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http://wangsamajuformalaysia.blogspot.com/2008/08/malaysias-tourism- industry.html Receipts from tourism have grown 21% from 2006 to 2007 (RM36 billion to RM 46 billion in 2007) and with the total number of tourist arrivals of 17.55 million and 20.97 million in 2006 and 2007 respectively this makes the average receipt per tourist to be RM2,066 in 2006 and RM2,198 in 2007. This makes it a growth in tourist receipt of 6% from 2006 to 2007. That is not a lot, if you take away the Malaysia's inflationary impact from this growth rate. Eventhough the receipts have increased by RM10 billion in 2007, and the tourist arrivals increased 16% in 2007, tourists on the average are not spending a lot more- the increase in average spending per tourist has increased only by 6%. In terms of hotel guests by locality, the Pakatan Rakyat states hold about 50% of local and foreign tourists in terms of hotel rooms nights. This is based on historical facts published by Tourism Malaysia which I pieced together. The breakdown is as follows: Kuala Lumpur 16% Selangor 7% Penang 8% Langkawi Island 6% East Coast 5% Ipoh 4% Alor Star & Sg Petani 4% Total 50% With the PR states commanding 50% of the hotel room nights it makes sense for Azalina the Tourism Minister to withdraw the tourism MOUs with those states right after she was appointed Minister. However, this kind of hostility is not acceptable. Take a look at Tourism Malaysia's official charter:

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http://wangsamajuformalaysia.blogspot.com/2008/08/malaysias-tourism-industry.html

Receipts from tourism have grown 21% from 2006 to 2007 (RM36 billion to RM 46 billion

in 2007) and with the total number of tourist arrivals of 17.55 million and 20.97 million

in 2006 and 2007 respectively this makes the average receipt per tourist to be RM2,066

in 2006 and RM2,198 in 2007. This makes it a growth in tourist receipt of 6% from 2006

to 2007. That is not a lot, if you take away the Malaysia's inflationary impact from this

growth rate. Eventhough the receipts have increased by RM10 billion in 2007, and the

tourist arrivals increased 16% in 2007, tourists on the average are not spending a lot

more- the increase in average spending per tourist has increased only by 6%.

In terms of hotel guests by locality, the Pakatan Rakyat states hold about 50% of local

and foreign tourists in terms of hotel rooms nights. This is based on historical facts

published by Tourism Malaysia which I pieced together. The breakdown is as follows:

Kuala Lumpur 16%

Selangor 7%

Penang 8%

Langkawi Island 6%

East Coast 5%

Ipoh 4%

Alor Star & Sg Petani 4%

Total 50%

With the PR states commanding 50% of the hotel room nights it makes sense for Azalina

the Tourism Minister to withdraw the tourism MOUs with those states right after she was

appointed Minister. However, this kind of hostility is not acceptable. Take a look at

Tourism Malaysia's official charter:

VISION To develop Malaysia into a leading tourism nation

MISSIONTo implement the National Tourism Policy towards making the tourism industry the nation's main source of income for the socio-economic development of the country

NATIONAL TOURISM POLICY

To turn the tourism industry into a major, sustainable, viable and quality sector which contributes to the socio-economic development of the country

OBJECTIVES To develop a sustainable tourism industry in order to generate a major source of income

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for the countryTo promote the tourism sector professionally, efficiently and continuously to meet the needs and preferences of foreign and local touristsTo strengthen and upgrade a quality service delivery system in order to ensure tourist satisfaction

FUNCTION

To formulate the national tourism policy to achieve the Ministry’s vision, mission and objectivesTo implement policies pertaining to the progress and development of the tourism industryTo co-ordinate, monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of tourism programmes and projects

CLIENT’S CHARTER

To provide quality and timely Tourism Delivery servicesTo provide quality tourism activities/programmes to promote participation and appreciation of the tourism industryTo provide superior and viable tourism infrastructure throughout the countryTo enforce and implement the provisions of the Tourism Industry Act and the Tourism Vehicle Licensing Act including the regulations there-under, efficiently and effectivelyTo promote the country as a leading local and international tourist destination

What hogwash. Not even a single point of the above is implemented nor are we near

anywhere near of being a tourism hub. No need to go far on - even in Asia, Malaysia is

not the leading destination and it won't be, compared to Bangkok and Hong Kong... or

even Singapore. In Hong Kong, the shopping malls in Causeway Bay are busy drawing

crowds way after 11pm during weekdays. In Malaysia, the shopping places close by

10pm weekdays. There are no religion issues in other countries, but in Malaysia you

randomly get raided and accused for khalwat. Look at the forum response here. It does

not matter you a re Muslim or non-Muslim, married or single- you still get whacked by

the Religious Department if you happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. The

tourism infrastructure is horrible- I guarantee you that the guy manning the tourism

booth at Jalan Sultan Ismail- Jalan P. Ramlee intersection (right at the corner of Shangri-

la hotel) is always at lunch break during lunch time. It's ok if you are a factory guy but a

no-no if you are absent from your station in the tourism industry. Other issues are:

- not enough direct flights from Europe and major Asian cities into places such as

Langkawi, Labuan and the East Coast of Malaysia. Most of these flights are to the KLIA

and it takes the average foreign tourist a hour more by flight and 6 hours more by road

to get to say, Langkawi from KLIA. Travel expenses increase as well.

-cabbies in Malaysia charge high fares.

-the Islam factor- room raids, bar raids, terrorism (dunno why there's this scare)

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-cleanliness factor- dirty toilets, roads etc.

-lousy handicap facilities

-high crime-rate (yikes- even the citizens are terrified of this!!!)

Left: Sunset at Causeway Bay, Hong Kong.

In Malaysia if you are in the hotel industry you get penalized if the Federal Govt wins

(not the other way around)- as in the case of the terminated MOUs. Its even worse if you

are in a city hotel doing Government business- the 9th June 2008 RM2 billion fiscal cut

on Government entertainment did more harm than good. Anyone with simple

understanding of economics know that the economic pie is fixed, all segments in the

economy are relative to one another. For those new to economics jargon a fiscal policy

is something of a policy or act which the government aims to influence the economy

with, i.e. taxes, reduction in spending, etc. Government spending is still major fuel to

the various economic sectors in Malaysia- the RM2 billion entertainment cut was

actually an exchange for a RM2 billion reduction in revenue for the retail and hotel

sector. Any economics student would have know this, but not the experts at Putrajaya,

wtf... but the Tourism Minister was pretty silent when this cut was announced in June

2008.