Unlocking Opportunities for the Private Sector in Nepal Promoting greener and more inclusive growth

Page 97

Mott MacDonald | Unlocking Opportunities for the Private Sector in Nepal Promoting greener and more inclusive growth

6.5

6.5.1

Tourism: barriers to growth

Decline in tourist spending/number of tourists

Majority of the respondents in the tourism sector rated decline in tourist spending/number of tourists to their areas as a moderate problem. The decline in tourists was experienced during the lockdown. Prior to the COVID-19 lockdowns, the greater challenge faced by tourism enterprises was getting higher spending tourists. At that time then, many of the tourist areas experienced significant increase in visitors but this did not necessarily translate to increased income for tourism businesses. Tourists who visit Lumbini, for example, usually stayed less than an hour to visit the birthplace of Buddha and do not really spend so much. It is also said that tour operators in Nepal do not really earn much from the Buddhist pilgrimage since most of the tour packages are handled by Indian operators (S. Prasain 2019). Lumbini also suffers from a lack of tourism products that can encourage tourists to spend more. It also suffers from a seasonal pattern of tourists.

Figure 38. Extent that decline in tourist spending / tourist volume hinders growth of businesses in the Tourism Sector

Among the seven provinces, Karnali is the least developed in terms of tourism infrastructures, governance, policies, and marketing campaigns (MoITFE 2020). It has also the lowest number of tourists. Tourism is focused mainly on Rara Lake in Mugu and Shey Phoksundo Lake in Dolpa. The province focuses on home stay facilities for tourists but it seems that indigenous communities have very little participation (Mahat 2019). Humla receives the largest number of visitors consisting primarily of Indian pilgrims who use Simikot as a transit point to visit Mt Kailash. They usually spend little time in the district capital.

February 2022

76


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Figure 39. Extent that limited internet connectivity hinders growth of tourism enterprises

1min
page 99

Figure 38. Extent that decline in tourist spending / tourist volume hinders growth of businesses in the Tourism Sector

1min
pages 97-98

Figure 37. Extent that high tax rate hinders business growth in the Construction Sector

2min
page 94

Figure 36. Extent that getting a business license is a problem for enterprises in the Manufacturing Sector

0
page 87

Figure 35. Extent that corruption hinders business growth of enterprises in Manufacturing Sector

0
page 86

Figure 32. Extent that insufficient supply of raw materials hinders business growth of Agribusinesses

0
page 78

Figure 33. Extent that limited access to storage facilities hinders business growth of Agribusinesses

1min
page 80

Figure 34. Extent that customs and trade regulations hinder business growth in the Manufacturing Sector

0
pages 84-85

Figure 31. Extent that lack of testing laboratories hinders business growth of Agribusinesses

0
page 77

Figure 30. Extent that customs and trade regulations hinder business growth of Agribusinesses

3min
pages 74-76

Figure 23. Extent that high cost of transportation hinders business growth in the three provinces

2min
page 65

Figure 26. Extent that high cost of power utilities hinders business growth

0
page 68

Figure 29. Indicative value added per worker per province

4min
pages 70-73

Figure 25. Extent that unreliable electric utilities hinder business growth

1min
page 67

Figure 17. Breakdown of respondents in manufacturing sector by number of workers, 2017 & 2021 35 Figure 18. Breakdown of respondents in the Tourism Sector by annual sales: 2017, 2019, and 2020

3min
pages 57-59

Figure 24. Extent that poor accessibility hinders business growth

1min
page 66

Table 9. Number of enterprises located in Province 2 by focus sector, 2018

4min
pages 43-44

Figure 3. Distribution of Construction and ICT enterprises by province

1min
page 30

Figure 5. Breakdown of respondents by major market

1min
page 34

Figure 10. Percentage contribution of each province to GDP, 2019/20

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page 41

Figure 9. Providers of financial services

2min
pages 38-40

Figure 8. Sources of funds for business expansion

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page 37

Figure 7. Sources of funds for purchase of fixed assets

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page 36

Figure 6. Sources of working capital

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page 35
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