Thursday, 25 July 2013

Tourism in Kenya.



Tourism is a wide ranging phenomenon and whilst certain operators such as
hotels, companies involved in transportation and all other facets of tourism have
specific objectives relating to their areas of interest, no one group has the overall
interest of the total industry at heart. Brown and Essex (1989) state that policies
are relevant to both the public and private tourism sectors. Policies in the public
sector are more concerned with the benefits of tourism for the community and
have to play a more strategic/coordinating/leadership role in the development of
tourism. In the private sector, policies are designed to give corporate direction for
a profit motive, and as such are opportunistic. 

Tourism policies have evolved from three distinct phases of development. The first phase, evident prior to the 1960s, took a laissez faire attitude towards tourism focusing on specific markets and sites with little regard to the wider implication of proposals or projects.This phase was referred to as 'hard' tourism. During the second phase, from the 1960s onwards, the social implications of tourism were recognised, hence the name 'soft
tourism'. Phase three is a blend of 'hard' and 'soft' tourism and in this phase the
public sector actively encourages the private sector to invest in tourism.
 
Overall resources are generally limited, and competing priorities between groups of users may interfere with a rational allocation process.
Therefore, the primary function of governments has to be to create the right
economic environment in which the private sector can fully participate and to
remove unnecessary controls, restrictions and burdens.
Tourism policy issues reflect not only economic considerations but also socio-cultural and environmental concerns as well, as shown in. These economic,socio-cultural and environmental concerns impact on the government structure, legal considerations as well as external relations.

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