Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

23
Chapter 2 Tourism Concepts & Tourism System

description

 

Transcript of Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Page 1: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Chapter 2 Tourism Concepts

& Tourism System

Page 2: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Learning Objectives

To identify important terminologies. To explain why economists don’t think of

tourism as being an industry. To explain the reasons for using a systems

approach for tourism. To describe the parts of The Tourism

System & the Tourism System model.

Page 3: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Contents

Some fundamental concepts Tourism Tourism Industry Visitor, tourist, excursionist

Why use a system approach The parts of Tourism System Model

Page 4: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS

What is Tourism There is no single definition of tourism that is universally

accepted. WTO , Madrid, Spain, is a specialized agency of the United

Nations. The World Tourism Organization defines tourism as

“Activities of persons traveling to and staying in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes not related to the exercise of an activity remunerated from within the place visited.”

Page 5: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Branches of tourism Inbound international tourism: visits to a country by

nonresidents of that country. Outbound international tourism: visits by the residents of a

country to other countries. Domestic tourism: visits by residents within their own

country. Internal tourism: domestic + inbound international Visits by residents and non-residents within a country. National tourism: domestic + outbound international Visits by the residents of a country within their own country

and to other countries.

E.g.. China: Inbound-domestic-outbound

Page 6: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

AIEST definition AIEST stands for International Association of Scientific Exp

erts in Tourism. Hunziker and Krapf, in 1942, defined tourism as "the

totality of the relationship and phenomenon arising from the travel and stay of strangers, provided that the stay does not imply the establishment of a permanent residence and is not connected with a remunerative activities".

Above definition was then accepted by AIEST as below:

Tourism is the sum of phenomena and relationships arising from travel and stay of non residents in so far as they do not lead to permanent residence and are not connected with any earning activity.

This definition is widely accepted in China.

Page 7: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Management of Tourism

Organizations Tourism Studies

Policy Issues

Recreation

Managem

ent

Soc

iolo

gy o

f T

ouris

mTourism

Education

Transportation

StudiesHost-

Guest

Relationsh

ip

Tour

ism

Mot

ivat

ionEco

nom

ics

of T

ouris

m

Rural

Tourism

Geography of Tourism

Tourism Law

Mar

ketin

g of

Tour

ism

Tou

rism

Pla

nnin

g an

d D

evel

opm

ent

Soc

iolo

gy

Parks and

Recreation

Political

Science

Business

Eco

nom

ics

Anthropology

Geography

Architecture

Agriculture

Transportation

Hotel and

Restaurant

Adm

inistration

Education

Law

Mar

ketin

g

Urb

an a

nd

Reg

iona

l P

lann

ing

New VentureDevelopmentEntrepreneurship

Heritage and

Environment

Management

Environmental

Studies

History

of

Tourism

History

CasinoManagement

Gaming

Sports

Tourism

and Medicine

Kinesiology

Psy

chol

ogy

LandscapeDesign

Hospitality

Studies

Tourism course & Disciplines inputs to the tourism field

Page 8: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Economics

Political science

Agriculture

Marketing

AnthropologyBusiness

management

psychology

sociology

ecology

law

historygeography

Tourism studies

Underlying themes

Page 9: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

What is an Industry

Well (1989) defines an industry as

“a number of firms that produce similar goods and services and therefore are in competition with one another”.

For instance, the steel industry is defined by the steel products they produce.

Page 10: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

How about tourism industry? Many businesses and other types of tourism organizations offer

complementary rather than competing products and services.

An airline, hotel, restaurant, travel agency, and attraction do not compete with each other. They complement each other and combine to offer visitors a satisfying vacation or business trip.

The input and output can not be clearly identified. Besides there is no single industry code for tourism under the

North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) Macroeconomists point out that the recognition of tourism as an

industry can lead to double counting because standard industry classifications fully account for all elements of the economy without finding it necessary or appropriate to recognize tourism.

Page 11: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Tourism industry

Unlike other industries that are defined by the products and services they produce (the supply side), the tourism industry is defined from a demand side perspective.

A tourism industry supplies products and services to tourists.

The Tourism Industry is defined as individuals, businesses & organizations that are working to provide product & services (including information) to tourists.

They include those that work in transportation, lodging, entertainment and food & beverage.

Page 12: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

China tourism industry Since 1986 tourism in China has been regarded as a

significant industry for the national economy. In the year 1986, China placed the tourist industry into

the national plan for social and economic development for the first time.

There is growing acceptance of travel and tourism as an industry or sector of economy which includes accommodation, travel agents and tour operators (the travel trade), intercity passenger transport enterprises, government agencies responsible for tourism programs and tourism facilities, and major elements of other businesses in the food service, entertainment, and recreational fields.

Page 13: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Visitor

VisitorTouristExcursionist

A visitor is defined as 'any person traveling to a place other than that of his/her usual environment for less than twelve months and whose main purpose of trip is other than the exercise of an activity remunerated from within the place visited'.

Page 14: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Tourist and Excursionist Tourist: temporary visitor staying at least 24 hours

in the country visited and the purpose of whose journey can be classified under one of the following headings.

a).leisure (creation, holiday, health, study, religion, and sports)

b).business, family, mission, meeting.

Excursionist: temporary visitor staying less than 24 hours in the country visited (including travelers on cruises).

Also called Day Tourist or Day Excursionist.

Page 15: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Classification of Travelers

(1) Tourists in international technical definitions.

(2) Excursionists in international technical definitions.

(3) Travelers whose trips are shorter than those that qualify for travel and tourism; e.g., under 50 miles (80 km) from home.

(4) Students traveling between home and school only -- other travel of students is within scope of travel and tourism.

(5) All persons moving to a new place of residence including all one-way travelers, such as emigrants, immigrants, refugees, domestic migrants, and nomads.

Page 16: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Relationship among tourism, tourism industry, and tourist

Tourism economic dimension

Tourism { Demand side ---- tourists

Supply side ---- tourism industry

Page 17: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

SYSTEM APPROACH

General system theory was defined by a biologist, Ludwig von Bertalanffy, as:

A set of elements standing in interrelation among themselves and with the environments.

Tourism system consists of several interrelated parts working together to achieve common purposes.

Page 18: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

The reasons for using a systems approach for study of tourism

To emphasize the interdependency in tourism; the tourism system is like a spider’s web – touch one part are felt throughout the system.

For a student beginning to study tourism, it is important to get “the bigger picture” right away. The tourism system model framework provides a more comprehensive view of tourism: it captures “the big picture”.

Page 19: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

The reasons for using a systems approach

The second reason is because of the open system nature of tourism.

Tourism system is dynamic and constantly changing. New concepts are always arriving in tourism, such as ecotourism, TSA.

The third reason is the complexity and variety in all aspect of tourism.

For example, there are thousands of specialized tours and packages available for travelers today.

Page 20: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system
Page 21: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

The Tourism System Model

Part I: Destination: Planning, developing, and controlling tourism

Link 1: The tourism product Part II: Marketing: Strategy, planning, promotion,

and distribution Link 2: The promotion of travel Part III: Demand: The factors influencing the

market Link 3: The travel purchase Part IV: Travel: The characteristics of travel Link 4: The shape of travel

Page 22: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

Travel and tourism systems Tourism process developed by Chau (1977). He described the tourist as the demand, the travel industry

as the supply, and attractions as the tourist product and summarized the interrelate process as the subject, means, and objective of tourism.

Gunn in his book, tourism planning (1979), referred to a “tourism fundamental system” involving five components: tourist, transportation, attractions, services-facilities, and information-direction.

Leiper(1979) involved five basic elements in his system: tourists, generating regions, transit routes, destination regions, and a tourist industry operating within physical, cultural, social, economic, political, and technological environments.

Page 23: Chapter 2 fundamental concepts & tourism system

The end!

Questions?