Tourism Sector in Panama : Regional Economic Impacts and the Potential to Benefit the Poor

Tourism is one of Latin America's fastest growing industries but the impact of tourism on the poor and the effects on lagging regions are under debate. Many studies have evaluated the growth impacts of the tourism sector but few have analyzed the impact of tourism on the economy and poverty at the subnational level in developing countries. As a country marked by a "dual economy," Panama shares with other Latin American countries a fast growing, modern urban sector side by side with impoverished rural and peri-urban populations. Tourism has been growing in Panama and contributes at least 6 percent of gross domestic product. This paper presents the results of a top-down assessment of the impact of tourism spending on growth and poverty at the regional (province) level in Panama using a Social Accounting Matrix model. As revealed by this study, the tourism sector has large multiplier effects on the Panamanian economy and has the potential for significant benefits to the poor. But tourism's poverty benefits are neither automatic nor ubiquitous. They depend on where and how supply chains are structured and on the way tourists spend their money.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Klytchnikova, Irina, Dorosh, Paul
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-08
Subjects:ACCOMMODATIONS, ACCURATE ASSESSMENT, ADVENTURE TOURISM, AIR, AIRPORT, ARTISANS, BASIC, BEACHES, BRIDGE, CAPITAL INVESTMENT, CAR, CAR RENTAL, CARIBBEAN COAST, COASTAL AREAS, COASTAL TOURISM, CONSUMER SPENDING, CONSUMERS, CONTACT WITH TOURISTS, CRAFT, CRUISE, CRUISE SHIPS, CULTURAL HERITAGE, CULTURAL SITE, CULTURAL TOURISM, DOMESTIC FLIGHTS, DOMESTIC TOURISM, DOMESTIC TOURISTS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF TOURISM, ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF TOURISM DEVELOPMENT, ECOTOURISM, ENTRY POINTS, EXCURSIONS, FISHING, FOREIGN TOURIST, FOREIGN TOURISTS, FOREIGN VISITORS, GOVERNMENT POLICIES, HANDICRAFTS, HOTEL, HOTEL OPERATORS, HOTELS, IMPACT OF TOURISM, IMPACTS OF TOURISM, INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES, INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY, INDIGENOUS GROUPS, INTERNATIONAL TOURISM, INTERNATIONAL TOURIST, INTERNATIONAL TOURIST ARRIVALS, INTERNATIONAL TOURISTS, INTERNATIONAL TRANSPORT, INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL, LOCAL FOOD, LOCAL TRANSPORTATION, LODGING, MASS TOURISM, MESOAMERICAN BIOLOGICAL CORRIDOR, MINING, NATURAL AREAS, NATURAL HABITATS, NATURAL RESOURCES, NUMBER OF TOURISTS, PACKAGE TOUR, PASSENGERS, PERSONAL TRAVEL, REAL ESTATE, RECREATION, RESORTS, RESTAURANTS, SAFETY, SOUVENIRS, SPORTS, SUSTAINABLE TOURISM, TEXTILES, TOUR, TOUR OPERATORS, TOURISM, TOURISM AUTHORITY, TOURISM DEMAND, TOURISM DESTINATIONS, TOURISM DEVELOPMENT, TOURISM ECONOMY, TOURISM FLOWS, TOURISM GROWTH, TOURISM INDUSTRY, TOURISM RECEIPTS, TOURISM REVENUES, TOURISM SATELLITE ACCOUNT, TOURISM SECTOR, TOURIST ACCOMMODATION, TOURIST ARRIVALS, TOURIST DESTINATIONS, TOURIST EXPENDITURE, TOURIST REVENUES, TOURISTS, TRANSIT, TRANSIT PASSENGERS, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT SERVICES, TRANSPORTATION, TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE, TRAVELERS, TRIP, TRIPS, TRUE, UNCONTROLLED TOURISM DEVELOPMENT, VACATION, VISITOR, VISITORS, WORLD TOURISM, WORLD TOURISM ORGANIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/08/16648506/tourism-sector-panama-regional-economic-impacts-potential-benefit-poor
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12025
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