Fundamentals

Tourism, like cricket, needs better fundamentals

By Dhananath Fernando

Originally appeared on The Morning

Sri Lanka tourism is a lot like Sri Lanka cricket. For cricket, everyone has an opinion. Who should be captain, what the team should look like, what the game plan should be. Tourism is the same. Almost everyone has a different idea of how to ‘fix’ it.

And, like cricket, tourism is emotionally connected to the hearts and minds of people. That is why we get disappointed so easily after even a small setback, and why we bounce back so quickly too. The love for the game and the industry is real.

Tourist arrivals are now picking up and we are hitting record highs. But estimated earnings are declining. We need to remember that ‘earnings’ are an estimate. We calculate earnings by multiplying the number of arrivals by average length of stay, and then by average spending per night. The most sensitive part of that equation is average spending, which is based on surveys of tourists, on what they spend on categories such as accommodation, travel, shopping, and so on.

A few months ago, the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority (SLTDA) with Australia’s Market Development Facility (MDF) launched results of a survey with a sample of about 11,000 inbound travellers and 5,000 outbound travellers, covering about 50 countries.

According to those results, average spending per tourist is now $ 148, down from the earlier $ 171. That shift alone helps explain why earnings can fall even while arrivals rise. The same survey shows that about 18% of visitors are repeat visitors and 58% are women. Of total spending, 55% goes to accommodation. Interestingly, 46% of travellers booked through Online Travel Agents (OTAs) and 62% are non-package travellers.

In this context, another SLTDA study has made headlines: out of about $ 3 billion in earnings in 2024, around $ 900 million is said to have “leaked,” and the Government is now trying to prevent this leakage. According to the study, around $ 500 million is leaking through inbound travel operators and another $ 250 million through accommodation. Based on these findings, there is a renewed push for measures to minimise leakage.

The obsession with leakage

The intentions are good. But the problem is the way we are diagnosing the disease. In my view, there is a poor understanding of monetary economics behind this obsession with ‘leakage.’

Yes, OTAs charge commissions. Yes, some payments are settled overseas, so not every tourism dollar will enter Sri Lanka through our banking system. But the idea that regulating OTAs or tightening rules on parts of the tourism value chain will meaningfully ‘save’ dollars is not first principles thinking. Oversight matters. Compliance matters. But oversight is not a monetary strategy.

Here is why.

Leakage of dollars is largely a function of excess rupees in the system, not simply the behaviour of tourism stakeholders. When we create excess rupees, people will try to convert those rupees into dollars. The most common way this happens is through imports.

Let’s simplify it. When we buy a mobile phone, we are effectively buying dollars with rupees. We pay the shop in rupees. The shopkeeper goes to the bank, buys dollars using those rupees, and pays the overseas supplier. The transaction is initiated by rupees. If we have excess rupees the demand for USD is higher.

Now imagine we ban mobile phones, thinking those dollars will stay in the country. They will not. The bank will sell those dollars to someone else who wants to import something else, because banks are in the business of converting currencies, and because demand for dollars does not disappear simply because one item is restricted. If there is excess rupee liquidity, the dollars will find a way out through whatever channel is available.

The same logic applies to tourism. Even if you restrict OTAs or tighten certain import segments, there will be no ‘dollar saving’ if the rupee side remains loose. Any dollars entering the market will still leave as long as there is excess rupee liquidity chasing foreign exchange. Restrictions shift routes. They do not remove the pressure.

At the same time, we should be honest about why some businesses prefer to keep foreign currency outside Sri Lanka. It is not only about commissions or convenience. It is also about the difficulty of moving money across borders when regulations are heavy, approvals are unclear, and conversion rules are tight. If you are running a cross-border business, you will naturally park funds where transactions are smoother and risk is lower. That is exactly what is happening.

There is another reality we cannot ignore: there is a limit to how much import content we can cut in tourism without damaging the product.

A visitor expects a basic standard. Rooms need air-conditioning. Air-conditioners are imported. Tourism transport needs reliable vehicles and fuel. Vehicles and fuel are imported. There is a minimum quality bar in a competitive global market, and trying to cut our way below that bar will not save us; it will simply push tourists elsewhere.

Even in services, ‘local only’ is not always practical. World-class restaurants and wellness experiences often depend on specialised inputs and, sometimes, specialised talent. In some cases, salaries have to be paid in foreign currency.

You cannot run a top-tier Japanese restaurant or a great Thai experience with good intentions alone. We need talent from those countries to be located here for an authentic experience. If we attempt to ‘save dollars’ by lowering quality, we will end up losing the very customers who bring the dollars in the first place.

So what should we focus on?

Instead of hunting ‘leakage’ like it is the main villain, we should focus on value creation. If tourists see value, they spend more. Higher spend improves earnings, supports better jobs, and creates stronger businesses that can invest in quality.

The path to stronger tourism earnings is not to squeeze the system tighter; it is to make Sri Lanka a place where people are happy to spend, and businesses are confident to bring money in and reinvest.

And this is where monetary stability becomes central. If we stabilise the monetary system, avoid excess rupee creation, and reduce unnecessary friction in capital flows, tourism earnings will naturally improve. Yes, there will always be some money that is paid abroad, just as Sri Lankans will always spend money abroad too. That is normal in an open economy.

The solution is not to treat tourism stakeholders as the problem. The real fix is to get the monetary foundations right and make Sri Lanka easy to do business with. Otherwise, we will keep arguing about captains and game plans while losing the match in the middle overs.