I Think 'Quality Tourism' Is Class Filtering. That's Still Not the Real Problem.
"Quality tourism" policies that spread simultaneously across Asia-Pacific and Europe in 2026 function less as tools for reducing overall visitor volume than as mechanisms for filtering out travelers who cannot spend enough. Bali's governor has publicly proposed screening foreign visitors' three-month bank balances, Japan has tripled its international tourist departure tax from ¥1,000 to ¥3,000, and Indonesian immigration authorities deported 342 foreigners in the first half of the year alone under a new enforcement task force. Though these three developments unfolded in unrelated jurisdictions, they share an identical income-sorting logic dressed in the shared vocabulary of "sustainability". A particularly revealing statistic from 2025 shows that European travel spending rose 9.7 percent while visitor arrivals grew only 3.2 percent, indicating that the underlying policy message is not "there are too many tourists" but "there are too many tourists who spend too little". Yet the more fundamental problem this analysis identifies lies not in the income composition of visitors but in the leakage structure through which tourism revenue exits local economies toward international hotel chains and booking platforms, with peer-reviewed research estimating leakage rates of 40 to 50 percent in developing countries and roughly 70 percent in Thailand specifically. Ultimately, the quality-tourism discourse carries both an ethical problem of class-based exclusion and an economic problem of distributional structure, and addressing only the former while ignoring the latter converts the policy into a regulation that serves tourism capital rather than local residents.