Jamaica
There was a time not so long ago when outsiders just didn’t go to Trench Town. Until recently, this inner-city Kingston ghetto had such a reputation for violence that even armed police gave it a wide berth. But suddenly the former no-go zone is on the tourist trail and reggae fans can go to pay homage to the memory of Bob Marley at the so-called Culture Yard on First Street. The dilapidated ‘government yard’ tenement where Marley hung out with Bunny Wailer and other soon-to-be reggae legends is Jamaica’s latest and most unlikely heritage attraction.
The advent of Trench Town tourism suggests that the worst of Kingston’s political violence may be over – for the time being, at least. While there is still an unpalatably high national murder rate (849 in 1999), most deaths are linked to drugs and crime rather than party allegiance. The armed ‘dons’ who used to run the capital’s poorest areas as political fiefdoms have lost interest in partisan feuding, and recent elections have been mainly peaceful affairs. The People’s National Party (PNP) has held power for an unprecedented 12 years, while the rival Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) is stuck in the doldrums.
But the real significance of the Culture Yard is Jamaica’s determination to chase the tourist dollar. As competition hots up with other Caribbean purveyors of sand and sea, the island has sought to market itself as a cultural attraction, showing off its old plantation houses and colonial forts as well as its less picturesque slums. It has also tried to play down its image as a dangerous place, and so the Trench Town initiative is an important public-relations gesture.
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Tourism is rapidly becoming the biggest player in the Jamaican economy, earning an estimated $1.3 billion in 2000. Cruise ships and ‘all-inclusive’ resorts are taking over from traditional hotels, placing the industry more firmly in the hands of large conglomerates. Even so, many Jamaicans, from ministry officials to beach hustlers, continue to depend on the industry and what little ‘trickles down’ from the likes of Sandals resorts, where tourists live inside well-guarded enclaves. Approximately one in ten of the population works directly or indirectly in the tourism industry.
The old export earners, bauxite and sugar, are meanwhile in decline. There were sharp drops in world aluminium prices during 1999, and Jamaica’s mining sector suffered accordingly. Sugar, an antiquated hangover from the island’s plantation past, is only kept alive by preferential quota arrangements with the European Union. A similar deal for bananas has been threatened by the World Trade Organization’s ruling that the EU is breaching free-trade rules by favouring Caribbean producers, and farmers are abandoning what used to be known as ‘green gold’.
Largely as a result of agricultural woes, Jamaica’s economy has shrunk for four consecutive years, while its debt, despite some rescheduling, is still an unacceptable burden at more than $3.3 billion. If the Government has succeeded in taming inflation, it has been at the cost of a recession, and unemployment is stubbornly high at 16 per cent of the workforce. Not surprisingly, as incomes fall and prices rise, tempers are likely to fray, as in April 1999 when the Government announced a 30-per-cent hike in the price of petrol/gasoline, leading to riots and eight recorded deaths. On that occasion some of the worst violence took place around Trench Town. Any repetition, the Government knows, would be bad news for the all-important tourism industry.
At a glance
- Leader
- Prime Minister PJ Patterson.
- Economy
- GNP per capita $2,330 (Haiti $460, Britain $22,640).
- Monetary unit
- Jamaican dollar (J$1,000 = US$26.50).
- Main exports
- bauxite, alumina, sugar, bananas, clothing.
- Main imports
- petroleum products, machinery, food, construction materials. Jamaica’s huge trade deficit ($2 billion in 1998) is partly offset by tourism and other service-sector earnings, but tourism also accounts for much of the import bill.
- People
- 2.6 million. People per square kilometre: 237 (Britain 238).
- Health
- Infant mortality 10 per 1,000 live births (Haiti 83, Britain 6). Health facilities are concentrated around the capital, while cutbacks have reduced basic healthcare provision.
- Environment
- Tourism and bauxite mining have done considerable ecological damage but Jamaica still has a wide array of flora and fauna.
- Culture
- Over 90% of Jamaicans are of African descent, with smaller mixed-race and white communities. Other migrant groups include East Indians and Chinese.
- Religion
- Christianity, mostly Anglican but growing Pentecostal influence. African-descended folk religions such as Pocomania and Kumina exist alongside Rastafarianism.
- Language
- English (official), but patois (‘Jamaica talk’) is widely spoken.
- Sources
- State of the World’s Children 2001, Caribbean Development Bank 1999, South America, Central America and the Caribbean 2000, Human Development Report 2000.
- Last profiled
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Previously reviewed 1990 
Previously reviewed 1990 