Влияние туризма на экономику и социально-культурную сферу
Категория реферата: Рефераты по туризму
Теги реферата: класс, quality assurance design patterns системный анализ
Добавил(а) на сайт: Генкин.
1 2 | Следующая страница реферата
1. Introduction.
Tourism is the world’s largest and fastest growing industry. In recent
years there have been increases in international tourism for the purpose of
experiencing another culture. There is a wide-spread opinion that the
economic impact of tourism is always positive while the social and
environmental impact is always negative. Indeed, increasing incomes to
regions due to tourists are easy to see as well as numerous host-tourist
conflicts and destruction of the environment and local cultures. However, tourism can have both positive and negative outcomes for residents in
communities when sharing and preserving their culture and nature could be
seen as conflicting goals. (Besculides, Lee, McCormick, 2002:303) In this
paper I will consider impacts of tourism with reference to the Lofoten
Islands. This is a popular tourist destination in Northern Norway. The area
is unique because of its nature and variety of sea activities, e.g.
fishing, boat trips, sailing etc. It is also known in Norway as a
traditional fishing community, where the fishing industry dominates the
economy and the social life of the local people. Today those resources
which used to be source of living for the local community have become very
attractive for tourists. It is a challenge to get most profits of the
situation and avoid possible conflicts.
2. Economic impacts of tourism
According to recent statistics, tourism provides 10 percent of the world’s
income and employs almost one tenth of the world’s workforce
(www.investigate.html). By the year 2010 these numbers will double. All
considered, tourism’s actual and potential economic impact is astounding.
Many people emphasise positive aspects of tourism as a source of foreign
exchange, a way to balance foreign trade, an “industry without chimney” –
in short, manna from heaven.(L.van den Berghe, source unknown) But there
are also negative sides of tourism’s economic boom for local communities:
Economic impacts to the local community depend on how much of the incomes
generated by tourists go to the host communities. In most all-inclusive
package tours more than 80 percent of travellers’ fees go to the airlines, hotels and other international companies, not to local businessmen and
workers (www.ecotourism.org).
Large hotel chain restaurants often import food to satisfy foreign visitors
and rarely employ local staff for senior management positions, preventing
local farmers and workers from reaping the benefit of their presence.
Resorts and hotels often over-consume natural resources like water and
power, forcing utility prices up and causing blackouts and water shortages
for locals.
Many tourists never leave the hotel grounds or cruise ship, reducing the
possibility of tourist income for local businesses. “Rug sack tourists”
have little effect on host communities as they consume very little during
the trip.
Faced with limited economic prospects, locals lose the incentive to
preserve and conserve their natural and cultural resources.
Sometimes the costs connected with tourism overcome the incomes that
tourists generate. For example, in all-inclusive packages, as I have said, most of the expenditures go to the airlines, hotel chains and
touroperators, while the local communities have to work with pollution and
destruction in their region caused by tourists. As a result, it costs a
lot for the local communities to preserve the nature and the cultural
monuments in the region while a good deal of incomes flow out of the host-
region.
With reference to the Lofoten Islands the question is how the fishing
society can get the most of the tourism industry, and whether the local
people can get positive economic effects out of the developing tourism in
their region.
Here is a figure showing relationship between tourism and local community
based on economic impacts.
| | |
| |How much income does tourism give to the |
| |local community? |
|How much resource does | | |
|tourism use in the area? |A lot of |Little |
| | | |
|A lot of |Acceptable tourism |Undesirable tourism |
| | | |
|Little |Desirable tourism |“Invisible” tourism |
Fig.1 “ A general model of the local communities’ opinion about tourism”
Rшnningen 1996
Kilde: Kulturturisme. Lofoten som reiselivsattraksjon. Hovedfag.PDF, www.nhh.no/geo/prosjekt/kbl/r200rapport.pdf
The figure shows 4 types of economic impacts of tourism, based on the
coming incomes and the use of resources. No community would want tourism
that uses a lot of resources in the area but leaves little money to the
local population. Such tourism can be called undesirable. Communities can
put up with tourism that gives tem a lot of incomes but also uses a lot of
resources. It is the so-called acceptable tourism. In case when the use of
resources is little and the incomes to the region are also little, the
effect of tourism is almost not seen. This is the so-called “invisible”
tourism. So the economic impact will be considered as positive even if the
resources are used to great extent, in case if tourism gives large incomes
to the local people as a result. Hovland (source unknown) divided economic
impacts of tourism into direct and indirect. Direct effects are most
visible and easy to measure. These are contacts between a visitor and local
actors, such as the tourist industry, other industries, municipality and
other local actors. Indirect effects of tourism appear when local
businesses, population, municipalities and other actors are influenced by
tourism through other actors. I shall now discuss these relations between
tourism and fishery industry on the Lofoten Islands. As I have emphasised
Lofoten is an international destination with coast life culture as a
primary tourism resource. From1960 there have been problems in fishing
industry and the number of employees has decreased. So increasing
development of tourism compensates decreasing development of fishery
industry. If we take direct impacts of tourism, they are following here:
people have a possibility to get jobs in tourism industry and tourists
spend lots of money in local-owned restaurants, hotels, museums. Tourism
industry uses some resources that are not used by fishermen today. Old
fishing houses-rorbuer[1]- may have disappeared from the local landscapes
if they were not used today as hotels. Here are some numbers to show the
development of tourism in the region. In 1964 there were just 200 beds in
local hotels and guesthouses and 150 beds in rorbuer in the whole Lofoten.
In 1997 there were about 1360 beds just in Vеgan district. The total amount
of overnight stays in Lofoten has increased from 25000 in 1965 to 230000 in
1997. (Puijk 1996, SSB 1997) As we can see there is a flow of incomes to
the region and this is a direct economic impact of tourism.
Still there are negative economic impacts of tourism as well caused by
common resources for tourism and fishery industries on the Lofoten islands.
That’s why in spite of co-existing side by side these two industries
compete with each other. Many fishermen in Lofoten think that tourists
prevent successful development of the fishing industry as before. First of
all, the problem is common area. The number of quays in the fishing
villages is limited. And what was used by fishing boats is now to be shared
with tourists. Fishermen are afraid that tourism organisations will take
over a lot of fishing bays, buildings, even boats. Here is an opinion of a
local fisherman written in a local newspaper “Lofotposten” (9/2-98)
“Svolvжr bay is reserved for guestboats. There is almost no harbour left
for local people to place their boats or build a warehouse.” This effect
can be considered as indirect. Tourism organisations in Lofoten trying to
get more benefits from tourists, interfere into the fishing industry and
force them some changes.
The same concerns the fish itself. Many tourists come to Lofoten to fish.
And at this moment there are no fishing quotes for tourists. So what
happens is that “people come, fish freely and actively, make fish filets, freeze them, take them with them to Europe without any permission that are
required from the local fishermen. Tourists can in fact take with them up
to 200 kg fish in the fridge, sell it later, come back and fish again.”
(www.nhh.no/geo/prosjekt) Thus, tourists decrease the fishermen’s incomes
in a direct way. So we see how the tourism can ehave direct negative
effects on the fishing industry, decreasing their resources. Although
tourists leave money in the region as well, this effect becomes less
visible because the local people see first of all decrease of their main
incomes.
Here is another example of indirect economic impact. Tourism organisations
often want to change the traditional way of fishing by the local fishermen
so that coming tourists would consider their work to be more esthetical.
For example, fishing wastes have always been thrown back into the sea. Now
suddenly there are tourists to think about, and they find the fishing
wastes smell bad. That’s why some tourist organisations ask the fishermen
to install dump systems in order to clean the harbours. This brings extra
costs for the community.
The tourism industry on the Lofoten Islands makes use of the resources to a
great extent. The incomes the local community gets are big enough but they
come partly at the cost of fishing incomes. There is a certain lack of
regulations about the use of common resources. Obviously, to escape
conflicts the tourism industry should not take over the most important for
the fishermen areas. There are surely lots of areas not suitable for the
fishing industry (due to low amount of fish or small capacity of the
harbour) but which would suit tourists. Still, the problem lies deeper
because of social conflicts in the area.
3. Social and environmental impacts of tourism.
Socially tourism has a great influence on the host societies. Tourism can
be both a source of international amity, peace and understanding and a
destroyer and corrupter of indigenous cultures, a source of ecological
destruction, an assault of people’s privacy, dignity and authenticity.
(L.van den Berghe, source unknown)
Here are possible positive effects of tourism, according to Reisinger
(source unknown)
. Developing positive attitudes towards each other
. Learning about each other’s culture and customs
. Reducing negative perceptions and stereotypes
. Developing friendships
. Developing pride, appreciation, understanding, respect and tolerance for each other’s culture
. Increasing self-esteem of hosts and tourists
. Psychological satisfaction with interaction
So, social contacts between tourists and local people may result in mutual
appreciation, understanding, tolerance, awareness, learning, family bonding
respect, and liking. Residents are educated about the outside world without
leaving their homes, while their visitors significantly learn about a
distinctive culture. Besides, if local culture is the base for attracting
tourists to the region, it helps to preserve the local tradition, handicrafts which maybe were on the link of the extinction. Benefits
include also reciprocity, community pride, and a stronger sense of ethnic
identity.
On the other side tourism can increase tension, hostility, suspicion.
Claims of tourism as a vital force for peace are exaggerated. Indeed there
is little evidence that tourism is drawing the world together
(Robinson,1999:22). While the tourist is engaged in leisure, the host is
engaged in work. While the tourists arrive with loads of expectations, many
of the local stakeholders have no idea of what to expect.
Negative effects can be the following, according to Reisinger (source
unknown)
. Developing negative attitudes towards each other
. Tension, hostility, suspicion and misunderstanding
. Clashes of values
. Difficulties in forming friendships
. Feeling of inferiority and superiority
. Communication problems
. Ethnocentrism
Рекомендуем скачать другие рефераты по теме: курсовые работы бесплатно, сочинение на тему зима, ответы по истории.
1 2 | Следующая страница реферата