It is sometimes argued that lower-end tourism spreads the benefits around more to the various strata of the local population, and is therefore more democratic both in terms of those who travel and those who serve the travellers. But there are surely ways to ensure that even such tourism can be regulated in a way that both provides more income to the host population and prevents the destruction of local environment and culture. But the proliferation and fierce competition between hoteliers in Nepal - struggling with occupancy rates of around 30 per cent on average even as new hotels keep coming up - and other segments of the tourism industry makes this almost unrealisable in practice.

One reason for this state of affairs is the sheer openness and lack of regulation in Nepal's tourism industry. As Kanak Mani Dixit has pointed out in a recent issue of Himal ,"Nepal's tourism has always started at the high end, but then the 'service providers' proliferate and the asking price plummets. The country becomes a tourist heaven and tourism hell - enough to begin asking whether the industry is here to serve Nepal or vice versa." (South Asian Himal, May 2000 page 16)

One way out of this would be to promote high value tourism systematically, even to the extent of limiting the number of tourists and charging high rates. Countries like Bhutan and the Maldives have been using this strategy, exploiting their special natural environment to some effect. In Bhutan, however, while it does mean that traditional ways of life have been preserved, it has meant hardly improvement in the material standards of the people even in the areas commonly frequented by tourists.

The Maldives presents a different picture. The government confines tourism to individual otherwise uninhabited islands, with a developer having unique access to a particular island for its own resort. This has allowed very high value tourism, and has also meant huge employment generation, to the extent of attracting migrant labour from elsewhere in South Asia.

But in Nepal so far such efforts have been less successful. The comparable model is for the region of Mustang near Tibet. The walled city 3,500 metres above sea level is still one of the last outposts of the animistic Bon Po religion which existed in Tibet before Indian monks brought Buddhism to the plateau in the fourth century. The visit requires a five day trek from Jomson to Lo Manthang, which is not easy but commands stunning views of the Tibetan plateau and the summits of the Himalayan peaks to the south.

Because of this, the number of hikers undertaking this journey increased steadily over the 1980s. Since 1992, the government in Kathmandu has strictly limited tourist access to the area to 1000 trekkers per year and charges a premium tax of $70 per day in the form of a special permit for visiting the roadless plateau. This is intended to preserve the local culture while providing more income to the community. But local residents have complained that most of the money has gone to Kathmandu rather than into local infrastructure such as schools, hospitals or badly needed bridges, and that the limited number of tourists means that little income or employment is generated within the area. There have also been complaints the thefts of priceless religious objects from the crumbling monasteries have been on the increase.

This last point exemplifies the pitfalls of being less security-conscious, less obsessive about own possession, which are in fact some of the more attractive Nepali attributes. Indeed, in tourism, as in much else in Nepal, it is precisely these easygoing traits which may have worked against the best interests of the people themselves. As one Pokhara resident put it, "our problem is that we are too open and too easy about allowing everything, from building ugly shops on the lakeside to allowing foreign terrorists to operate in the country". It is sad but possibly correct to think that more sustainable and less damaging tourism in Nepal would have to built upon a change in such attitudes, and a more rigid and controlled context.

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