by the government in cash...
...Waiters, porters, prostitutes, bellboys, messengers, dishwashers, ST...
...Over 99 percent of the international traffic passing through San Antonio's airport and 83 percent of Houston's is either coming from or going to Latin America while only 20 percent of the international traffic of all U.S...
...About 14 percent of annual air traffic between the United States and Latin America in 1967-68 went through San Antonio and Houston...
...1 2 U.S...
...From the above chart on tourism expenditures, it would appear that a good percentage of the tourist receipts go into the Latin American economies...
...Through the technique of joint ventures it attempts to break down national opposition to foreign capital...
...Latin America, already a booming market for U.S...
...Puerto Rican workers on the average get one-third of the salary paid in the United States for the same type of work and the cost of living is 25 percent higher...
...ADELA is a multinational private investment company, with investments over $150 million in Latin America...
...The question to ask is not, "if the population, government, and climate is right, can tourism be developed...
...at *& 9- 10 - doormen, shoeshiners, and some managers (to add local flavor...
...The tourism industry was looking so lucrative that in Colombia, the Catholic Church offered to finance a new luxury hotel...
...10 Because the United States is the main generator of travel to Latin America, most of the promotion is done in this country...
...Wages are low...
...Various business groups have launched investment programs In May of 1968, Braniff International, with the aid of Western International Hotels, Deltec Corporation and ADELA, formed HASA (Hotel Associates, S.A...
...residents to Latin America rose 14.2 percent over 1967, with reported increase of average tourist expenditures, the reverse of the world trend...
...EXPENDITURES IN U.S...
...In 1969, El Salvador received nearly $1 million to help construct a Western International hotel, El Camino Real, in San Salvador...
...These awards often merely implement plans made in U.S...
...It promotes an atmosphere where people jump for tips because they are starving, where people think that the only way to achieve development is by serving the needs of the rich white foreigners, rather than the needs of one's own people...
...communication declares: It is a center of vice, drugs, prostitution, and gambling...
...tourist agencies and related services (travelers checks, credit cards, car rental networks...
...Hilton and Intercontinental work principally on a management contract basis, whereas Sheraton puts up necessary captial from its own resources to buy or construct accomodations...
...Brazil, for example, offers a ten year income tax holiday for construction and operation of new hotels...
...Much of the entertainment is in hotel nightclubs and cafes...
...For an analysis of these and other international financing agencies, see Hector Melo and Israel Yost, "Funding the Empire," NACLA Newsletter, Vol...
...For progressive people it can aid in increasing internationalism and understanding of other people and cultures...
...In May 1968 he was serving as Director of Public Affairs for Braniff -- the Civil Aeronautics Board awarded the new Latin America routes to Braniff in November 1968.* * "6 LBJ Aides Joined Airlines", The Washington Post, May 28, 1968 and Braniff annual report, 1968...
...32 Rather than see the progressive U.S...
...In countries where the government has little interest in the welfare of the people, it sees building luxurious rooms for foreign businessmen andstourists as a higher priority than housing and services for the people...
...suppliers of hotel furnishings, electrical and air conditioning installations, refrigeration equipment and swimming pool constructors...
...cit., p. 203...
...3 Terrance Cullinan, in a Stanford Research Institute report entitled Tourism in Latin America, 4 gives the traditional arguments for tourism development: (1) strengthening of the economy by significant contributions to national income...
...36 In the face of this resistance, numerous companies are cancelling plans for expansion...
...Braniff officials are among the principals of a company -- Tourism Investments S.A...
...Market Factors in Latin America," Overseas Business Reports, April, 1970...
...traffic by U.S...
...Cuba has come up with some answers...
...Buenos Aires...
...Pan Am: The Wings of Imperialisment...
...exports...
...24 A U.S...
...Crompton de Calvo, op cit., p. 202...
...1 9 It becomes clearer that tourism development is basically benefitting the United States and that the people of Latin America are paying for it...
...Does this type of employment help development or improve the quality of life...
...5 s Tourism development also generates demand for office furniture and business machines, interior decorators, catering equipment, construction materials and equipment...
...Puerto Rico now has the world's highest drug addiction rate...
...I ~n Minimum contribution for one-year subscription: $5.00...
...34 Terrorism has cost the companies millions--estimates go up to $25 million...
...The United States generates 60 percent of international tourism and is, therefore, the world's major source of tourists...
...8. Cullinan, "Tourism Beyond the Rio Grande," p. 3. 9. San Francisco Chronicle, October 26, 1970...
...imports, is opened up still more with tourism and loans that promote tourism development...
...People are encouraged to see their own country and are given free vacations in the places where foreigners used to have mansions and private clubs...
...Much of the local sightseeing is done in cars rented from U.S...
...a new corporation geared entirely to developing tourism...
...IV, May-June, 1970, p. 5 ff., and "The Bank of America's LAAD partners," The NACLA Newsletter, Vol...
...3) loans from Latin American governments...
...2) loans from the United States or U.S.-controlled financial institutions...
...The quote is from a report on tourism in Trinidad, however the observation applies to the rest of Latin America also...
...The tourist receipts for Latin America, therefore, include the earnings of foreign and U.S...
...In the words of the Texas Business Review: Texas business is already heavily involved in tourism development and one of the two major U.S...
...It promotes an industry which, more than any other business, is based on serving outside interests...
...Aside from stimulating the U.S...
...LUCIA WORRIED ABOUT TOURISM CASTRIES, St...
...Major U.S...
...credit cards and nearly all tourists use U.S...
...Lucia's economic life once the construction boom is over...
...What was never mentioned was that his home state and many of his close business and political associates also stand to benefit in a big way from any increase in travel to Latin America...
...Tourism is also supposed to add an impetus to regional cooperation, or as Doreen E. Crompton de Calvo in a recent issue of the Bank of London and South America Review noted, "The characteristics of international tourism today dictate that Latin Americans see their region as a whole, in the way that tourists see it...
...airlines Country City Hotel Chain serving country Argentina Buenos Aires Sheraton (UC) SH Braniff if" " Hilton (UC) HIL Pan American it" " Plaza Hotel IHC Bariloche Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Mendoza Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Brazil Sao Paulo Sao Paulo Hilton (UC) HIL Braniff Rio Sheraton (UC) SH Pan American Chile Santiago San Christobal SH Braniff f" Carrera Hotel SH Pan American f" Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Antofagasta Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Arica Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Concepcion Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Vina del Mar Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Colombia Bogota Tequendama IHC Braniff t" Hilton (UC) HIL Pan American Barranquilla El Prado IHC Eastern Airlines Cali Cali Intercontinental (UC) IHC Medellin Intercontinental Medellin IHC Dominican Santo Domingo Embajador IHC Pan American Republic " " Holiday Inn HOL Ecuador Quito Colon Internacional WI Braniff f" Intercontinental Quito IHC Pan American El Salvador San Salvador El Salvador IHC Pan American " " Holiday Inn (UC) HI Camino Real WI Guatemala Antigua Antigua WI Pan American Guatemala City Camino Real WI Delta Airlines It" " Guatemala Baltimore WI Eastern ff" " Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Guyana Georgetown Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Pan American Intercontinental Guyana IHC British Honduras Belize Holiday Inn (UC) HOL KEY: HOTEL CHAINS (Parent company in paranthesis) SH - Sheraton Hotels (International Telephone IHC - Intercontinental (Pan Am) (and Telegraph) WI - Western International (United HIL - Hilton Hotels (Trans World Airlines) Airlines) HI - Holiday Inns BR - Braniff Abbreviation: UC - Under construction- 8Country City Hotel Chain Airlines Mexico Various cities 22 Western International (plus 1 UC) American Airlines 1 Sheraton Braniff 1 Intercontinental Eastern 1 Braniff Delta 3 Hilton Pan American 5 Holiday Inn (plus 11 UC) Nicaragua Managua Intercontinental Managua IHC Pan American t" Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Panama Panama City Granada Hotel BR Braniff " " Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Pan American " " El Panama WI Colon Miranda WI Peru Lima Grand Hotel Bolivar IHC Braniff 1" Sheraton (UC) SH Pan American Puerto Rico Ponce Intercontinental Ponce IHC Delta f" Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Eastern San Juan Holiday Inn HOL Pan American " " Caribe Hilton HIL "' " San Geronimo HIL P.R...
...Second-class postage paid at New York, New York.-3The images had to change before Latin America could "sell...
...Department of Commerce, December, 1970...
...Sheraton SH Mayaguez Mayaguez Hilton HIL Dorado Dorado Hilton HIL Uruguay Montevideo Victoria Plaza IHC Pan American Venezuela Caracas Hotel Tamanaco IHC Pan American Holiday Inn (UC) HOL Delta Avila WI Caracas Hilton HIL Sheraton-Humboldt SH Maricaibo Holiday Inn (UC) HOL La Guaira Sheraton-La Guaira SH Macuto Macuto Sheraton SH Valencia Intercontinental (UC) IHC Barinas Llano Alto WI Coro Miranda WI Cumana Cumanagoto WI Maracay Maracay Hotel & Country Club WI Margarita Island Bella Vista WI Merida Prado Rio WI San Christobal El Tama WI Santo Domingo Monico WI Trujillo Trujillo Hotel WI Urena Aguas Calientes WI Source: Travel brochures, Holiday Magazine, Hotel Index...
...It serves American business--not the people of Latin America...
...Sheraton, owned by IT&T has 10 and is pushing to expand to key Latin American cities...
...53 U.S...
...Why do Puerto Rican nationalists bomb resort areas of Condado Beach...
...In addition,the expected doubling of tourist arrivals in Latin America by 1975 will require complete reconstruction or replacement of about half of the region's airports and additons or alterations to most of the remainder...
...The NACLA NEWSLETTER is published ten times a year by the North American Congress on Latin America...
...Let's look at how U.S...
...In the last few years multinational corporations have expanded hotel construction and take-overs of hotel management...
...It is a far cry-and long struggle--from the present kind of travel that promotes poverty, primitive villages and swinging Latin Americans as tourist attractions...

Vol. 5 • April 1971 • No. 2


 
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