Financial and Economic Sustainability
FINECS SSN-2181-1636 Vol. 1, Issue 1, Mar, 2021
https://finecs.net
Received: 9 January, 2021
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Revised: 19 February, 2021
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Accepted: 25 March, 2021
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ASSESSMENT OF EMPLOYMENT IN TOURISM INDUSTRY
Nargiza Khallieva
Phd Researcher
ABSTRACT
This paper studies the challenges and conditions of being employed in tourism industry, it studies the ways of assessment tourism employment, according to the results, reduced working hours of political instability, advancement, increased wealth, improved working capital, and a stable climate aid to these tourism and hospitality projects, all of which will generate millions of jobs.
Keywords: Tourism, employment, challenges, touristic places
INTRODUCTION
It is worth noting that the total output of a "tourism characteristic industry" (TCI) typically exceeds visitor consumption, as a portion of the output of the majority of TCIs is purchased by non-visitors. Even when it comes to a commodity like restaurant meals, visitor purchases typically represent a portion of the total number of meals produced. Simultaneously, the total employment generated by a tourism-related industry does not always equal the employment generated by tourism demand. In the preceding example, output of food services will include significant sales to non-visitors. It would be inappropriate to allocate all employment in food services; therefore, an allocator is required to more closely approximate the levels of employment generated by the tourism sector. This is accomplished through the application of the tourism ratio or tourism value added industry ratio. This method of calculating tourism value added industry ratios is based on the assumption that employment generated by tourism in each industry is proportional to tourism value added in the benchmark year. Tourism is fundamentally about people – visitors are people, subject to changes in their behavior, demands, and decision-making. These types of changes are notoriously difficult to forecast and anticipate. Additionally, tourism products and services are about people. Tourism industries rely heavily on the human factor (along with other factors such as natural resources, infrastructure, and capital) to ensure product and service delivery and quality. Additionally, many tourism products incorporate people into their expertise, whether as performers or as members of the cultural environment. Individuals are unquestionably critical to the effective operation and growth of the tourism industries as a whole.
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