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By C. ben-David

A recent media announcement by Caribbean Airlines (CAL) that it would be offering two regularly scheduled flights a week between the new Argyle International Airport (AIA) on the mainland of St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) and John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK) in New York City, beginning April 14, 2017, has received little attention, and deservedly so.

Rather than being “a big frolicking deal,” in the words of Professor Garrey Dennie in an essay speciously titled “The Invisible Hand at Argyle International Airport” (Searchlight newspaper, April 15, 2017, p. 12), in misplaced homage to the great 18th century economist Adam Smith, it represents business as usual, at most, for air travel from the mainland to other destinations.

This is partly because it was false for CAL to claim that it is, “… one of the first airlines to offer non-stop flights to the new airport, which also serves as an international gateway to the Grenadine Islands,” given that LIAT has serviced AIA since its Feb. 14 opening as have SVGAir and Mustique Airways, each of which has had direct regularly scheduled or charter flights to St. Lucia, Grenada, Barbados and, in the case of SVG Air and Mustique Airways, to the Grenadines for decades.

It was also deceptive for CAL to claim that, “Customers will also benefit from seamless connections between St Vincent and the Grenadines and Caribbean Airlines’ other international and regional destinations” because the airline will not fly to the Grenadines at all and the “seamless connections” to regional and international destinations will require a plane and luggage transfer to and from Trinidad on CAL’s ATR aircraft, a service almost identical to what has been offered for decades by LIAT with even smaller planes and, more recently, with the same 70-seat ATR aircraft carrying flyers back and forth to Barbados, St. Lucia, Grenada, Trinidad, and elsewhere.

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Moreover, the “seamless CAL connections” involve flying 286 km south from AIA to Piarco International Airport and then north to JFK, often with two stops and/or up to 16 hours of layover in various departure lounges.

More important, these same “seamless connections” could have been easily provided at the now shuttered but perfectly serviceable E. T. Joshua International Airport at Arnos Vale without the expenditure of some EC$700 million on building AIA, leaving the cash-starved country of SVG with a EC$400 million debt and EC$20 million in annual operating costs, nearly three times the cost of servicing the old Arnos Vale airport.

The CAL decision to service AIA in an indirect and one- or two-stop fashion (as opposed to direct, non-stop flights to and from AIA to New York and other destinations, as AIA was built to facilitate) should also remind us of what transpired on Feb. 21 when New York-bound passengers chose more convenient routings, as reported by iWitness News:

[Dynamic Airways] Passengers [refused to book the Feb. 21 flight to JFK from AIA because they] were apparently turned off by the fact that they would have had to transit in Guyana for seven hours before flying back to New York — arriving in Georgetown at 9:30 a.m. and leaving at 4:30 p.m.”

As for the spin-off effects of the CAL flights, even if the two new CAL flights serve as a catalyst for new visitors to SVG, the 140 additional holiday arrivals per week would hardly make a dent in AIA’s huge debts or crippling operating costs.

Nor will this new service represent the first step in a truly seamless non-stop connection because CAL does not fly non-stop to any of our neighbours — Barbados, St. Lucia, and Grenada — countries with much higher stayover visitor numbers. Instead, it has always flown to and from these countries with the same stopover “seamless connections”, inconveniently transferring passengers and their baggage from one plane to another as they are now doing at AIA. So much for Professor Dennie’s assertion that CAL is servicing SVG, “… in a particularly ingenious way.”

Finally, it is erroneous for Professor Dennie to claim that, “Competitive flights between JFK and Argyle International Airport (AIA) have arrived and the market will be changed, irrevocably so” and that, “… the market is already yielding competitive ticket pricing for travelling to and from St Vincent and New York” because there is no evidence that these flights will lower travel costs or encourage more tourist visits if only because they ignore the theory of comparative advantage, a set of ideas developed by another great economist, David Ricardo. In fact, the cost of true non-stop return flights from JFK to St. Lucia, SVG’s closest neighbour (67 km between their international airports), April 23-30, via JetBlue and United Airlines is US$591.56; the indirect, one- and two-stop flights on the same dates to and from SVG from JFK using Caribbean Airlines is US$769.56, or 30 per cent higher.

It is also certain that Adam Smith (whose writings lead to the theory of comparative advantage) would have immediately recognised that both CAL and LIAT are highly indebted and inefficient government-owned operations that do not have the market discipline or managerial competence to lower their operating costs and fares regardless of what market competition they face.

But the most important travel feature of all that Professor Dennie ignores is the elementary fact that the mainland of St. Vincent lacks the necessary and sufficient tourist features, resources, and knowhow to attract many more holiday visitors regardless of how convenient flying here becomes.

This is the 51st in a series of essays on the AIA folly. My other AIA essays are listed below:

    1. Get ready for a November election!
    2. Lessons for Argyle Airport from Canada’s Montreal–Mirabel Int’l
    3. Lessons for Argyle Int’l Airport from the cruise industry
    4. Lessons from Target Canada for Argyle Int’l Airport
    5. Lessons from Trinidad & Tobago for Argyle Int’l Airport
    6. The Dark Side of Tourism: Lessons for Argyle Airport
    7. Why Argyle Won’t Fly: Lessons from Dominica
    8. Ken Boyea and the Phantom City at Arnos Vale
    9. Airport Envy Vincy-Style
    10. Fully realising our country’s tourism potential
    11. Airport without a cause
    12. The unnatural place for an international airport
    13. The Potemkin Folly at Argyle
    14. False patriotism and deceitful promises at Argyle
    15. Airport politics and betrayal Vincy-Style
    16. Phony airport completion election promises, Vincy-style
    17. Is Argyle Airport really a ‘huge game-changer for us?’
    18. Has the cat got your tongue, Prime Minister?
    19. More proof that Argyle won’t fly
    20. Our very own Vincentian cargo cult at Argyle
    21. The missing Argyle Airport feasibility studies
    22. The world’s four most amazing abandoned airports
    23. Farming, fishing, and foolish talk about Argyle International Airport
    24. Argyle Airport amateur hour
    25. Vincent’s place in the world of travel
    26. Investing in St. Vincent’s Tourism Industry
    27. The Argyle Airport prophecy: what the numbers say
    28. Why Qatar? Why St. Vincent and the Grenadines?
    29. Did the IMF drink the Comrade’s Kool-Aid?
    30. Foolish words about Argyle International Airport
    31. ‘If I come, you will build it’: Lessons from the Maldives for Argyle Airport
    32. Urban lessons for Argyle International Airport
    33. Who really lands at Arnos Vale?
    34. No ticky, No washy — Argyle-Style
    35. We have met the Vincentian tourism enemy and he is us
    36. Hotel Saint Vincent
    37. Why St. Vincent Island has so few tourists 
    38. Why Bequia is a gem of the Antilles
    39. Why seeing is believing in the Caribbean tourism industry
    40. St. Vincent’s cruise ship numbers are much lower than we think
    41. Lessons from Barbados for Argyle Airport
    42. Cuba’s tourism rollercoaster: Lessons for Argyle Airport
    43. What the world teaches Black Sands Resort and Villas
    44. Not all Argyle Airport critics are ‘internet crazies’
    45. The media’s take on the opening of Argyle Airport
    46. Why Roraima Airways? Lessons for Argyle Airport
    47. Our Argyle International Airport ‘veritable miracle’
    48. From ‘poppy show’ to campaign rally: The Argyle Airport opening
    49. St. Vincent’s 2016 tourism numbers are nothing to brag about
    50. Going forward or marching in place? Lessons for Argyle airport

The views expressed herein are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the opinions or editorial position of iWitness News. Opinion pieces can be submitted to [email protected]

The opinions presented in this content belong to the author and may not necessarily reflect the perspectives or editorial stance of iWitness News. Opinion pieces can be submitted to [email protected].

3 replies on “The Visible Hand of Adam Smith at Argyle International Airport”

  1. I was an avid reader of your writing, however, after calling Vincentians people of “primitive mentality” I am having difficulty taking anything you write seriously. Seriously, I don’t think you should care about opinion because we do not each other.
    Objectively, this piece you wrote is written by someone who is looking for relevancy, or who is trying to remain relevant. Maybe, you spend whatever time you have building-up instead of tearing-down. Anybody can tear down, but being a builder is another matter; unfortunately you are the former.

    1. C. ben-David says:

      Unfortunately, there is so little to build up because those in power and those of “primitive mentality” have done so much destroy our beloved country.

      Please don’t blame the messenger because you don’t like the message; better to say what is wrong with the message and what the “true” message actually is.

      You should start with telling us which parts of what I have written above are false, inflammatory, exaggerated, distorted, irrelevant, etc.

      Don’t be shy, my feeling are not easily hurt.

  2. C. ben-David says:

    ADDENDUM:

    CAL has just announced a new service from Argyle to Miami and back which is relatively cheap ($US 251.46 to Miami, or $EC 671.40) but has the same issues as the flight to and from JFK, and more so:

    The flights are on Friday and Sunday and involve a plane and baggage change in Trinidad and a 16-hour layover.

    More evidence that AIA is one step forward and two steps back.

Comments closed.