
Tourism in South Africa: Is it an economic lifeline or local disruption?
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Is tourism South Africa’s economic lifeline, bringing jobs and billions into the country, or is it slowly eroding local lifestyles and pricing residents out of their own communities?
J Sbu painted the following picture:
A German couple lands at OR Tambo. They hire a car, sleep in a guesthouse, eat at a local restaurant, book a safari, and buy beadwork from a roadside vendor. That one couple doesn’t just take photos; they inject money directly into the local economy.
Tourism in South Africa contributes close to 9% of the country’s GDP and supports around 1.6 to 1.7 million jobs. That includes waiters, tour guides, drivers, housekeepers, craft sellers, taxi drivers, hotel staff, and many others.
We asked you: Where do we draw the line?
Should South Africa push tourism aggressively to grow the economy and create jobs, or should there be limits to protect local lifestyles, housing, and culture?
This is what you had to say…
J Sbu painted the following picture:
A German couple lands at OR Tambo. They hire a car, sleep in a guesthouse, eat at a local restaurant, book a safari, and buy beadwork from a roadside vendor. That one couple doesn’t just take photos; they inject money directly into the local economy.
Tourism in South Africa contributes close to 9% of the country’s GDP and supports around 1.6 to 1.7 million jobs. That includes waiters, tour guides, drivers, housekeepers, craft sellers, taxi drivers, hotel staff, and many others.
We asked you: Where do we draw the line?
Should South Africa push tourism aggressively to grow the economy and create jobs, or should there be limits to protect local lifestyles, housing, and culture?
This is what you had to say…


