as I have stated before ,a lot of you people would complain about a free lunch .
people working in the port?
taxis serving the port?
people who run shops/bars inside the port?
organizers of excursions?
tourist excursion guides/drivers/service?
Of course, those are intuitively obvious. How many people are we talking about in total?
From what I have seen, I would put this number at no more than 100 people in total. Also, there is no way to really tell how many of these people are employees of Carnival here under work permit. Maybe as many as 25%. I can say that the upper level jobs in the engineering department there is completely imported with locals being the labor force.
went to santiago yesterday and saw that the work on the road from maimon restarted again. the rumour has it that carnival threatened with withdrawal from puerto plata if the road is not finished.
In other words, if Carnival pulls out, the impact would be rather minimal given how cruise lines manage all of the profit centers involved. It would certainly generate less dialog than the current situation in Sosua.
Not to worry, there will be other reasons for Carnival to withdraw.
Typical situation here with that road. Start it and go like crazy, miss a deadline and then stop until some overwhelming force causes a restart. Those overwhelming forces are few and far between. Obviously government people are going to lose money if Carnival pulls out, so the work was started again.
Will they ever actually finish it?
Over $100,000 US benefit to the North Coast per cruise?
According to Julio Almonte Nina, Deputy Minister for Tourism for the North Coast, the thousands of tourists who have arrived on the last 93 cruise ships at the Amber Cove terminal in Maimon in the province of Puerto Plata, have generated income of around US$10 million that has injected great dynamism in the productive and economic sectors of the province. In pesos that equates to around RD$493,172,145.
Almonte Nina says that the 278,973 cruise ship passengers who arrived, rented 13,000 vehicles, of which 8,755 took taxis, 2,905 buses, 1,076 safari tours and 266 rented a car.
Source: DR1, Diariolibre
Aug 31, 2017
According to Julio Almonte Nina, Deputy Minister for Tourism for the North Coast, the thousands of tourists who have arrived on the last 93 cruise ships at the Amber Cove terminal in Maimon in the province of Puerto Plata, have generated income of around US$10 million that has injected great dynamism in the productive and economic sectors of the province. In pesos that equates to around RD$493,172,145.
Almonte Nina says that the 278,973 cruise ship passengers who arrived, rented 13,000 vehicles, of which 8,755 took taxis, 2,905 buses, 1,076 safari tours and 266 rented a car.
Source: DR1, Diariolibre
Aug 31, 2017
I have to say I changed my mind about the cruise-ships.
I have a bar on the Malecon and thought that nothing would change because the taxi-mob would bring the clients to business that they want (and they do) and that I wouldn't have any benefit from them, but I was wrong.
If the tourists ask the cab drivers in amber cove to go to the beach of pop, they will bring them to Cosita Rica because they are the only people who pay a lot at the cab drivers, nobody else sees a tourist on the Malecon, BUT.... I have a couple of clients who live here and make money on the tourists from carnival (with excursions or in shops) and those people have a lot more money now to spend, so indeed: not everybody wins on the tourists, but others (like myself) are earning more because some people have more money to spend thanks to those tourists.