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Are cities for tourists or residents?

And at what margin?

A new ideological struggle is brewing, yet we have not yet recognized it as such.  The question is to what extent cities are for tourists, or for their current residents.  Here is a report from Vermont:

A Vermont town known for its autumn foliage has closed its roads to the public for the season, citing an overwhelming amount of influencer tourists.

The select board of Pomfret voted to close Cloudland Road and Barber Hill Road to non-residents from Sept. 23 to Oct. 15. That also blocks access to the popular Sleepy Hollow Farm, a private residence that many tourists try to visit.

New York City has placed severe restrictions on AirBnb, causing hotel room prices to skyrocket.  Here is more from Jerusalem Demsas.

Amsterdam has sent out warnings, designed to discourage British tourists from visiting the city for sex, drugs, and drink.

As for the Continent, The Times of London reports:

Beaches, restaurants and estate agents have been attacked by radical anti-tourism groups throughout mainland Spain and the Balearic islands this summer…Flares were let off in restaurants, tourists’ bike tyres were slashed and hooded activists besieged a sightseeing bus.

Venice may be charging day trippers five euros a pop, and I’ve seen calls for raising that price by 5x or more.  That is one set of obstacles that probably makes sense, due to congestion and wear and tear on the city itself.

Cruise ships are becoming less popular at many places around the world.  How about this from Florida? (NYT):

Activists flooded City Commission meetings, protested on the dock, collected signatures and managed to pass three ballot measures in 2020 imposing stricter controls to protect the marine environment and limit [cruise ship] passengers to 1,500 a day…

Maybe this one is a coincidence, but Japan is hiking the price of its bullet train pass for tourists by seventy percent.

China is schizophrenic on tourism, on one hand easing visa requirements but on the other managing payments in the country isn’t getting easier.

Obviously the right answers here are on a case-by-case basis.  But political economy tells us that chosen policies will tend to overemphasize the interests of the voting residents, and underemphasize the interests of the visitors.

Plenty of these anti-tourist stories are making the news, but we’ve yet to see this part of a more systemic pattern.  And that pattern is going to intensify, if only because voters are aging, nationalism is ascendant, and protectionist sentiment is on the rise.

I am also pleased to tell you all that the world is full of underexplored spots — try Salta or Kosovo for a start.  Or in a major, heavily-touristed city of your choice, just walk ten or fifteen minutes away from the beaten track, if that.

It is snobby and elitist and self-satisfying to speak up against tourism, but in the future we will need a movement to defend the practice.

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