Fiji has a market economy and had a total annual GDP of around 4.3 billion USD in 2021. It had reached a high of 5+ billion USD before the pandemic made it nosedive in 2020, as tourism is a significant contributor to the overall GDP. Since 2022 it has rebounded strongly as travel restrictions have been progressively eased. The Reserve Bank of Fiji has issued a press release revising the growth figures upwards as tourists have flocked back to the islands. Credit rating agencies have also revised their ratings from negative to stable and positive in late 2022.
Young tourists going riding on Natadola beach at sunset. Tourism is a major earner in Fiji |
Apart from tourism, the other main sector is agriculture, it has been the primary vehicle of growth for the Fijian economy traditionally. The ancestral Melanesians who came from Asia and settled Fiji 3500 years ago, had brought with them a whole heap of food plants and were known horticulturists, remember?
The agriculture sector
is dominated by subsistence farming, essentially by the indigenous Fijians who
cultivate crops like cocoa, pineapples, copra and cassava for some extra
income. Fishery is also an significant activity and Fiji is an exporter
of fish and seafood. Timber products make a contribution as well - large
scale pine forests were planted systematically last century. Uniquely developed palmwood and palmwood furniture forms part of the export basket. Read more here.
Traditionally, Fiji's economic development has been on the back of agriculture. It remains a paramount sector even at present. |
The commercial sector consists of garments and sugarcane, mostly by independent Indo-Fijian farmers on leasehold lands. There is also some light manufacturing catering to local Fijian demand as well as exports to surrounding Pacific island nations, such as paints, brewery, boat building and furniture. As these sectors have grown the importance of sugar refining has naturally declined. Bottled water has emerged as a growth area in recent years. Fiji also has mineral resources - gold, silver and copper are mined, though output fluctuates and some mines have closed down in recent years. Read more here.
Fiji is
a net importer of energy. However, it is the Pacific island nation with
the highest share of renewables. More than 55% of Fiji's energy requirement is
supplied through hydroelectricity (50%), while solar, biomass and wind have a
share of 5% at present. Fiji's 20 year National Development Plan has the
objective to generate all energy from renewables by 2030. Read more about
Fiji's energy situation and objectives here.
Pines near the coastal road near Natadola. Forestry is a small but significant contributor to the economy. |
All this month I'll be writing about Aspects of Fiji, which is where I am at the mo. And where the sum of the constituent parts is emphatically greater than the whole!
Did you know that Fiji is the most developed economy among the South Pacific islands? It is also an educational hub - the University of the South Pacific, jointly owned by the South Pacific island nations, has three campuses in Fiji and draws students from all over the region.
~ Thank you for reading ~
Posted for the A-Z Challenge 2023
I did not know that about Fiji. All renewable by 2030? Ambitious. Glad the country has rebounded from the lack of tourism.
ReplyDeleteYes, it is very ambitious, given that the current share is just 55. But it makes sense as they are most seriously impacted by climate change.
DeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteOn the up, it would seem... long may it be the case. I actually didn't know about the university - although, to be honest, it had probably never risen in conversation or thought, but makes sense, really! YAM xx
There are three unis in Fiji in all - apart from USP (30K students), there's Fiji National University in Suva (26-27K) and the smallest, University of Fiji in Lautoka (2-2.5K enrolments).
DeleteUSP was founded in 1968 so almost 50 years ago now. FNU was created in 2010 through an Act but its constituent colleges all go back many decades, some older than USP even. Eg the Nursing School which is now part of FNU medical college, goes back to the 1890s, therefore more than a century old. The College of Engineering was the Fiji Institute of Technology and started in 1963.
The Lautoka one is recent though - set up a few years ago. I believe the first batch graduated in 2017 or nearabout.
I'm things are looking up. Yesterday, or was it the day before? things were not looking good.
ReplyDeletehttps://findingeliza.com/
It changes constantly, one day down, the next up. C'est la vie! :)
DeleteI am so glad that things are looking up - and their energy ambitions put many bigger more profitable countries/economies to shame.
ReplyDeleteRemains to be seen whether they manage it - they have my earnest good wishes.
DeleteVery interesting. Do they use nuclear power?
ReplyDeleteNot that I know of, no plans either for nuclear energy, all hydro, solar and wind. Some projects in biofuels I think.
DeleteWow, I didn't know about any of this! (apart from the tourism aspect). Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThe Multicolored Diary
Anytime. :) Glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteIndeed, I assumed tourism was the ALL of the economy. I should not assume anything. And hopefully, the students stay in Fiji and apply their education to benefit the country.
ReplyDeleteNot far wrong there - tourism was more than one third their economy before the pandemic hit. Students often go off to greener pastures in NZ/Oz after qualifying so that's something of an ongoing challenge.
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