Lounge chairs are placed along the shore of Gili Air Island, in West Nusa Tenggara on Dec. 9, 2014. (Antara Photo/Widodo S. Jusuf) |
Jakarta.
Indonesia’s tourism minister called for more investment in everything
from ports to dive operators on Thursday as he pushed for private and
public funding to reach the ambitious goal of doubling the archipelago’s
tourist visitors by 2019.
“We need investment, especially in hotel rooms,” Arief Yahya told
an audience of tourism industry professionals at Indonesia Tourism
Investment Day 2014.
Arief emphasized the need to boost the number of hotel rooms in
parts of the country where occupancy rates are high, while official data
show the need for some 15,000 restaurants as well as niche
facilities including dive operators and big-ticket infrastructure items
like ports.
“I have sent a letter of the list of 88 tourism regions in
Indonesia to the transport minister and public works minister,” Arief
said. “I think that investment in tourism is better than investments in
manufacturing.”
Indonesia has underperformed as a tourist destination relative to
its regional peers, despite having a preponderance of outstanding
natural beauty and a currency that cycles between friendly and very
friendly, relative to the currencies of its top five visitors;
Singapore, Malaysia, Australia, China and Japan.
Indonesia took a leaf out of the Malaysian book in 2011 with the
launch of the “Wonderful Indonesia” campaign, which replaced the dry
“Visit Indonesia” promotion of previous years. Tourist arrivals jumped 9
percent in its first year.
Indonesia stamped 8.8 million tourist visas in 2013, a 10 percent
increase on the previous year. But again too much of Indonesia’s tourism
fortunes were tied up in Bali, which welcomed 3.27 million people last
year — 826,000 of them from Australia.
Bali has much to offer, but it has had much of it for several years
now. It has one of the world’s best restaurants, Mozaic, in the
hilltown of Ubud, as well as an abundance of world-class beach resorts
in the island’s south and a long list of attractions, from its Hindu
temples to crowded surf breaks.
But much of the rest of the archipelago remains too far off the
beaten path for most travelers — something the ministry will need to
help address if Indonesia is to close the gap on the more than 25
million visitors neighboring Malaysia achieved in 2012.
Tourism industry professionals have long pointed to Indonesia’s
unwelcoming visa system as a key barrier to opening up less frequented
destinations.
Most tourists pay $35 on arrivals in the country and have the right
to stay for 30 days. Renewing a tourist visa for an additional 30 days
can be done inside the country, but the process can be lengthy and
discourage people from staying longer and venturing out to areas of
natural beauty such as Flores and Raja Ampat in the east, and Lake Toba
and Sabang in the west.
Malaysia, by contrast, offers residents of many countries visa-free travel for 90 days.
Infrastructure remains a concern among hoteliers and tour
operators. Lake Toba, for example, the site of the world’s largest
volcanic eruption 25 million years ago and the world’s largest volcanic
lake, is desperately short of foreign visitors — due in part to the five
hours it takes to drive the 160 kilometers from the nearest airport in
Medan.
Other parts of the country — from the dive resorts of Wakatobi and
Derawan to national parks like Bromo in East Java — remain relatively
difficult to reach, and visitors are less likely to explore multiple
destinations because of Indonesia’s visa restrictions.
The combination of factors affecting Indonesia’s tourism potential
has a negative impact on an important source of foreign currency —
around the $10 billion mark in 2013. The sector is also a productive
source of employment.
The International Labor Organization (ILO) has worked with the
Ministry of Tourism in recent years to improve the way data are
collected, as a means of boosting the quantity and quality of jobs in
the sector. A recent document issued by the Geneva-based organization
called for a focus on poverty reduction and the creation of sustainable
jobs.
Realistic ambition?
Arief has set an ambitious target of 20 million foreign tourists by
2019, indicating a 127 percent increase in the next five years. By
comparison, foreign arrivals rose 37 percent in the previous five years.
Tourism officials and industry executives have long credited
Malaysia with running a gold-standard marketing campaign to attract more
visitors. The “Malaysia, Truly Asia,” campaign launched in 1999
was responsible for boosting occupancy rates across the country’s beach
resorts and inland hotels.
While Malaysia benefits from a capable road network and more
efficient transportation, Indonesia has more noteworthy attractions
across its sprawling archipelago.
But Arief’s target over the next five years will largely remain
dependent on the currency outlook and attracting visitors from
holiday-hungry China. Easing visa restrictions would help in bringing in
more tourists to the country.
By Jakarta Globe on 06:18 pm Dec 11, 2014
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