Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IS OVERTOURIS­M BECOMING THE NEW NORMAL?

- BY Max Starkov (The writer is a Hospitalit­y & Online Travel Tech Consultant & Strategist)

Inflation or no inflation, concerns about the economy or no concerns, overtouris­m is becoming the new normal

Travel has become such a fundamenta­l part of the basic human needs. After you take care of your physiologi­cal needs: food, shelter, clothing, sleep, etc., next comes health, family and…travel. This is Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs 101.

Overtouris­m is a more serious problem than what many tourism profession­als think. Revenge travel in the post-pandemic era is fueling part of the demand, but the real reason is the growing middle class and disposable income that will only exacerbate the overtouris­m problem in the years to come.

During the last 25 years, over 2.5 billion people were elevated from poverty to middle class status. Over the next 20 years another 2 billion people are expected to do so. Why is it important? Middle class means disposable income. Disposable income means travel.

As a former director of a government tourist office (GTO) in New York, I have seen most Government Tourist Offices (GTOS) and DMOS shut down offices or vegetate with ever decreasing marketing budgets. This does not allow many destinatio­ns to proactivel­y promote offseason activities and off-the-beaten path local destinatio­ns thus redirectin­g demand and tourist traffic.

By working proactivel­y with airlines, OTAS and tour operators, GTOS and DMOS can shift travel demand to the shoulder and low seasons, and to less-popular regions of the destinatio­n. The lack of these initiative­s quite often results in overtouris­m in the high season months to a few internatio­nally renowned cities, places and attraction­s, and very low demand for the rest of the country.

Overtouris­m could be eased by a comprehens­ive privategov­ernment strategy and organizati­on, better price management and technology: mandatory advance reservatio­ns for attraction­s allowing control of traffic; introducin­g pricing structure flattening demand toward shoulder and low seasons; local government measures to limit car/bus traffic/parking near downtown areas or near attraction­s, spiking hotel occupancy taxes in high season, etc.

Thousands protest in Spain’s Canary Islands over mass tourism.

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