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IDRC pub. Comparison of the economic role of the tourism industry in Hong Kong, Korea R, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka - looks at growth rate trends; considers economic implications for employment creation, foreign exchange earnings, income generating activities, etc. As well as obstacles to development; assesses sectoral linkages through input output analysis; provides forecasting econometric models for Hong Kong; includes recommendations. Map, organigrams, references and statistical tables.
This book employs a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model – a widely used economic model which uses actual data to provide economic analysis and policy assessment – and applies it to economic data on Singapore’s tourism industry. The authors set out to demonstrate how a novice modeller can acquire the necessary skills and knowledge to successfully apply general equilibrium models to tourism studies. The chapters explain how to build a computable general equilibrium model for tourism, how to conduct simulation and, most importantly, how to analyse modelling results. This applied study acts as a modelling book at both introductory and intermediate levels, specifically targeting students and researchers who are interested in and wish to learn computable general equilibrium modelling. The authors offer insightful analysis of Singapore’s tourism industry and provide both students and researchers with a guide on how to apply general equilibrium models to actual economic data and draw accurate conclusions.
The 2020 edition analyses tourism performance and policy trends across 51 OECD countries and partner economies. It highlights the need for coherent and comprehensive approaches to tourism policy making, and the significance of the tourism economy, with data covering domestic, inbound and outbound tourism, enterprises and employment, and internal tourism consumption.
Most of the civilized countries nowadays rally on sustainability. This challenged this modern world how to sustain what we have right now so that the future generations after us will have the taste of what we are enjoying at the present. This is the main thrust of sustainability. One of the industries that each country anchors in terms of development that would yield a promising economic impact is the dynamic and flourishing industry of Tourism and Hospitality. With its utmost importance, the Tourism and Hospitality industry has to be sustainable. This research endeavoured to determine on whether or not the Philippines has good and sound laws to ensure the best quality experience of tourists. Said laws would thereby create a sustainable tourism and hospitality industry with a clear framework for the entire industry based on laws that would protect and preserve the Philippine destinations. The presence of laws that would promote sustainable tourism, would contribute to the long term program of the government towards sustainable tourism. A genuine sustainable Tourism and Hospitality Industry must have some pillars so that it would realize its goals and objectives. These pillars should be strong enough to withstand all the challenges of its implementation and enforcement. One of these pillars would be legislations, policies, and regulations which would thereby give a clear framework and blueprint for the sustainability of the Tourism and Hospitality Industry.
Revisiting Sustainable Tourism in the Philippines offers a novel perspective about how sustainable tourism can be pursued against the backdrop of the events that have occurred over the years, through four themes: value chain integration, thinking small, customization of services, and quality over quantity.
Tourism, the world's largest industry, has created a variety of complex political problems, particularly in those countries where the primary attraction of tourism is its potential for accelerating development. The political dimensions that have encouraged tourism in the People's Republic of China, the Philippines, Thailand, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, Nepal, and Bhutan are examined in Linda K. Richter's study, which is based on more than 250 interviews with government officials, travel industry representatives, and media officials. Richter concentrates on the reasons for using tourism to advance government policy objectives and on the many ways political and economic problems can frustrate tourism's contribution to national development. All too often, after the expensive infrastructure is developed, luxury goods imported, and lavish promotional efforts expended, nations are left disillusioned with the economic promise of tourism. Disappointing results are often complicated by a preoccupation with the lure of tourism and an underestimation of the industry's needs and of the political pressures of and on government officials. Encouraging an awareness of the political aspects of tourism, the author advocates greater involvement by social and political scientists in monitoring tourism policy, as well as a restructuring and redesigning of programs in this largest sector of international trade.