tourism contribution to communities in fiji alifereti tawake, jcu phd student 24 th october, 2009

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Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

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Page 1: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji

Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student24th October, 2009

Page 2: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

Outline1. Fiji2. Tourism

contribution3. Tourism ‘leakage’4. Community benefits5. Examples of

community projects– retaining benefits in

communities– Reducing leakage

6. Needs

Page 3: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

1.Fiji• Traditional ways of life and

community structures

• Land ownership (86% traditional)

• Life dependent on the sea and land

• Cash dependence increasing

Page 4: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

1.Fiji

Tourism Remitance Sugar Fish Clothing and

Footwear

Mineral Gold0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900 Average Foreign Exchange Earnings (2006-2008)

Source: Fiji Islands Bureau of Statistics, reproduced from Reserve Bank of Fiji report, 2009

$M

Page 5: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

2. Tourism Contribution

• 24% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

• Largest gross foreign exchange earner, $892m

• Retention rate around, 44%

• Benefiting communities (est. <5%, Korovulavula et al., 2006)

Source: Reserve Bank of Fiji, 2009

Page 6: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

3.Tourism ‘Leakage’ Strategic Assessment of Fiji’s Tourism

Development Plan Report (Levett and McNally, 2003)

• ‘Leakage’ of economic benefits (64%)– Import of goods, food, drink and services– Travel and packaged deals– Overseas investors repatriate profits ‘export

leakages’

• Community oriented activities

• Ecotourism as a strategy– Community-based ‘eco-tourism’ run or jointly

owned by communities, home stays

Page 7: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

4.Community benefits (<5%)

• Erosion of benefits– Employment – Land lease

• Unequal distribution – Chiefly system– Land owners

Page 8: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Village Tours

Profits equally distributed

Page 9: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Village-based activities

Page 10: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Tourism Interpretation

• Historical sites

• Village history

• Plant & animal totems

• Medicinal plants

• Traditional dances

• Traditional ‘feast’

Page 11: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Plantation Walk

Page 12: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Community-Protected Areas

Locally Managed Marine Areas (LMMA)

Community Managed Forest Parks

Page 13: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Sponsoring Reef Restoration

http://sasalutawamudu.org/donate.php

Page 14: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Involving women

Printing conservation messages on sulus

Page 15: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Example: Involving Youths

Adopt-a-tree of

reforestation

Page 16: Tourism Contribution to Communities in Fiji Alifereti Tawake, JCU PhD student 24 th October, 2009

5. Needs

1. Investment into local projects

2. Research into their performance

3. Enabling policies