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Believe it or not: Bolivia is one of the World’s Top Emerging
Tourism Destinations!
By Lykke E. Andersen*,
La Paz,
25
June
2007.
The World Tourism Organization publishes facts and figures on
international tourism, including a table of the
World’s Top Emerging Tourism Destinations, as measured by
the growth in international tourist arrivals.
The good news is that Bolivia has made it to the table! (Mexico
and Brazil didn’t). The bad news is that it is at the very
bottom of the table. Of the 76 countries included, Bolivia was
last with an average annual growth rate in international tourist
arrivals of 4.0% between 1995 and 2004.
Bolivia does indeed have an enormous tourism potential, but is
not very good at exploiting it. Bolivia receives about 400
thousand international tourists per year, which means that just
1 in every 2000 international tourists stop by Bolivia. If
tourists were randomly wandering all over the Earth’s land
surface (including Antarctica), about 1 in 150 would
accidentally enter Bolivia, so it seems they are actively
avoiding this country.
This is a pity, both for Bolivia and for the tourists. For
Bolivia because tourism is one of the few areas where Bolivia
has a natural comparative advantage due to the amazing diversity
of natural and cultural attractions, and because, in sharp
contrast to natural gas exports, tourism generates jobs in a
wide variety of sectors for both skilled and unskilled workers
and entrepreneurs. Bolivia’s complicated geography is a serious
constraint for the export of physical goods, but for the
“export” of adventure and nature experiences to tourists, it is
a distinct advantage.
For tourists it is a pity because Bolivia has so many
spectacular things to offer at very affordable prices.
Backpackers breathe a sigh of relief when they come to Bolivia,
as their daily expenses drop to only a fraction of those in
other Latin American countries.
While Bolivia doesn’t cater to the mass tourism market with long
rows of beach hotels, it has plenty to offer to the more
adventurous traveler. One of my favorites is the 6-hour bicycle
ride on the World’s most dangerous road from La Cumbre to Rio
Selva Resort near Coroico. The trip starts at over 5000 meters
among snow clad mountains and goes down through the most
spectacular and varied landscape on a mud road clinging to the
almost vertical mountain sides, and ends in the swimming pool at
a five-star hotel in the jungle.
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