Premium
The economic impacts of tourism in B otswana, N amibia and S outh A frica: Is poverty subsiding?
Author(s) -
Muchapondwa Edwin,
Stage Jesper
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
natural resources forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.646
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1477-8947
pISSN - 0165-0203
DOI - 10.1111/1477-8947.12007
Subject(s) - tourism , poverty , business , economic impact analysis , population , economy , economics , geography , development economics , economic growth , demography , archaeology , sociology , microeconomics
Tourism in southern A frica is based on the region's wildlife and nature assets and is generally environmentally sustainable, but the extent to which it contributes to other aspects of sustainable development — overall income generation or poverty eradication — is less well explored. In this paper, we use social accounting matrices to compare the economic impacts of foreign tourism in B otswana, N amibia and S outh A frica. Overall impacts on GDP range from 6% ( S outh A frica) to 9% ( N amibia). However, S outh A frica's economy is more diversified than its neighbours' and more of the goods and services used by tourists and by the tourism industry are supplied domestically. Consequently, the impact per Rand spent is considerably larger for S outh A frica than for B otswana or N amibia. The poorer segments of the population appear to receive shares of tourism income that are smaller than their share of overall income in all three countries.