The Economics of Tourism and Hospitality
The Economics of Tourism and Hospitality
The Economics of Tourism and Hospitality
Wages ...
Hotelier
Rent
Wages Food ...
Savings
Service
(eg,taxi)
K= Y
E
t l
Where: i
Su e
t
b e
bt
K= the multiplier S u
it
l
Y= the change in income generated by E
E= the change in expenditure (the initial sum of
money spent by the tourist)
Su e t l
bt ti
it b
l Su e
The size of the multiplier depends on the
extent to which the various sectors of the
economy are linked to one another. When
the tourism and hospitality sectors by
heavily from other local economic sectors
for goods and services, there will be a
smaller tendency to import and the multiplier
will be greater that if the reverse were true.
A simplified formula for tourism
multiplier is:
K= 1- L
1 - (c -cj - tic) ( 1 - td = b +
m)
Where:
K= the multiplier
L= the direct first round leakages
C= the tendency to consume
Cj= the proportion of the propensity spent abroad
Tic= the indirect tax
Td= the value of direct deductions (income tax, national
Insurance and so on)
B= the level of government benefits
M= the value of imports
Most developing economies have
an income multiplier grange
between 0.6 and 1.2, while
developed economies have
arranged between 1.7 and 2.0
The cost-benefit ratio