Haiti Transportation and Communications
Figure 15. Transportation System, 1989
Unavailable
Riders on a "tap-tap" (jitney) near Gonaïves
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Colorful "tap-taps" on Avenue Dessalines, Port- au-Prince
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Haiti's transportation system was still inadequate in
the
1980s, in spite of the major infrastructural improvements
that
had accompanied the growth period of the 1970s. Poor
transportation hindered economic growth, particularly in
the
agricultural sector. Like other services in the economy,
transportation--when it was available--was prohibitively
expensive for most citizens. One study in the 1980s
revealed that
some assembly workers spent as much as one-quarter of
their daily
wages and two hours of their time on transportation.
The country's road system was the most important part
of the
transportation system. In 1989 there were more than 3,700
kilometers of roads: 17 percent were paved; 27 percent
were
gravel or were otherwise improved; and 56 percent were
unimproved
and were generally impassible following heavy rains.
Besides the
paved streets in the capital, there were only two paved
highways,
which linked the northern and the southern regions of the
country. National Highway One (Duarte Highway) extended
north
from Port-au-Prince to Cap Haïtien via the coastal towns
of
Montrouis and Gonaïves. National Highway Two proceeded
south from
the capital to Les Cayes by way of Miragoâne with a spur
to
Jacmel
(see
fig. 15). Both were paved in 1973 with funding
from
AID. Despite international funding and some government
improvement efforts by the National Road Maintenance
Service
(Service Entretien Permanent du Réseau Routier
National--Serrin),
inadequate road maintenance persisted.
Haiti imported all its vehicles, about 4,000 a year in
the
late 1980s. According to government sources, more than
36,600
vehicles were in use in 1981, three times the number in
1960.
Travel outside the capital generally required
four-wheel-drive
vehicles, which were equipped to ride on poorly maintained
and
washed-out roads. The government offered limited and
unreliable
public transportation. The majority of Haitians who
traveled by
vehicle used tap-taps, brightly colored and overcrowded
jitneys
that serviced most of the island.
Haiti's fourteen ports constituted another major
component of
the transportation sector. Port-au-Prince was the central
shipping site, accounting for as much as 90 percent of
registered
imports and most exports. Upgraded in 1978, Port-au-Prince
was
the only modern port in Haiti in the late 1980s; it
offered
mechanical handling equipment, two transit warehouses, and
container capability. The capital's port, however, was
expensive
and therefore underutilized; wharfage costs were four
times
higher than those of ports in the Dominican Republic. CapHaïtien , the second major port, handled most cruise-ship
traffic
as well as domestic and international merchant ships. CapHaïtien , like some other small ports, underwent
renovations
during the 1980s. Lesser-used ports included Miragoâne,
Les
Cayes, Fort Liberté, Gonaïves, Jacmel, Montrovís, and
Jérémie.
As a result of the poor road system, cabotage via
provincial
ports played an important role in internal commerce.
Smaller
ports also dealt extensively in the pervasive contraband
trade
out of the Dominican Republic and Miami. Smuggling
stimulated
economic activity at depressed provincial ports, but it
also
resulted in the loss of millions of dollars in import
duties.
Port-au-Prince had the country's only international
airport.
Located about ten kilometers outside the capital, this
airport,
opened in 1965, was fully equipped for all international
flights,
and it handled the majority of domestic flights. More than
a
dozen airlines from North America, South America, the
Caribbean,
and Europe serviced the airport. The government-owned
airline,
Air Haiti, operating under the control of the National
Civil
Aviation Office (Office Nationale de l'Aviation
Civile--ONAC),
flew domestic flights to many provincial airports. Eleven
other
airfields of varying quality were also operational. The
National
Airport Authority (Autorité Aéroportuaire Nationale--AAN)
regulated the country's airports.
There was no passenger rail service in Haiti. The 80-
kilometer railroad that operated southwest and east of
Port-au-
Prince for the Haitian American Sugar Company (HASCO) was
the
country's only railroad system.
Haitians were the most isolated citizens of the Western
Hemisphere in terms of their low per capita use of
telephones,
radios, and televisions. There were only six telephones
for every
1,000 people in Haiti, compared with the average of eight
telephones for every 1,000 people in Africa.
The Haitian Telecommunications Company
(Telecommunications
d'Haïti--TELECO), under the Ministry of Public Works,
Transport,
and Communications, was responsible for the nation's
telephone
service and other telecommunications. The government owned
96
percent of TELECO, which modernized the national telephone
industry in the late 1980s, with French financing, by
introducing
digital dialing to the Port-au-Prince area. The capital
also
enjoyed direct dialing to the United States and Europe,
via a
satellite station at Sabourin, although at very high
rates.
Telephones, however, continued to be a luxury item. In the
mid1980s , more than 80 percent of the country's 39,000
telephones
were in Port-au-Prince, where only about 20 percent of
Haiti's
population lived. Telephone service to provincial cities
was so
unreliable that many rural areas relied on two-way radios.
Rapid
expansion of the telephone system was expected by the
early
1990s, when the number of telephones in Port-au-Prince was
slated
nearly to double from 39,000 to 69,000 and the number
outside the
capital, more than to triple from 7,000 to 23,000. About
400
telex lines and an elementary mail service functioned in
the late
1980s.
Data as of December 1989
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