News

New LIAT CEO: Lower Air Taxes Would Increase Government Revenues

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - May 2, 2014

Above: a LIAT plane

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Taxes on intra-regional air travel have largely proven to be crippling for Caribbean carrier LIAT, and the company’s new CEO says lowering them would both increase demand and governments revenues.

Evans, who officially assumed office on April 22, said this week that, while taxes are “important to reinvest in aviation infrastructure,” he would like to see governments “fully examine the overall economic and social impact of LIAT.”

Evans said a lighter taxation regime would “stimulate greater demand and an increase in the ‘tax take’ back to [each] government.”

““We spend approximately US$12.5 million dollars a year here in Barbados, but all those jobs we create spend a further $25 million and most of that is, of course, taxable revenue to the government,” said Evans, who was a guest on the Caribbean Tourism Organization’s Destination Caribbean programme.

Evans said LIAT was worth more than $100 million USD each year to the region in terms of jobs and its tourism impact, outside of its airline activity.

He also said that meeting demand with increased capacity was not a major hurdle.

“Any airline faced with increasing demand will be happy with that situation and it would find a way either in its own right or in some sort of a cooperative fashion in order to provide that extra supply or capacity,” he said.

The new CEO also said regional carriers could collaborate.

“Whilst competition is absolutely essential, there is more we can do in cooperation with each other than we are doing at the moment,” he said.

Popular Posts caribbean travel

The Caribbean Travel Awards 2025

More than 32 million people visited the Caribbean in 2023, and that number should be eclipsed by the end of this year. In other words, the Caribbean is more popular than ever — deepening its position not just as the world’s […]


Aruba’s New Adults-Only Resort Has Swim-Up Suites, a Rooftop Bar and One of the World’s Greatest Beaches 

eagle beach cj photo

Eagle Beach. If you know Aruba, you know it. That wide, white, shimmering stretch of sand in the northwestern corner of the island is one of our favorite beaches in the Caribbean — and inarguably among the best beaches, well, anywhere […]


Royalton Just Reopened These Punta Cana All-Inclusive Resorts After a $32 Million Upgrade 

punta cana all-inclusive royalton

One is family-friendly. The other is an adults-only escape. They’re both part of Marriott’s Autograph Collection, both set on a beautiful stretch of beach in Punta Cana.  And they both just reopened after a sweeping $32 million upgrade.  The adjacent […]


Related Posts jamaica negril

Slight Decline for Caribbean Hotel Occupancy in Shoulder Season 

Caribbean hotel occupancy declined for the second straight month in November, according to new data from analytics from STR.  The region’s hotels were 66.8 percent full last month, a 1.4 percent reduction from the same month in 2023.  Average daily […]


Caribbean Moment: On the Beach on Stocking Island, Exuma 

exuma beach

If you’ve been to Exuma, you know. The water, the beach. It’s, well, it’s pure heaven. And one of our favorite corners of the Exuma chain is the little island of Stocking Island right off the coast of George Town.  […]


Caribbean Airlines Is Bringing Back Its Flights from Fort Lauderdale to Montego Bay, Jamaica 

caribbean airlines montego bay

For years, it was one of the most popular routes to the Caribbean island of Jamaica: Caribbean Airlines’ nonstop service between Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood and Montego Bay’s Sangster International Airport.  But since before the pandemic, travelers looking to hop on Caribbean […]