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Botswana has higher tourism potential - World Bank

Okavango Delta PIC: TSELE TSEBETSAME
 
Okavango Delta PIC: TSELE TSEBETSAME

Along with Botswana, the report lists Cape Verde, Namibia, South Africa and Tanzania as countries that have high potential for tourism growth over the next five years.

It argues that many Sub Saharan African (SSA) countries are on the verge of tourism success. Countries around the world have benefitted from tourism as international global arrivals have grown. For example, from 1980 to 2000 arrivals in the Asia Pacific grew from 8 percent to 22% contributing to economic growth and improved livelihoods.

During the same period, Africa's market share of global tourism grew from 3 percent (1980) to 5 percent (2010), according to the report.

The report says African governments and the private sector must work together to address obstacles such as land access and visa regulation to expand tourism opportunities, transform business climates and energise job creation, especially for women and youth.

 'Africa's mountains, savannahs and rivers, and cultural events such as music, dance and festivals are far above the natural assets found in other regions,' says Iain Christie, one of the report's co-authors. 'With these natural attributes, tourism can play an enormous role in development. But to do so it must be integrated into each country's economy and government structure and be seen as a benefit by everyone, from the president, to the ministers to the general population.'

'Tourism in Africa is the first World Bank report to comprehensively examine tourism throughout SSA and to recommend practical, evidence-based measures to unleash the sector's economic and development power across the continent.

Tourism is one of the largest and fastest growing sectors of the world economy, and tourism in Africa is ripe for development,' the report notes. For example, the number of tourists arriving in SSA has grown over 300% since 1990, with 2012 seeing a high of 33.8 million tourists who visited the region. Income generated from tourism has also grown. Receipts from hotels, tours and other attractions in 2012 amounted to over US$36 billion and directly contributed just over 2.8 percent to the region's GDP, according to the report.

This boost in tourism is occurring just as economic growth is exploding across the African continent. Over the last five years, real GDP rose an average 4.9 percent - faster than the 3 percent global average. 

As a result of the recent economic good health in SSA countries, global hotel chains are poised to spend hundreds of millions of dollars in Africa over the coming years to meet rising demand from both international tourists and the continent's own fast-growing middle class, the report notes.

At the same time, the expansion of tourism in SSA faces a number of obstacles.

Issues such as land ownership and availability, and how land rights are transferred, are central to business and tourism development.

Other constraints such as access to finance for investors, taxes on tourism investments, low levels of tourism skills among Africa's population, lack of security, safety and high crime, and bureaucratic processes are present in varying degrees in SSA countries. The report provides steps to overcome each of these obstacles.

To understand better which SSA destinations are the highest performers and why, the report presents a typology of destinations, which ranks the 48 SSA countries by level of tourism development, ranging from pre-emergent (those countries recovering from or engaged in civil wars) to consolidating (countries with relatively mature tourism sectors), and provides recommendations appropriate for countries at each stage of tourism development.

The report shows how countries that are scaling-up tourism need to invest in promotion and marketing, and should take steps to enhance their image, and provide incentives to investors, while those working to deepen their success need to diversify their tourism offerings, address seasonality, and manage growth strategically.

The report presents 24 tourism case studies from a wide-range of destinations, dating from the mid-1970s to the mid-2000s, each chosen to illustrate a particular challenge or success and the effects of certain planning decisions.

The cases illustrate good practice and lessons learned from countries that promoted tourism as a source of growth and poverty alleviation.

The report describes SSA's many tourism successes and urges governments to form alliances with the private sector, and the private sector to partner with government at local, regional and national levels.

Together they can plan and develop tourism infrastructure, increase transparency in land ownership and create a business-friendly environment for tour operators and other companies.