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Sustainable tourism and the moral limits of the market: can Asia offer better alternatives

chapter
posted on 2023-05-22, 19:36 authored by Can Seng OoiCan Seng Ooi
<p>Despite its entanglements with society, tourism is still an industry that uses the market for economic exchange, so as to price tourism goods, services and experiences. The market serves important functions in society but there are two moral limits. The first is on how market exchange may transform some products, services and experiences in ways that denigrate and even destroy their intrinsic values. The second is on the failure of the market in distributing benefits from economic exchange more equitably, and to those who need them more. This does not mean that the market is immoral, it just means that there are inherent limitations to how the market maximises or enhances the welfare of society. This chapter looks at four common sustainable tourism approaches, and argues that they all address the moral limits of the market, from local perspectives. And subsequently, can lessons be learned from the Asian experience in doing sustainable tourism? The answer is yes but with caveats.</p>

History

Publication title

Asian Tourism Sustainability

Volume

Part F188

Edition

1st

Editors

AS Balasingam and Y Ma

Pagination

177-197

ISBN

9789811652639

Department/School

Office of the School of Social Sciences

Publisher

Springer

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Singapore

Extent

10

Rights statement

Copyright 2022 The Author

Socio-economic Objectives

110402 Socio-cultural issues in tourism