Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to re-examine the economic models and assumptions that have given rise to current day tourism. It suggests alternate models based on new values to help tourism emerge from the current COVID crisis and “come-of-age.”Design/methodology/approachThe paper delineates the assumptions of neoliberal economics upon which much of tourism has been based. It then summarizes the work of progressive economists in developing new models that value capital other than financial. Six of these models are briefly described and applied to tourism.FindingsSome assumptions underlying the neoliberal economic model that need re-examining are the ideas that: self-interest drives ideal economic behavior; success comes from competition, not cooperation; encouraging consumption for its own sake; giving owners priority over other stakeholders; and more income translates into more happiness. Redesign of economic systems requires consideration of social capital, natural capital, intellectual capital, compassion capital, trust capital and spiritual capital to name a few. Examples of alternate systems using these capitals are the collaborative economy, the circular economy, the creative economy, the gift economy, the sacred economy and the regenerative economy.Originality/valueThe paper’s approach is to interlace modern economic thought with the future maturation of tourism and to suggest that tourism policymakers and leaders learn from these thinkers to create a new model for the future of tourism.

Highlights

  • Civilization is being threatened in ways it never has before, presenting new realities, new norms and new shocks

  • This paper suggests further that the economic system upon which most of tourism has been built is substantially responsible for the “adolescent” behavior of tourism to date

  • The maturation of tourism beyond its adolescent stage is not an easy transition, but a necessary one given the current state of the world. It will require a fundamental change in values by all tourism stakeholders so that the greater good for all beings motivates their activities

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Summary

Introduction

Civilization is being threatened in ways it never has before, presenting new realities, new norms and new shocks. This paper suggests further that the economic system upon which most of tourism has been built is substantially responsible for the “adolescent” behavior of tourism to date It proposes alternate economic frameworks based on different value systems to design a more mature, responsible tourism future for New Zealand. This first requires letting go of old patterns of behavior. ᭿ ignoring human values (perhaps the most limiting of all) Questioning these assumptions can create an opening for new economic paradigms to guide tourism forward based on different and more mature value systems. The section will explain how mainstream economists are embracing new value systems and how New Zealand tourism can learn from them

Embracing new value systems
Exploring new economic structures for tourism
The collaborative or sharing economy
The creative economy
The sacred economy
The regenerative economy
Conclusion
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