Mkikuyu- Akili timamu
JF-Expert Member
- Feb 16, 2018
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Tourism Contribution to GDP in Tz is 17%..What is 17% of $47bn?? $7.99bn...but the Government revenue is $2bn Ulienda shule wapi? Mshenzi wewe$2 billion is total earnings from tourism - that's the ytotal amount tourism contributes to your GDP. Here's the data direct from the source's mouth TTB.
View attachment 763365
You can get the whole document here:-
https://www.google.com/url?url=http...board+report&usg=AOvVaw2dIDpRyoTDs-75X6jupifQ
I'm not talking of tourists transiting from Kenya, I'm talking about Kenya being the largest source of tourists to Tanzania. 18.2% of your tourists are Kenyans. Kwani hamjui kusoma?The idiot is bragging of their inability to convince them to stay. Get the idea how will the map change the moment Air Tanzania goes direct to Europensure, Asia n North America.
You are among stupid people ever known in here, even if those data come from respective countries, these international bodies review them before they accept and label them as internationally accepted after passing all necessary international verifications, thats why they are named as UN reports despite the fact that UN gets them from respective individual countries. You seem to know nothing about these issues, stupid.World bank gets it Data from KTB and TTB. Stop responding to me if you're stupid.
And we beat up flat! This is coming to the southern circuit!Because you're lazyπππ
Acha kujiliwaza wewe, Ethiopia is leading, followed by Tanzania, then Uganda and then Kenya, Rwanda and Burundi, stop your nonsense denial, for your information, tourism has contributed 17% to the GDP of Tanzania in 2017, go away with your figures just to please your ego, Kenya can't match Tanzania in this area, go and check with Rotich and Balala will all confirm this. You must accept and move on, it is the reality nor way out.
And we beat up flat! This is coming to the southern circuit!
New Opportunities for Development in Southern Tanzania Through Nature-Based Tourism
REGROW Project Will Promote Tourism, Regional Development and Poverty Reduction Through a Conservation Approach
WASHINGTON, September 28, 2017 β Increased conservation and management of unique Protected Areas in Southern Tanzania, coupled with promotion of alternative livelihoods for rural communities and infrastructure development, will generate economic opportunities for the region, protect natural assets, and benefit nearly 40,000 households around the Protected Areas.
These results will be achieved over the next six years through a $150 million credit from the International Development Association* through the Resilient Natural Resource Management for Tourism and Growth Project βREGROWβ, which was approved today by the World Bank.
REGROW, whose development objective is to improve the management of natural resources and tourism assets in priority areas of Southern Tanzania, and to increase access to alternative livelihood activities for targeted communities, will position the βSouthern Circuitβ as an engine of growth through tourism development and associated benefits; enable communities in the project area to enhance their incomes by linking them with resilient livelihoods; promote increased conservation of National Parks and Game Reserves; reduce human-wildlife conflict and strengthen resilience to climate vulnerability and change; and contribute towards safeguarding flows from the Great Ruaha River into the Ruaha National Park.
The βSouthern Circuitβ includes several National Parks (Katavi, Kitulo, Mahale, Udzungwa Mountains, Mikumi and Ruaha), Game Reserves (with Selous being the largest), two rift valley lakes (Nyasa and Tanganyika), areas of cultural interest, and access to the primary gateway town of Iringa. REGROW will promote investments inside four Protected Areas, considered to be catalytic for the consolidation of the Circuit: Ruaha, Mikumu and Udzungwa Mountains National Parks, and Selous Game Reserve. Combined, these areas cover 75,446 km2 (for reference, Switzerland covers 41,285 km2).
βTourism is a key element of Tanzaniaβs economy, contributing to roughly 10 percent of GDP in 2015,β said Bella Bird, the World Bank Country Director for Tanzania, Malawi, Somalia and Burundi. βThe country is endowed with world renowned biodiversity and wildlife attractions, but most people tend to be familiar with just its Northern Circuit. The assets of the Southern Circuit can increase the number of tourists arriving to the country, thus increasing economic benefits and promoting wildlife conservation. For this to happen, infrastructure and services need to be improved, and the destination needs to be further promoted to potential visitors.β
The number of visitors has doubled over a short period, from about 500,000 in 2000 to over 1 million in 2015. Due to its success in attracting higher-spending tourism, the country now boasts the highest revenue/tourist ratio in Sub-Saharan Africa (double, for example, that of Kenya). Apart from being a reliable and resilient source of revenue for the government, the sector also provides well-remunerated direct employment to over 400,000 Tanzanians.
βBy consolidating the Southern Circuit as a viable destination, Tanzania will guarantee a more diversified, robust tourism offering; the additional revenue generated in the Southern Circuit will facilitate the conservation of these unique, unspoiled Southern Protected Areas, and become an engine for regional growth. The diversification will also ease mounting pressures of the Northern Circuit, thus enabling its continued ability deliver a unique wildlife experience,β saidDaniel Mira-Salama, the World Bankβs Senior Environmental Specialist who is also the Task Team Leader for REGROW.
REGROW will address some of the key challenges of the βSouthern Circuitβ to realize its potential. These include limited infrastructure inside the Protected Areas, coupled with environmental degradation; insufficient linkages between tourism and rural development; water resources trade-offs upstream of the Ruaha National Park, leading to water scarcity inside the Park, compounded by other climate variability and climate change impacts. REGROW will tackle those challenges through investments in key infrastructure, promotion of linkages between sites, positioning of Iringa as gateway town, attraction of private sector investments, branding and marketing, and creation of effective local supply chain linkages. Above all, success will depend on the bridging of the gap between conservation and sustained economic benefits for Tanzanians.
REGROW is to be implemented through four components that include strengthening management and improve infrastructure in priority areas; strengthening alternative livelihoods for targeted communities; strengthening landscape management and infrastructure investments in and upstream of the Ruaha National Park; and project management as well as institutional strengthening.
* The World Bankβs International Development Association, established in 1960, supports the worldβs poorest countries by providing grants and low to zero-interest loans for projects and programs that boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve poor peopleβs lives. IDA is one of the largest sources of assistance for the worldβs 77 poorest countries, 39 of which are in Africa. Resources from IDA bring positive change for 2.8 billion people living on less than $2 a day. Since 1960, IDA has supported development work in 112 countries. Annual commitments have averaged about $18 billion over the last three years, with about 50 percent going to Africa.
PRESS RELEASE NO: 2018/028/AFR
Contacts
Dar es Salaam
Loy Nabeta
(255) 22 216-3246
lnabeta@worldbank.org
Washington
Ekaterina Svirina
+1 (202) 458 1042
esvirina@worldbank.org
New Opportunities for Development in Southern Tanzania Through Nature-Based Tourism
ππππ±πππππ±ππππππππLeo tunazaa na waoDon't quote me useless articles, opportunities are everywhere including Somalia. Come back when you have more tourists than Kenya and making more money from Tourism than Kenya.ππ
Wacha kutapatapa kisu lazima kikuingie kwa mkun**duπππππππππYou are among stupid people ever known in here, even if those data come from respective countries, these international bodies review them before they accept and label them as internationally accepted after passing all necessary international verifications, thats why they are named as UN reports despite the fact that UN gets them from respective individual countries. You seem to know nothing about these issues, stupid.
Kenya falls in βFailed State Indexβ rankings
Umeona? Hii comedy aisee inaburudisha sana kuitizamia kwa mbali. πHawa watu nikuhurumiwa wameanza kutapa tapa aisee
Sijakuelewa kuhusu Ethiopia,unataka kusema nini?. We we talk about tourism it includes all forms of tourisms, if you combined all forms of tourism including conferences, climbing mountains, culture tourism, Tanzania is leading by far.Ethiopia and heavy tourism data in the same sentence!?
Still on tourism, forget the safari/beach circuits that are only Tz mainstay,Kenya combines the two with conference,cultural/sports etc hence the figures.
For a very long time, people on this forum have peddled the lie that Tanzania earns more from tourism than Kenya. What's been happening is guys fished figures they didn't understand from the internet and paraded them around. They compared Tanzania's contribution to GDP figures with Kenya's government revenue from tourism figures and concluded Tanzania was ahead. Far from the truth - here are the actual figures.
Direct Contribution to GDP:-
KENYA - $2.5B
TANZANIA - $2.1B
Total Contribution to GDP
KENYA - $6.7B
TANZANIA - $5.9B
View attachment 763330
Even in growth we are still ahead.
View attachment 763334
As you can see, Kenya leads in both size and growth of the tourism industry. I guess the discussion is over on this.
Here we are talking about money not numbers. In Tanzania your tourism creates many low paying jobs, in Kenya it creates few high paying jobs. ππMbona husomi the whole chart, Tanzania beat Kenya on every other chart from employment on tourism sector to growth and investment na wala hatujaanza kuweka direct flights.
Here we are talking about money not numbers. In Tanzania your tourism creates many low paying jobs, in Kenya it creates few high paying jobs. ππ
Mtu kama wewe Uhuru atakupa kazi yakusafisha viatu hapo whitehouse.For a very long time, people on this forum have peddled the lie that Tanzania earns more from tourism than Kenya. What's been happening is guys fished figures they didn't understand from the internet and paraded them around. They compared Tanzania's contribution to GDP figures with Kenya's government revenue from tourism figures and concluded Tanzania was ahead. Far from the truth - here are the actual figures.
Direct Contribution to GDP:-
KENYA - $2.5B
TANZANIA - $2.1B
Total Contribution to GDP
KENYA - $6.7B
TANZANIA - $5.9B
View attachment 763330
Even in growth we are still ahead.
View attachment 763334
As you can see, Kenya leads in both size and growth of the tourism industry. I guess the discussion is over on this.
Huyu mwanzo aliitwa engineer fake next ikiwa zero brain then debe tupu. Kwa sasa anaitwa "wakukulupuka"ππYou are such an embarassment, Its despicable..You have no basic understanding of the difference between revenue and GDP contribution.. Sad
For a very long time, people on this forum have peddled the lie that Tanzania earns more from tourism than Kenya. What's been happening is guys fished figures they didn't understand from the internet and paraded them around. They compared Tanzania's contribution to GDP figures with Kenya's government revenue from tourism figures and concluded Tanzania was ahead. Far from the truth - here are the actual figures.
Direct Contribution to GDP:-
KENYA - $2.5B
TANZANIA - $2.1B
Total Contribution to GDP
KENYA - $6.7B
TANZANIA - $5.9B
View attachment 763330
Even in growth we are still ahead.
View attachment 763334
As you can see, Kenya leads in both size and growth of the tourism industry. I guess the discussion is over on this.
NairobiWalker walikuwa wanakutukana na kukudharau sana. Sasa umewashika m*kende. Sijui watatorokea wapi. Good job, this is one of the best researches i have ever seen, keep up the good job. Wacha waje tuwasikieFor a very long time, people on this forum have peddled the lie that Tanzania earns more from tourism than Kenya. What's been happening is guys fished figures they didn't understand from the internet and paraded them around. They compared Tanzania's contribution to GDP figures with Kenya's government revenue from tourism figures and concluded Tanzania was ahead. Far from the truth - here are the actual figures.
Direct Contribution to GDP:-
KENYA - $2.5B
TANZANIA - $2.1B
Total Contribution to GDP
KENYA - $6.7B
TANZANIA - $5.9B
View attachment 763330
Even in growth we are still ahead.
View attachment 763334
As you can see, Kenya leads in both size and growth of the tourism industry. I guess the discussion is over on this.
That is normal for Kenya, few to have everything and majority to have nothing, very opposite with Tanzania, that's why Tanzania leads Africa in Inclusive economy, Kenya is the last.Here we are talking about money not numbers. In Tanzania your tourism creates many low paying jobs, in Kenya it creates few high paying jobs. ππ
the Most interesting part is that 18.2% of the tourists are kenyans....So this guys survive from kenyans
Hacha kukulupukaπππ Check out @ClanSeweβs Tweet:World bank gets it Data from KTB and TTB. Stop responding to me if you're stupid.