CENTRAL AMERICAN TOURISM
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Transcript of CENTRAL AMERICAN TOURISM
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CENTRAL AMERICAN TOURISMPresented By:
Joe, Tim, Dusty, Kyle, & Ryan
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Introduction
• Focus on Costa Rica, Guatemala, Panama, and Belize
• Turmoil in the 1980’s led to increased interest in the area by tourists in the 1990’s and beyond
• Costa Rica has the largest growth, which may be due to the fact that they have no army and are seen as a more peaceful country
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Introduction (cont’d)
• Ecotourism has become quite popular
• In addition, the beautiful weather in the area still lends itself to the more traditional resort towns
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Costa Rica
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Background Statistics
Costa Rica United States
Area (km2) 51,000 9,629,000
Population (millions) 3.8 290
Population Density (per km2) 82 30
GDP $32 billion $10.45 trillion
GDP (per capita) US$8,260 US$36,300
Capital: San JoseOfficial Name: Republic of Costa Rica
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Tourism Statistics
1998 1999 2000
Costa Rica 943 1032 1106Belize 177 181 N.D.Guatemala 636 823 826Panama 431 457 479
1998 1999 2000
884 1,002 1,102
108 112 N.D
394 570 518
494 538 576
Tourist Arrivals (thousands) Tourist Receipts (US$ millions)
Tourism arrivals and receipts
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Tourism Statistics (cont’)Tourism in the economy
(2000)
Receipt per capita
(US$)
Receipt per arrival
(US$)
Percentage of GDP
Costa Rica 276 996 7.1
Belize 450 619 14.2
Guatemala 46 629 2.7
Panama 206 1203 5.7
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Factors that have led to Costa Rica having the most established and mature tourism
industry the region• 1980s Privileged position relative to its neighbors.
• 1985 The Law on Tourism Incentives
• Late 1980s The world trend towards environmental conservation and ecological issues gathered new momentum.
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Guatemala
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Guatemala Fast Facts
• Capital – Guatemala City
• Language – Spanish
• Population – 11.1 million
• Currency – Quetzal (1 Quetzal = .12USD)
• Largest economy in Central America
• Recently tourism and agriculture have boomed.
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Guatemala
• The Guatemalan Economy has been booming over the past several years.
Over 50% of Guatemala's GDP comes from services such as Tourism.
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Guatemala
• Tourism has steadily increased in Guatemala after internal conflicts were resolved in 1985.
• Guatemalan Tourism Receipts (US$)
1985 13.3 Million
1990 117.9 Million
1992 186.0 Million
1995 212.5 Million
1997 266.1 Million
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Guatemala
• Modern and Colonial Cities
• Mayan Ruins• Natural Paradise• Pacific Ocean
Tourist Attractions
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Guatemala
• Ecotourism - The demand for the visit of unmanaged natural landscapes in their natural environments.
• Sustainable Tourism Paradox – The increase in visitors makes it dificult to preserve the natural beauty for future tourists.
The Future of Guatemalan Tourism
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Panama
Where the canal is
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Full country name: Republic of Panama
Area: 30,420 sq mi
Population: 2.8 million
Capital city: Panama City (pop 700,000)
People: 65% mestizo, 14% African descent, 10% Spanish descent, 10% Indian
Languages: Spanish (Official), English and Indian languages
Religion: 85% Roman Catholic, 10% Protestant, 5% Islamic
Government: 85% Roman Catholic, 10% Protestant, 5% Islamic
Currency: Balboa = $1.57
Some Facts About Panama
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•The service industry is the biggest source of revenue in Panama’s economy.
•Tourism is one of Panama’s primary services
Panama’s Economy
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Year $ (in millions)
1993 225.6
1994 261.6
1995 310.4
1996 343.1
1997 374.2
Panama’s Tourism Receipts
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Tourist Attractions
Panama Ruins
This is the one bridge that crosses the Panama Canal
La Amistad International Park
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Belize
“Central America’s Diamond in the Rough”
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Overview•Belize is located on the Caribbean Sea
between Mexico and Guatemala•Slightly smaller than Massachusetts•Population of 266,000 people•English official language•Government is parliamentary
democracy •Natural Resources: fish, timber, hydro-
power, potential arable land – only
2.8% used
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History• Heavily populated by the Mayans from 250-900A.D.• First settlement 1638 by British for logging - followed by
fights of British and Spanish for ownership• British won supremacy in 1798 and est. as colony in
1871• Loosely governed by natives and achieved
independence Sept. 21, 1981 – constitution introduced and accepted by UN and Commonwealth of Nations
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Dangers of FDI in Tourism• Coastal flooding esp. in the south• Frequent, devastating hurricanes (June to
November)• Crime – due largely in-part to illicit drug trade (major
transshipment point for cocaine)• International Disputes – land disagreements with
Guatemala – laid claim to Southern Belize• Labor Shortages – 90,000 force but shortage of
skilled labor and all types of technical personnel – 43% of population under age 18
• High Trade Deficit - $290mil. Export/$430mil. Import• High Nation Debt - $435mil. External• Poverty – 33% of population below poverty line
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Room for Improvement• Stable exchange rates – remained relatively constant
since 1998• Major ports source of income/trade/transportation• Continued increase of arable land production• Support from US/UK - $21mil last year• Gov’t expansionary and monetary policies initiated in
Sept. 1998 cause led to 6.5% increase in 1998, 10.8% in 2000, 4.6% in 2001, and 3.7% in 2002 – mostly in tourism
• Short-term objective is reduction of poverty via international donors
• GDP real growth rate – 3.7% per year• Inflation rates – 1.9%
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Tourism• Recent times – GDP growth in 2001 was
4.6% compared to 10.8% increase in 2000 result of two nat. disasters, declining export
prices, and Sept. 11th – esp. in tourism- Tourism is number one source of income for
country – represents 20.2% of GDP- Gov’t is spending lots time and money in
attempts to reinitiate growth via growth plans with help of US & UK
- Protecting natural resources = main tourist attractions: Mayan ruins, beaches, parks, etc.
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Ancient Ruins• Mayan ruins located throughout Belize – main
attractions on coastline• Government has spent large amounts of
money revitalizing areas and making them more tourist accessible – trails & protection
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Hotel Accommodations• Much time and money spent increasing
and improving resorts and hotels – via Colonial Development Corporation (CDC)
• Considered lower than average – number of rooms has more than tripled from 1990
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Overall• With continued gov’t assistance in
tourism and related businesses and increases of foreign money flow the Belizean tourist industry is bound to flourish and become one of the most successful in Central America and the world
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Bibliography
http--www.incae.ac.cr-ES-clacds-investigacion-pdf-cen607.pdf.url
2http--www.icdf.org.tw-web_pub-20030429165348C2-4.pdf.url
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/us.html
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The Young Dr. Boggs
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The End