Tourism is one of the biggest businesses in the world. There are nearly 800 million international tourist arrivals every year. It employs, directly or indirectly, one in fifteen of all workers worldwide, from A to Z, from airport cleaners to zookeepers, and includes bar staff, flight attendants, tour guides, and resort reps. It is a huge part of the economy of many countries – in countries such as the Bahamas, over 60 % of the economy is based on tourism. Tourism is a fast - growing business. When Thomas Cook organized his first excursion from Leicester to Loughborough in 1841, he probably didn’t know what he was starting. Key developments in the last 150 years or so have led to the rise of mass tourism. There have been technological developments in transport, in particular the appearance of air travel and charter flights. There have been changes in working practices, with workers getting paid holiday time and working shorter and more flexible hours.
In recent years we have seen the growth of the Internet and globalization making the world seem a smaller but very fascinating place. The tourism industry grows faster and faster each year. In 1950, there were 25 million international tourists’ arrivals. In 2004, the figure was 760 million, and by 2020 it is predicted to be 1.6 billion.
But what are the challenges today? The tourism industry is affected by many different things: international events, economic change, changes in fashion. New concerns and worries appear every year, for example as people become more worried about security and international terrorism or as the value of their currency changes. But new destinations and new sources of tourists also seem to emerge every year.
Tourism survives. It is a powerful and sometimes dangerous force in the modern world. Tourism creates many good jobs and careers, but it also produces many poor and badly paid jobs. Tourism can help to protect environments and animal life, but it can also damage them. Tourism can save cultures and the local way of life, but it can also change them for the worse.
3. ответьте на вопросы по тексту:
1. What do these numbers in paragraphs 2 and 3 refer to?
a) 1841;
b) 25 million;
c) 760 million;
d) 1.6 billion.
2. What are the four positive and four negative effects of tourism mentioned in the article?
3. Which of the key developments in tourism do you think were the most important?
4. Can you think of some recent international events that have affected the tourism industry?
2)No, I am speaking English.
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4)Yes, the teacher is asking me questions.
5)Yes, I am answering the teacher's questions.
6)Yes, the teacher is speaking English.
7)Yes, I am listening to what the teacher is saying.
8)Yes, I am looking at the blackboard.
9)Yes, I am looking at the teacher.
10)I am looking at my book.
11) The teacher is asking me questions.
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