Jamaica Is Open, But Not Yet Rebuilt
A tourism boom on paper, but a cost-of-living squeeze and uneven recovery still define life on the ground
Key points
Tourism arrivals are recovering, with Jamaica targeting over 4 million visitors and US$4 billion in earnings in the near term
Government officials have acknowledged limits on fuel price controls, with global oil volatility feeding directly into local costs
Post-hurricane rebuilding remains uneven, with households still awaiting repairs, grants, and stable utilities
Rising import costs continue to push up food, transport, and construction prices across the island
The benefits of tourism remain concentrated, with taxes and jobs returning locally, but much revenue retained offshore
Kingston, Jamaica — The headlines are confident. Jamaica is open for business, stronger than ever, and ready to welcome the world. Ministers point to rising visitor numbers, expanding hotel investments, and a tourism sector that continues to anchor the national economy. By official projections, the country is pushing toward more than four million visitors annually, with billions in foreign exchange earnings.
But step away from the arrival halls and into the communities still rebuilding, and a different picture emerges. One that is less polished, more complicated, and harder to package.
The truth is not that Jamaica is failing. It is that Jamaica is recovering, unevenly, and in real time.
Tourism has returned, and in many respects it never truly left. Resorts have reopened, cruise ships have resumed their calls, and major operators have doubled down on investment. Properties such as Sandals Dunn’s River are being positioned as global showcases, part of a wider shift toward higher-end, experience-driven travel. This is not accidental. It reflects a deliberate strategy to move Jamaica upmarket, to attract fewer visitors who spend more.
From a macroeconomic standpoint, that strategy makes sense. Tourism remains one of the largest contributors to GDP and a critical source of foreign exchange. Taxes collected from the sector help fund public services, while employment provides income across multiple layers of the economy.
Yet the benefits are not evenly distributed, and they never have been.
Much of the revenue generated by large resorts does not circulate fully within the local economy. International ownership structures mean that significant portions of earnings are retained abroad, denominated in US dollars or other foreign currencies. What returns to Jamaica comes primarily through taxation and wages. Both matter, but both are limited in scope.
Employment, too, has shifted. Contract work is increasingly common, particularly in hospitality. For many workers, income depends on occupancy rates and seasonal demand. If there is no work, there is no pay. Stability, in the traditional sense of long-term employment, is harder to secure.
At the same time, the cost of living continues to rise.
Jamaica has always been an expensive island, largely due to its dependence on imports. Goods arriving at port often double in price once duties, logistics, and retail margins are applied. That reality has not changed. What has changed is the pressure coming from global markets.
Since the escalation of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, including the Iran conflict, oil prices have shown renewed volatility. For Jamaica, which imports the vast majority of its energy, that translates quickly into higher fuel costs. The government has previously intervened to cushion these increases, placing limits on how much prices could rise. More recently, officials have indicated that such measures cannot be sustained indefinitely. The fiscal space to absorb shocks is limited, and the burden is increasingly shifting back to the consumer.
Fuel prices affect everything. Transport, food distribution, electricity generation, construction. When energy costs rise, the entire economy feels it. For households already stretched, even small increases can have significant consequences.
Food prices are a visible example. Imported staples, local produce dependent on transportation, and everyday essentials have all become more expensive. For many families, the margin between managing and struggling is narrowing.
Overlay this with the ongoing recovery from last year’s hurricane season, and the strain becomes clearer. While the national narrative has moved forward, parts of the country are still catching up. There are households without fully restored roofs, communities dealing with intermittent utilities, and individuals waiting on grants or assistance to rebuild.
Government programmes exist to support this process, including initiatives to help repair homes. But as with any system that relies on trust and distribution at scale, outcomes vary. Some receive support quickly, others wait. Some use funds as intended, others may not. These are not uniquely Jamaican challenges, but they are present, and they shape how recovery is experienced on the ground.
None of this negates the importance of tourism. Nor does it suggest that investment in the sector is misplaced. Tourism brings in foreign exchange, supports jobs, and remains one of the country’s strongest economic pillars. The red carpet extended to the industry has delivered results, and it continues to do so.
The question is not whether tourism is good for Jamaica. It is how much of that good reaches the average Jamaican, and how quickly.
There is a risk in allowing the national story to become too one-dimensional. To present a picture of full recovery when the reality is still in progress. Confidence is important, particularly in attracting investment and maintaining momentum. But credibility matters just as much.
Jamaica is open. Visitors are arriving. Resorts are expanding. These are facts.
It is also true that rebuilding continues. Costs are rising. And for many, the recovery is not yet complete.
Both realities can exist at the same time. The challenge, and the opportunity, is to ensure that they move closer together.




Growth and pressure can exist at the same time.
The children of Israel increased under pressure. The people are resilient, and God will bring help.