Tourism Economics Study Boosts Vacation Rentals and Downplays Local Concerns


Skift Take

Tourism and short-term rentals can be highly beneficial to some communities, but tourism boards and research firms for hire shouldn't view them as sacrosanct.

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A couple of days after the Visit Greater Palm Springs tourism board approved a resolution to oppose a referendum in La Quinta, California that would place tighter restrictions on vacation rentals, the tourism board promoted a board-commissioned Tourism Economics study that reads like a cheerleading pamphlet for the short-term rental industry.

In so doing, neither the Oxford Economics tourism research unit nor its tourism board client seem to have received the memo that destinations around the world are increasingly involving local communities in crafting visitor policies. It's not about tourism above all else anymore.

In a post-Covid world, after years of overtourism in some destinations, such as Barcelona and San Diego, California, where critics at times decry an Airbnb and Vrbo onslaught, aren't the locals supposed to be more than an after-thought?

However, the unvarnished reality — OK, let's face it — is that status