The Economic Impacts of Tourism

 
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Akhmad Tantowi
BPS-Statistics Indonesia
 
Paramaribo, 9 – 11 August 2016
 
 
Role of Tourism
 
TOURISM
 deals with social, culture, politic,
environment and 
economy.
 
THE ECONOMY OF TOURISM 
is obvious. It has
enormous potential of to stimulate growth
and development. As identified  in the
Tourism Satellite Account
, tourism and
related tourism generates multiplier effects
on national economy.
 
How does Tourism affect
Economy and People?
 
 
Visitors buy goods and
services
Increase production of
 goods and services
Increase employment,
compensation, profit
Increase income of, government,
households, business, etc..
Increase demand for
goods and services
 
Indirect effect
 
Direct effect
 
International Tourism, 2015
 
Source: UNWTO Tourism Highlights, 2015 edition
 
The measurement
of the economic impacts of tourism
 
Tourism generates directly and indirectly an increase in
economic activity in the places
 
visited, mainly due to demand
for goods and services that need to be
 
produced and provided
The objective of e
conomic impact studies 
is
 to measure
economic benefits, that is, the net
 
increase in the wealth of
residents resulting from tourism, measured in monetary
terms.
Th
e
 change in
 
wealth might occur not only through increased
flows of income to households, but
 
also through the change in
net worth induced by the change in market value (positive
 
or
negative) of existing assets, both produced and non-
produced, as a response to the
 
induced change in demand for
such types of assets.
 
Tourism Effect
 
In terms of input-output analysis, three different types of effects are defined:
The 
direct effects 
take into account only the immediate effects of the
additional
 
demand on production
 
processes and supply of goods and
services in terms of additional goods and
 
services, and additional value
added and its components
. 
The 
TSA
 only makes it possible to measure the
direct
 
effects of consumption on output and value added of tourism
industries and other industries
 
serving them (
TDGVA and TDGDP)
.
The
 
intermediate inputs or capital goods need to be produced or
imported, induces a chain of additional demand for different factors of
production (that
 
is, inputs, labo
u
r
,
 and capital). This chain of effects that
enables the activities
 
directly serving visitors is called the 
indirect effects
of visitor demand
In addition, the increase of income distributed to the labour force and to
the
 
owners of productive capital resulting from incremental visitor
demand generates
 
increased demand for goods and services through a
rise in household consumption.
 
This additional demand generates a chain
of 
induced effects 
on a great variety of goods
 
and services.
 
Methods used to
estimate indirect and induced effects of tourism
 
Models based on Input-output analysis
By using an input-output table, it is possible to express the technical
relationship
 
between output by product or activity (at basic price) and
intermediate consumption
 
(at purchasers price) by product or activity.
Computable general equilibrium 
(CGE) 
models
Although based on similar types of data and assumptions, CGE models are
designed to relax some of the constraints inherent in input
 
output
 
models,
in particular price variation constraints.
Multipliers
Both procedures are technically complex and have enormous information
needs.
 
For this reason, analysts sometimes use exogenous multipliers
(estimated from other
 
economies or regions) that convert the value of
tourism consumption (total or by
 
product categories) into estimates of the
indirect and induced effects.
 
Historical Background
 
8
 
In September 1999, an UNWTO–OECD–Eurostat intersecretariat working
group was created with the object of establishing a common conceptual
framework
 
for the development of the methodological design of the T
SA
T
he United
 
Nations Statistical Commission endorsed the draft document,
as amended, which
 
constitutes the content of the Tourism Satellite
Account: Recommended Methodological
 
Framework 2000.
The T
SA
: R
MF 
2008 is basically an update that takes into account the IR
TS
2008, the updates of other macroeconomic-related frameworks,
 
and the
experience of member countries in implementing the TS
A
.
The main differences between the T
SA
: RM
F
 (2000) and the present 2008
update refer basically
 
to the clarification of the concepts of tourism
expenditure and tourism consumption,
 
that of the treatment of goods
acquired by visitors, and proposals for taking into consideration
 
new forms
of vacation home ownership as well as the meetings industry.
 
Overview
 
9
 
Tourism as a demand-side phenomenon refers to the activities
of visitors
 
and their role in the acquisition of goods and
services.
It can also be viewed from the
 
supply side, and tourism will
then be understood as the set of productive activities
 
that cater
mainly to visitors.
In order to ensure that the compilation of the integrated
tourism statistics
 
is in line with the compilation practices of
other economic statistics, it was decided
 
that it shall be further
aligned with the updated System of National Accounts 2008
(SNA 2008)
 
Overview (1)
 
10
 
T
he setting up of the T
SA 
consists
in analy
s
ing in detail all the aspects of demand for goods and services
which
 
might be associated with tourism,
in establishing the actual interface with the supply
 
of such goods and
services within or outside the economy of reference and
in describing
 
how this supply interacts with other economic
 
activities,
using the supply and use tables as a reference.
T
he Tourism
 
Satellite Account: Recommended Methodological
Framework 2008 (TSA: RMF 2008)
 
builds upon this
consistency and provides an additional resource to link
tourism statistics
 
to the standard tables of the SNA 2008
 
Types of satellite
accounts
 
11
 
Detailed without
expansion of
framework
EX. Tourism, health,
education, etc..
 
Expansion of SNA
framework
EX: environment,
household, human
resources, etc..
 
1
 
2
 
Satellite
Accounts
 
SNA
 
SNA
 
Satellite
 
Accounts
 
The 
C
omplete Tourism
Satellite Account
 
12
 
Macroeconomic aggregates that describe 
the size and the direct economic
contribution of tourism
, such as TDGVA
 
and TDGDP, consistent with similar
aggregates for the total economy and for other productive economic activities
and functional areas of interest;
Detailed data on tourism consumption
, a more extended concept associated
with the activity of visitors as consumers, and 
a description of how this
demand is met by domestic supply and imports
, integrated within tables
derived from supply and use tables which can be compiled both at current
 
and
constant prices;
Detailed production accounts of the tourism industries
, including data on
employment, linkages with other productive economic activities and gross
fixed capital formation;
Link between economic data and non-monetary information on tourism
,
 
such
as number of trips (or visits), duration of stay, purpose of trip, modes
 
of
transport, etc., which is required to specify the characteristics of the economic
variables.
 
The 
TSA Analysis
 
13
 
The T
SA
 is mainly
 
descriptive in nature and 
does not 
include
any measurement of 
the indirect and
 
induced effects
 of tourist
consumption on the economic system as a whole.
It
 means
 
that the impact of tourism on the economy is not fully
reflected in the TS
A
 tables and must therefore be measured
and analysed using other means.
This can be done for instance using input-output or
computable general equilibrium
 
models based on the Tourism
Satellite Account or other modelling instruments which
 
allow
for comprehensive tourism impact analysis
 
TSA Perspectives
 
14
 
The 
TSA
: 
RMF 
2008 should be considered from two different
perspectives:
As a statistical tool that complements those concepts,
definitions, aggregates
 
and classifications already presented in
the I
RTS
 2008 and articulates them into analytical tables which
provide elements for comparing estimates between regions,
countries or
 
groups of countries. These elements are also
comparable with other internationally
 
recognized
macroeconomic aggregates.
As the framework gives guidance for countries in the further
development of
 
their system of tourism statistics, the main
objective being the completion of
 
the T
SA
, which could be
viewed as a synthesis of such
 
a system.
 
Tourism activities
Tourism activities
 
Form of Tourism & Categories
of Tourism Consumption
 
16
 
Form of Tourism & Categories
of Tourism Consumption
 (cont.)
 
17
 
Classification
 
One of the most important issues that can be
addressed with tourism statistics
 
is the
description and measurement of the role of
tourism in the supply of goods
 
and services.
T
he 
IRTS
 2008 presents important new
developments concerning the
 
identification of
products (tourism characteristic and connected
products and other
 
consumption products) and
tourism industries using internationally approved
classifications
 
of products, CPC Ver. 2) and of
productive
 
activities, the ISIC Rev. 4.
 
18
 
Classification of 
P
roducts
 for Tourism
 
19
 
Classification of 
P
roducts
 ... 
(Contd.)
 
20
 
Classification of 
P
roducts
 ... 
(Contd.)
 
21
 
Tourism characteristic products 
are those that satisfy one or
both of the
 
following criteria
:
o
Tourism expenditure on the product should represent a
significant share of
 
total tourism expenditure (share-of-
expenditure/demand condition);
o
Tourism expenditure on the product should represent a
significant share of
 
the supply of the product in the
economy (share-of-supply condition). 
This
 
criterion
implies that the supply of a tourism characteristic product
would
 
cease to exist in meaningful quantity in the absence
of visitors.
In the case of 
tourism connected products
, their significance
within tourism
 
analysis for the economy of reference is
recognized although their link to tourism
 
is limited
worldwide. Consequently, lists of such products will be
country specific
 
Tourism characteristic activities?
 
Tourism characteristic activities
 
are
those that typically produce 
tourism
characteristic products
.
T
he industries in which the principal
activity is tourism
 
characteristic will be
called tourism industries
 
22
 
T
ourism characteristic consumption
products
/
 activities
 
23
 
T
ourism characteristic consumption
products
/
activities
 
24
 
The Tables
 
The 10 tables that make up the TSA are derived from and
related to the supply and use tables of the SNA 2008
At a minimum, in order to speak of a satellite account, the
TSA must include a detailed presentation of supply and
consumption in terms of goods and services acquired by
visitors (tables 1-4) and of the industries that produce
them (table 5) as well as their components, as this
constitutes the core of the TSA system (table 6)
The recommended valuation principles are the same as
those of the SNA 1993, that is, production should be
valued at basic prices and consumption and use at
purchasers’ prices
 
25
 
T
he Tables
 
(Contd.)
 
26
 
Tables 1, 2 and 3
: 
Tourism expenditure, according to
forms of tourism
 
by products and classes of visitors
o
Table 1 focuses on inbound tourism
o
T
able 2 on domestic tourism
o
T
able 3 on outbound tourism
Table 4
 
Internal tourism consumption, internal
tourism expenditure
 
and other components of
tourism consumption, by products
Table 5
 
Production accounts of tourism industries
and other industries
 
(at basic prices)
Table 6
 
Domestic supply and internal tourism
consumption, by products
 
(at purchasers’ prices)
 
T
he Tables
 (Contd.)
 
27
 
Table 7
 
Employment in the tourism industries
Table 8
 
Tourism gross fixed capital formation of
tourism industries
 
and other industries
Table 9
 
Tourism collective consumption, by
product and level of government
Table 10 Non-monetary indicators
 
Aggregates
 
28
 
Main aggregates:
Internal tourism expenditure;
Internal tourism consumption;
Gross value added of tourism industries (GVATI);
Tourism direct gross value added (TDGVA);
Tourism direct gross domestic product (TDGDP).
 
INDONESIA TSA
 
 
30
 
Statistics-Indonesia (BPS)
Compiling tourism statistics
Compiling I-O table and national/regional accounts
Ministry of Tourism (M
o
T)
Organizing the primary data sources
Central Bank of Indonesia (BI)
C
ompiling balance of payments
 
31
 
A
d
m
i
n
i
s
t
r
a
t
i
v
e
 
R
e
c
o
r
d
 
f
o
r
 
I
n
b
o
u
n
d
 
a
n
d
 
O
u
t
b
o
u
n
d
 
T
o
u
r
i
s
t
Number of foreign visitors and Indonesian residents going
abroad
P
r
e
p
a
r
e
d
 
b
y
 
I
m
m
i
g
r
a
t
i
o
n
 
O
f
f
i
c
e
s
 
P
a
s
s
e
n
g
e
r
 
E
x
i
t
 
S
u
r
v
e
y
 
(
P
E
S
)
Average expenditure and consumption pattern of inbound
tourist
Conducted by M
o
T
Number of sample around 1
7
,000 respondents
 
32
 
D
o
m
e
s
t
i
c
 
T
o
u
r
i
s
t
 
S
u
r
v
e
y
Estimate number of domestic tourist (conducted by 
BPS
every year)
Average expenditure and consumption pattern of tourist
(c
onducted 
jointly 
by BPS
 dan MoT every three year)
Latest survey was in 20
14
 
O
u
t
b
o
u
n
d
 
S
u
r
v
e
y
Average expenditure of outbound tourist
Conducted by M
o
T
 
33
 
I
n
d
o
n
e
s
i
a
n
 
I
-
O
 
T
a
b
l
e
,
 
2
0
0
0
 
(
u
p
d
a
t
i
n
g
)
Latest 
updating 
one is 
in 2008
Now 
BPS
 is compiling Table I-O 2010 (still in progress)
Problems: supply side of tourism sector is not fit with
the sectoral I-O table
 
O
t
h
e
r
 
s
o
u
r
c
e
s
Secondary data: investment, labor force and tourism
promotion
 
34
 
1)
Economic profile of tourism sector
2)
Tourist expenditure structure and its
magnitude
3)
Structure of tourism related sector
4)
Structure of employment and its share
on national labor force
5)
Contribution of tourism sector on
national economy
 
35
 
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s
e
 
I
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Impact of tourism in generating sectoral value of
production, GDP, wages & salaries, indirect taxes and
sectoral employment
 
36
 
37
Indonesia Tourism Economic Impact, 20
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38
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Tourism plays a crucial role in stimulating economic growth and development. By generating multiplier effects on the national economy, tourism directly and indirectly increases economic activity, income, employment, and demand for goods and services. Economic impact studies measure the net increase in wealth resulting from tourism, including changes in household income and asset values. Input-output analysis identifies direct, indirect, and induced effects of tourism on production processes, value added, and consumption patterns.

  • Tourism
  • Economic Impacts
  • Economic Development
  • Multiplier Effects
  • Input-Output Analysis

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  1. Introduction to Tourism Satellite Accounts Akhmad Tantowi BPS-Statistics Indonesia Paramaribo, 9 11 August 2016

  2. Role of Tourism TOURISM deals with social, culture, politic, environment and economy. THE ECONOMY OF TOURISM is obvious. It has enormous potential of to stimulate growth and development. As identified in the Tourism Satellite Account, tourism and related tourism generates multiplier effects on national economy.

  3. How does Tourism affect Economy and People? Visitors buy goods and services Direct effect Increase income of, government, households, business, etc.. Increase demand for goods and services Indirect effect Increase production of goods and services Increase employment, compensation, profit

  4. International Tourism, 2015 Source: UNWTO Tourism Highlights, 2015 edition

  5. The measurement of the economic impacts of tourism Tourism generates directly and indirectly an increase in economic activity in the places visited, mainly due to demand for goods and services that need to be produced and provided The objective of economic impact studies is to measure economic benefits, that is, the net increase in the wealth of residents resulting from tourism, measured in monetary terms. The change in wealth might occur not only through increased flows of income to households, but also through the change in net worth induced by the change in market value (positiveor negative) of existing assets, both produced and non- produced, as a response to the induced change in demand for such types of assets.

  6. Tourism Effect In terms of input-output analysis, three different types of effects are defined: The direct effects take into account only the immediate effects of the additional demand on production processes and supply of goods and services in terms of additional goods and services, and additional value added and its components. The TSA only makes it possible to measure the direct effects of consumption on output and value added of tourism industries and other industries serving them (TDGVA and TDGDP). The intermediate inputs or capital goods need to be produced or imported, induces a chain of additional demand for different factors of production (that is, inputs, labour, and capital). This chain of effects that enables the activities directly serving visitors is called the indirect effects of visitor demand In addition, the increase of income distributed to the labour force and to the owners of productive capital resulting from incremental visitor demand generates increased demand for goods and services through a rise in household consumption. This additional demand generates a chain of induced effects on a great variety of goods and services.

  7. Methods used to estimate indirect and induced effects of tourism Models based on Input-output analysis By using an input-output table, it is possible to express the technical relationship between output by product or activity (at basic price) and intermediate consumption (at purchasers price) by product or activity. Computable general equilibrium (CGE) models Although based on similar types of data and assumptions, CGE models are designed to relax some of the constraints inherent in input output models, in particular price variation constraints. Multipliers Both procedures are technically complex and have enormous information needs. For this reason, analysts sometimes use exogenous multipliers (estimated from other economies or regions) that convert the value of tourism consumption (total or by product categories) into estimates of the indirect and induced effects.

  8. Historical Background In September 1999, an UNWTO OECD Eurostat intersecretariat working group was created with the object of establishing a common conceptual framework for the development of the methodological design of the TSA The United Nations Statistical Commission endorsed the draft document, as amended, which constitutes the content of the Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended Methodological Framework 2000. The TSA: RMF 2008 is basically an update that takes into account the IRTS 2008, the updates of other macroeconomic-related frameworks, and the experience of member countries in implementing the TSA. The main differences between the TSA: RMF (2000) and the present 2008 update refer basically to the clarification of the concepts of tourism expenditure and tourism consumption, that of the treatment of goods acquired by visitors, and proposals for taking into consideration new forms of vacation home ownership as well as the meetings industry. 8

  9. Overview Tourism as a demand-side phenomenon refers to the activities of visitors and their role in the acquisition of goods and services. It can also be viewed from the supply side, and tourism will then be understood as the set of productive activitiesthat cater mainly to visitors. In order to ensure that the compilation of the integrated tourism statistics is in line with the compilation practices of other economic statistics, it was decided that it shall be further aligned with the updated System of National Accounts 2008 (SNA 2008) 9

  10. Overview (1) The setting up of the TSA consists in analysing in detail all the aspects of demand for goods and services which might be associated with tourism, in establishing the actual interface with the supply of such goods and services within or outside the economy of reference and in describing how this supply interacts with other economic activities, using the supply and use tables as a reference. The Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended Methodological Framework 2008 (TSA: RMF 2008) builds upon this consistency and provides an additional resource to link tourism statistics to the standard tables of the SNA 2008 10

  11. Types of satellite accounts Detailed without expansion of framework 1 Satellite Accounts SNA EX. Tourism, health, education, etc.. Satellite Expansion of SNA framework 2 SNA EX: environment, household, human resources, etc.. Accounts 11

  12. The Complete Tourism Satellite Account Macroeconomic aggregates that describe the size and the direct economic contribution of tourism, such as TDGVA and TDGDP, consistent with similar aggregates for the total economy and for other productive economic activities and functional areas of interest; Detailed data on tourism consumption, a more extended concept associated with the activity of visitors as consumers, and a description of how this demand is met by domestic supply and imports, integrated within tables derived from supply and use tables which can be compiled both at current and constant prices; Detailed production accounts of the tourism industries, including data on employment, linkages with other productive economic activities and gross fixed capital formation; Link between economic data and non-monetary information on tourism, such as number of trips (or visits), duration of stay, purpose of trip, modes of transport, etc., which is required to specify the characteristics of the economic variables. 12

  13. The TSA Analysis The TSA is mainly descriptive in nature and does not include any measurement of the indirect and induced effects of tourist consumption on the economic system as a whole. It means that the impact of tourism on the economy is not fully reflected in the TSA tables and must therefore be measured and analysed using other means. This can be done for instance using input-output or computable general equilibrium models based on the Tourism Satellite Account or other modelling instruments which allow for comprehensive tourism impact analysis 13

  14. TSA Perspectives The TSA: RMF 2008 should be considered from two different perspectives: As a statistical tool that complements those concepts, definitions, aggregates and classifications already presented in the IRTS 2008 and articulates them into analytical tables which provide elements for comparing estimates between regions, countries or groups of countries. These elements are also comparable with other internationally recognized macroeconomic aggregates. As the framework gives guidance for countries in the further development of their system of tourism statistics, the main objective being the completion of the TSA, which could be viewed as a synthesis of such a system. 14

  15. Tourism activities Inbound tourism Demand side Visitors Domestic tourism Outbound tourism Tourism Accommodation F & B services Tourism industries Supply side Travel agent Attraction services etc

  16. No 1. Form of Tourism Tourism Consumption Domestic tourism consumption: the tourism consumption of a resident visitor within the economy of reference Domestic tourism: the activities of a resident visitor within the country of reference either as part of a domestic tourism trip or part of an outbound tourism trip 2. Inbound tourism: the activities of a nonresident visitor within the country of reference on an inbound tourism trips Inbound tourism consumption: the tourism consumption of a non- resident visitor within the economy of reference 3. Outbound tourism: the activities of a resident visitor outside the country of reference, either as part of an outbound tourism trip or as part of a domestic trip. Outbound tourism consumption: the tourism consumption of a resident visitor outside the economy of reference Form of Tourism & Categories of Tourism Consumption 16

  17. No 4. Form of Tourism Tourism Consumption Internal tourism consumption: the tourism consumption of both resident and non-resident visitors within the economy of reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism consumption and inbound tourism consumption National tourism consumption: the tourism consumption of resident visitors, within and outside the economy of reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism consumption and outbound tourism consumption Internal tourism: domestic and inbound tourism, that is, the activities of resident and non-resident visitors within the country of reference as part of domestic or international trips. 5. National tourism: domestic and outbound tourism, that is, the activities of resident visitors, within and outside the country of reference, either as part of domestic or outbound trips Form of Tourism & Categories of Tourism Consumption (cont.) 17

  18. Classification One of the most important issues that can be addressed with tourism statistics is the description and measurement of the role of tourism in the supply of goods and services. The IRTS 2008 presents important new developments concerning the identification of products (tourism characteristic and connected products and other consumption products) and tourism industries using internationally approved classifications of products, CPC Ver. 2) and of productive activities, the ISIC Rev. 4. 18

  19. A. Consumption products: A.1. Tourism characteristic products comprising two subcategories A.1.i. Internationally comparable tourism characteristic products, which represent the core products for international comparison of tourism expenditure A.1.ii. Country-specific tourism characteristic products (to be determined by each country by applying the criteria mentioned in IRTS 2008). A.2. Other consumption products made up of two subcategories, both to be determined by each country and, consequently, country-specific A.2.i. Tourism connected products comprising other products according to their relevance for tourism analysis but that do not satisfy the criteria mentioned in IRTS 2008 A.2.ii. Non-tourism-related consumption products comprising all other consumption goods and services that do not belong to the previous categories Classification of Products for Tourism 19

  20. B. Non-consumption products: This category includes all products that by their nature cannot be consumption goods and services and, therefore, can neither be a part of tourism expenditure, nor a part of tourism consumption, except for valuables that might be acquired by visitors on their trips. Two subcategories are defined B.1. Valuables B.2. Other non-consumption products comprising those products associated with tourism gross fixed capital formation and collective consumption Classification of Products ... (Contd.) 20

  21. Tourism characteristic products are those that satisfy one or both of the following criteria: o Tourism expenditure on the product should represent a significant share of total tourism expenditure (share-of- expenditure/demand condition); o Tourism expenditure on the product should represent a significant share of the supply of the product in the economy (share-of-supply condition). This criterion implies that the supply of a tourism characteristic product would cease to exist in meaningful quantity in the absence of visitors. In the case of tourism connected products, their significance within tourism analysis for the economy of reference is recognized although their link to tourism is limited worldwide. Consequently, lists of such products will be country specific Classification of Products ... (Contd.) 21

  22. Tourism characteristic activities? Tourism characteristic activities are those that typically produce tourism characteristic products. The industries in which the principal activity is tourism characteristic will be called tourism industries 22

  23. Products Activities 1. Accommodation services for visitors 1. Accommodation for visitors 2. Food-and beverage-serving services 2. Food- and beverage-serving activities 3. Railway passenger transport services 3. Railway passenger transport 4. Road passenger transport services 4. Road passenger transport 5. Water passenger transport services 5. Water passenger transport 6. Air passenger transport services 6. Air passenger transport 7. Transport equipment rental services 7. Transport equipment rental Tourism characteristic consumption products/ activities 23

  24. Products Activities 8. Travel agencies and other reservation services 8. Travel agencies and other reservation services activities 9. Cultural services 9. Cultural activities 10. Sports and recreational services 10. Sports and recreational activities 11. Country-specific tourism characteristic goods 11. Retail trade of country-specific tourism characteristic goods 12. Country-specific tourism characteristic services 12. Other country-specific tourism characteristic activities Tourism characteristic consumption products/activities 24

  25. The Tables The 10 tables that make up the TSA are derived from and related to the supply and use tables of the SNA 2008 At a minimum, in order to speak of a satellite account, the TSA must include a detailed presentation of supply and consumption in terms of goods and services acquired by visitors (tables 1-4) and of the industries that produce them (table 5) as well as their components, as this constitutes the core of the TSA system (table 6) The recommended valuation principles are the same as those of the SNA 1993, that is, production should be valued at basic prices and consumption and use at purchasers prices 25

  26. The Tables (Contd.) Tables 1, 2 and 3: Tourism expenditure, according to forms of tourism by products and classes of visitors o Table 1 focuses on inbound tourism o Table 2 on domestic tourism o Table 3 on outbound tourism Table 4 Internal tourism consumption, internal tourism expenditure and other components of tourism consumption, by products Table 5 Production accounts of tourism industries and other industries (at basic prices) Table 6 Domestic supply and internal tourism consumption, by products (at purchasers prices) 26

  27. The Tables (Contd.) Table 7 Employment in the tourism industries Table 8 Tourism gross fixed capital formation of tourism industries and other industries Table 9 Tourism collective consumption, by product and level of government Table 10 Non-monetary indicators 27

  28. Aggregates Main aggregates: Internal tourism expenditure; Internal tourism consumption; Gross value added of tourism industries (GVATI); Tourism direct gross value added (TDGVA); Tourism direct gross domestic product (TDGDP). 28

  29. INDONESIA TSA

  30. INTER-INSTITUTIONAL PLATFORM Statistics-Indonesia (BPS) Compiling tourism statistics Compiling I-O table and national/regional accounts Ministry of Tourism (MoT) Organizing the primary data sources Central Bank of Indonesia (BI) Compiling balance of payments 30

  31. DATA SOURCES Administrative Record for Inbound and Outbound Tourist Number of foreign visitors and Indonesian residents going abroad Prepared by Immigration Offices Passenger Exit Survey (PES) Average expenditure and consumption pattern of inbound tourist Conducted by MoT Number of sample around 17,000 respondents 31

  32. DATA SOURCES (Contd.) Domestic Tourist Survey Estimate number of domestic tourist (conducted by BPS every year) Average expenditure and consumption pattern of tourist (conducted jointly by BPS dan MoT every three year) Latest survey was in 2014 Outbound Survey Average expenditure of outbound tourist Conducted by MoT 32

  33. DATA SOURCES (Contd.) Indonesian I-O Table, 2000 (updating) Latest updating one is in 2008 Now BPS is compiling Table I-O 2010 (still in progress) Problems: supply side of tourism sector is not fit with the sectoral I-O table Other sources Secondary data: investment, labor force and tourism promotion 33

  34. INFORMATION ON I-TSA COVER 1) Economic profile of tourism sector 2) Tourist expenditure structure and its magnitude 3) Structure of tourism related sector 4) Structure of employment and its share on national labor force 5) Contribution of tourism sector on national economy 34

  35. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF TOURISM Use I-O model to measure economic impact of tourism Expenditures (tourists, capital formation and tourism development made by government and private) treated as final demand in I-O framework Each expenditure is reclassified following sectoral I-O classification Economic impact: Impact of tourism in generating sectoral value of production, GDP, wages & salaries, indirect taxes and sectoral employment 35

  36. Table 1. The economic impact of tourism sector, 2013 (trillion Rp) Output Total GVA/GNP Total Labor force Total SECTORS NO. % % % Tourism (4) 2.95 1.78 4.10 3.02 4.08 2.06 12.62 93.91 47.50 13.10 6.25 22.14 14.91 2.65 1.91 4.32 Tourism (6) 2.78 1.79 4.37 3.02 4.08 2.06 12.62 93.91 47.50 13.10 6.25 22.14 14.91 2.65 1.93 4.02 Tourism (8) 6.32 8.26 13.14 7.42 11.93 5.88 33.01 90.81 66.87 20.93 13.86 74.85 38.26 8.39 3.19 8.52 (Billion Rp) (3) 55,621.9 22,653.5 237,866.1 5,731.3 101,967.7 40,582.9 61,008.0 62,088.3 4,248.5 58,046.4 6,412.3 57,306.1 12,091.5 9,918.0 54,463.9 790,006.3 (Billion Rp) (5) 36,391.1 18,304.8 94,091.1 2,119.3 37,020.7 21,671.8 26,375.7 36,894.3 1,276.4 24,141.0 2,021.5 17,502.6 6,891.5 7,743.3 32,579.8 365,025.0 (000) (7) 2,479.6 117.8 1,966.4 18.7 757.4 1,265.6 710.0 396.9 73.9 645.3 70.1 216.0 151.5 59.9 680.8 9,609.8 (1) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Land transport 11 Water transport 12 Air transport 13 Auxiliary transport 14 Communication 15 Other service (2) Agriculture Mining & Quarying Manufacturing Elect., gas, water supply Construction Trade Restaurant Hotel Railway transport Jumlah 36

  37. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF TOURISM, 2013 Wages/ Salaries Indirect Taxes Employ- ment Output GDP/GVA Description (billion Rp) 18,280.7 (billion Rp) 9,084.0 (billion Rp) 2,850.4 (billion Rp) (000) Total Economy 337.6 112.8 Total of Tourism Impact 1. Inbound Tourist 2. Domestic Tourist 3. Outbound Tourist (pre+post) 4. Investment 7. Promotion 790.0 229.4 317.9 10.7 365.0 109.4 150.1 4.9 118.3 36.1 48.1 1.6 13.3 4.1 5.4 0.2 9.6 3.0 4.3 0.1 219.9 12.2 94.5 6.1 30.5 2.1 3.4 0.2 2.0 0.2 Share of Tourism (%) 1. Inbound Tourist 2. Domestic Tourist 3. Outbound Tourist (pre+post) 4. Investment 7. Promotion 4.32 1.25 1.74 0.06 4.02 1.20 1.65 0.05 4.15 1.27 1.69 0.06 3.93 1.22 1.60 0.05 8.52 2.64 3.83 0.12 1.20 0.07 1.04 0.07 1.07 0.07 1.00 0.06 1.79 0.14 37

  38. Indonesia Tourism Economic Impact, 2013 Economi Impact I-O Multiplier Matrix Inbound tourism consumption (129,75) TABLE I-O 2008 UPDATING Impact on goods and services prod (790,01) 4,32 % Total National Product (18.280,75) Domestic tourism consumption (177,84) Impact on GDP (365,02) 4,02 % Outbound tourism consumption (pre+post) (5,88) GDP (9.083,97) 8,52 % Impact on workers (9,61) Total workers (112,76) Tourism investment (121,30) 4,15 % Total worker conpent (2.850,39) Impact on wage/salary (118,34) Gov exp on tourism sector (7,12) Impact on indirect tax (13,26) 3,93 % Total Tax (337,63) in trillion rupiahs, except worker in million persons 38

  39. Terima Kasih

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