Pacific Island Times January 2019 Vol. 4 No. 1 | Página 4
FROM THE PUBLISHER’S DESK
I
What defines 2018?
n one of its last announcements for 2018, the outgo-
ing Calvo administration hoped to end the year (and
its term in office) with a happy note. A press release
sent on the eve of Christmas had a Sally Fields-esque
email subject: “They really love us. Tourists
show love for Guam with record-breaking
arrival.”
Statistics showed Guam welcomed 132,850
visitors for the month of November, reflect-
ing an 8.6-percent compared to the same
month of the previous year— notably the
period when the market was gripped with
fear of “fire and fury” amid the tantrums
of two state leaders. Guam was then in the
crosshairs of North Korea’s threats of missile
assault.
This year’s arrival numbers, according
to the Guam Visitors Bureau, broke
the 2016 record of 125,748 visitors,
claiming the top November spot in
Guam’s tourism history. Obviously,
tourists began traveling again, which
can be partly attributed to the relative
regional peace that ensued after Don-
ald Trump and Kim Jong Un signed
a treaty in June that promised North
Korea’s “unwavering commitment
to complete denuclearization of the
Korean peninsula.”
While China remains a nuisance,
Pyongyang’s resolve to calm down
has reduced tension in the Pacific
region and ushered 2018 into the era
of peace.
Palau had its own quandary in 2018
when it began to feel the impact of China’s
“punishment” for its refusal to give up its
diplomatic relations with Taiwan. China
has blacklisted the Pacific nation, which in
recent years had Chinese travelers as its No.
1 market. At any rate, Palau is not exactly
in a destitute situation that would compel
it to abandon its diplomatic preference and
succumb to China’s pressure. According to
the Asian Development Bank’s December
2018 report, Palau has been recording annual
fiscal surpluses of 4 percent of GDP since
FY2011— even through the current
tourism downturn.
While China
remains a
nuisance,
Pyongyang’s
resolve to calm
down has reduced
tension in the
Pacific region and
ushered 2018 into
the era of peace.
While geopolitical concerns may
have been taken of the equation, the
Guam market remains challenged
by the acute labor shortage that has
brought several civilian construction
projects to a halt, subsequently stunting further expan-
sion of the island’s $5.1 billion economy.
Our sister islands had it worse in 2018. The CNMI,
for example, was battered by a series of destructive
typhoons that tormented its yoyo economy. Within
less than a week after jubilating over its astounding 25
percent GDP growth in 2017, the Northern Marianas
received a violent visit from Yutu that left Saipan and
Tinian in shambles and zapped their tourism. But time
4
and again, the CNMI has demonstrated its ability to re-
bound quickly. As CNMI Gov. Ralph Torres rolls up his
sleeves to begin his new term in office, he is faced with
the challenge of proving the commonwealth’s resilience
once again.
Palau’s fiscal feat can’t be said of
other Pacific island nations in the re-
gion, whose economic performances
in the past year have been decisive-
ly poor. International lenders have
identified at least six Pacific island
countries that are facing elevated risk
of debt distress due to narrow eco-
nomic bases, vulnerability to eco-
nomic shocks and exposure to climate
change and natural disasters. The list
of troubled nations includes Kiribati,
Marshall Islands, Federated States
of Micronesia, Samoa, Tonga and
Tuvalu. While Pacific island nations
and territories may share the same
cultures, geographical assets and
liabilities, each one dealt with unique
circumstances that make it quite diffi-
cult to define the era that just went by
and, collectively, predict the year ahead.
And back on Guam, we have just entered the year of
transition, and we are about to see how the Leon Guer-
rero-Tenorio administration will deal with the island’s
economic, political and social challenges. The new
Guam Legislature is made up of — refreshingly— fresh
faces with, hopefully, fresh ideas. While suspending our
judgment and prejudices, we are hoping for the best.
Happy new year!
Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
[email protected]
Associate Editor
Bruce Lloyd
[email protected]
Associate Editor (Pacific Note/Palau)
Ongerung Kambes Kesolei
[email protected]
Contributing Writers
Raquel Bagnol
Zaldy Dandan
Jayne Flores
Theodore Lewis
Shirley Mabini
Gabriel McCoard
Diana Mendoza
Joseph Meyers
Jonathan Perez
Joy Santamarina
Alex Rhowuniong
Johanna Salinas
Michelle Voacolo
Visual Editor
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
Sales and Marketing Executive
Jan SN Furukawa
[email protected]
Account Executive
Anna Marie Alegre
[email protected]
Administraitive Assistant
Lolita Therrel
[email protected]
***
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