economic impact of t..
Download
Report
Transcript economic impact of t..
Is Tourism good for
Development?
Why have LEDC’s become
popular?
How has this become possible?
Leakage
• In most all-inclusive package tours, about
80% of travellers' expenditures go to the
airlines, hotels and other international
companies, and not to local businesses or
workers.
• Estimates for LEDW - 80% in the
Caribbean, 70% in Thailand & 40% in
India.
Leakage
Import leakage
• LEDW - food and drinks often imported - local
products often not up to the hotel's (i.e. tourist's)
standards or the country simply doesn't have a
supplying industry eg Scotch whiskey.
• Average import-related leakage - 40-50% of
gross tourism earnings for small economies and
between 10% and 20% for most advanced and
diversified economies.
Export leakage
• TNC's significant in export leakage.
• Have necessary capital to invest in the construction of
tourism infrastructure and facilities.
"all-inclusive"
• All-inclusive - largest amount of revenue but smaller impact on
economy per dollar of revenue than other accommodation
types.
• All-inclusives also import more and employ fewer people per
dollar of revenue than other hotels.
• Non-river cruises carried some 8.7 million international
passengers in 1999.
• Guests encouraged to spend most of their time and money on
board, and opportunities to spend in some ports are closely
managed and restricted.
• Smaller trickle-down effect on local economies.
Dependence economies
• Diversification in an economy is a sign of health.
• Gambia - 30% of the workforce depends directly or indirectly
on tourism.
• In small island developing states, percentages can range from
83% in the Maldives to 21% in the Seychelles and 34% in
Jamaica.
• Over-reliance on tourism carries risks to tourism-dependent
economies. Economic recession, the impacts of natural
disasters such as tropical storms and changing tourism
patterns can all have a devastating effect.
Foreign exchange earnings
• An important indicator of the role of international tourism is its
generation of foreign exchange earnings.
• Tourism can generate income for infrastructural
improvements such as better water and sewage systems,
roads, electricity, telephone and public transport networks
• Tourism is one of the top five export categories for as many as
83% of countries and is a main source of foreign exchange
earnings for at least 38% of countries.
Contribution to government revenues
• Direct contributions - taxes on incomes from
tourism employment & businesses and by
direct levies on tourists such as departure
taxes.
• Indirect contributions come from taxes and
duties levied on goods and services supplied to
tourists.
• The WTO estimate - worldwide contribution
was over US$ 800 billion in 1998 - a figure it
expects to double by 2010.
Employment generation
• The hotel accommodation sector alone provided
around 11.3 million jobs worldwide in 1995.
• Tourism can generate jobs directly through hotels,
restaurants, nightclubs, taxis, and souvenir sales,
and indirectly through the supply of goods and
services needed by tourism-related businesses.
• Tourism supports some 7% of the world's workers.
Antigua: a Caribbean case study
A sustainable future from tourism?
Make note of the following:
Background of an LEDC.
Facts & figures about tourism.
How does the organisation of tourism (typical of an
LEDC) result in costs outweighing benefits?
Economic (leakage, cruises, all inclusive, employment).
Social (cultural dilution, demonstration effect).
Environmental.
Political.