Agritourism For Rural Development in Italy Evoluti
Agritourism For Rural Development in Italy Evoluti
Agritourism For Rural Development in Italy Evoluti
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Author’s contribution
The only author performed the whole research work. Author FMS wrote the first draft of the
paper. Author FMS read and approved the final manuscript.
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Received 4 March 2013
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Review Article Accepted 14 May 2013
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Published 24 May 2013
ABSTRACT
This paper deals with agritourism in Italy and it is based on several recent studies,
unpublished papers and statistics. Italy has a long and diversified experience in the
agritourism sector, which since 1985 has been formally recognized with a national
legislation, accompanied by regional laws. Agritourism has represented one of the main
drivers for on farm diversification and has contributed to the economic development and
wellbeing of rural areas, by attracting millions of tourists into parts of the country which
were ignored even by Italians. The offer is very diverse, ranging from small and simple
family farms to luxurious estates, with services of the highest quality. In 2010, with 19,973
operators and about 200,000 beds available, there were more than two million guests, out
of which 50% foreigners, who spent on the farm an average of 4.5 nights. Agritourism
operators have net farm incomes and returns to family labour higher than the normal
farmers, but some worries are there, because the utilization rate of the rooms – the major
indicator for the tourism industry, in 2011 and 2012 was the lowest when compared to
other categories of operators. Suggestions are consequently advanced, such as more
professionalism, better market segmentation, diversified and integrated offers through
travel operators, regional marketing, and national categorization of the agritourism farms,
based on quality parameters.
1. INTRODUCTION
Italy is the only country within the European Union with specific laws regulating agritourism,
which is considered an agricultural activity. This paper has been written to share the Italian
experiences and to illustrate what has been made and still needs to be improved, for the
benefit of the farmers and of the whole society, in Italy and in other countries.
The Italian tourism industry employs, directly and indirectly, about 2.5 million people and
provides about 4 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product [1]. When all linked activities are
computed, its relevance rises to 9.4 percent of GDP; in 2010, foreign tourists have brought
to Italy about 29 billion euros. These figures position the whole Italian tourism industry at the
fifth place, after France, USA, China and Spain, but there are wide margins for improvement
[1]. Within the tourism industry, in the last 30 years the phenomenon of agritourism has
represented the revival of ancient traditions, coupled with integrated rural development.
Within the more general definition of multifunctionality [2,3], agritourism represents one of
the major sources of income for farmers. It has also allowed to diversify the tourist offer and
to attract visitors out of the most famous mainly urban destinations. Wine and food tourism is
enormously important [4] (Osservatorio Nazionale sul Turismo, Rapporto sul turismo 2011,
unpublished document, Rome) and has represented in both 2010 and 2011 about 5% of
total tourist flow, with a higher relevance for Foreigners (6.9% in 2011) than for Italians
(4.2%), but only 11.7% overnight in a farm.
The history [5] of on farm hospitality goes back through the centuries, when travellers and
pilgrims had to ask for food and shelter along the routes, whenever a monastery, a
guesthouse or a trading post were not available. More recently, in XIX century, the German
cultural and philosophical movement called “Romanticism” invited its followers to leave the
towns and discover again the nature; walking through fields and woods, as well as climbing
on mountains and sunbathing near the seaside became fashionable for the cultural elites.
This demand for nature motivated rich entrepreneurs to build luxurious hotels in the Swiss,
Austrian and Italian Alps or along the coast in the French Riviera, many of which are still in
operation, but it also favoured some clever farmers and landlords, who begun to diversify
their activities, by opening guesthouses and small restaurants to accommodate both less
demanding guests and very rich clients, searching for a touch of “rural life”
It is however only in the last 30 years, with the very recent explosion of mass tourism, that
agritourism (not to be confused with tourism in rural areas) has become a mass
phenomenon, involving thousands of farms and moving millions of tourists. Foreign and
Italian tourists may now enjoy a day of cultural visits to the abundant cultural heritage and
the next day can move to a nearby rural area for a food and wine tasting, or can spend a full
week on a farm, relaxing near the swimming pool or engaging into some outdoor sporting
activity. Agritourism has exploded everywhere in the world [6] and it represents a viable
source of employment and income for smallholders and estate owners in many countries, in
all continents.
2. METHODOLOGY
This paper is based on a literature survey and own experiences by the Author. The desk
work has been performed during the months July – December 2012, by consulting published
articles [1,2,3,13,15,17,18,19,20,21] and books [4,5,6,7,9,10,11,12,14,16] as well as
unpublished documents (fully referred to in the text, as the guidelines for this Journal
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impose), produced by associations, institutions, and interest groups. Taking into account that
the international literature about agritourism is nowadays enormous, only the most relevant
papers are mentioned in this paper. Data about tourism and agro-tourism in Italy have
mainly been found in the ISTAT website (www.istat.it) the Italian national bureau for
statistics, while some unofficial data have been provided by Agriturist, a farmers’ association,
and made public by INEA [8], the National Institute for Agricultural Economics (www.inea.it).
Italy has always been a major tourist destination [5]: centuries ago, it was the pilgrims who
came from the whole Christianity to worship in Rome and to pay homage to famous Saints
scattered all over the country. Then it was the desire to see the ruins and the legacy of the
Roman Empire and the masterpieces of the Renaissance, which motivated nobles and
artists to visit Italy for the so called “grand tour”.
After the II World War and during the economic boom that characterized the 50’s and 60’s,
the natural beauties of the Mediterranean coast and of the Alps were discovered by millions
of foreigners, mainly European. Italians too, thanks to their increased income, started to
enjoy their holidays and begun discovering the beauties of their own country. In recent
years, although the rivalry with traditional competitors (France, Spain, and Greece, just to
mention a few) remains strong and competition with newcomers (Turkey, Egypt, Morocco,
Emirates, etc.) is fierce, the flow of tourists has remained quite strong. One of the challenges
of the tourism industry has been to attract tourists out of the usual routes, main towns and
destinations (Naples, Rome, Florence, Pisa, Rimini, Venice, the Alps, etc...), to discover the
nature, the cultural heritage and the foods of the whole country.
An increasing number of tourists, not only in Italy [7], is searching new experiences and
expresses the desire to reconnect with the cultural roots of foods, in the places where the
ingredients are originated and where gastronomy was born. Within this framework,
agritourism has played and will play a major role, because the farms are perceived by the
urban consumers as the best places for leisure, and at the same time the farmers need to
diversify their sources of income.
The number of farms offering some sorts of hospitality (Table 1) has increased from 8,905
in 1998, when this type of data were first collected, to 19,973 in 2010, equal to an average
annual growth of +7.96%, thanks to the investments by the farmers themselves, partially
supported by capital grants provided by various Funds of the European Union. The number
of beds has annually increased even more, by 9.86%, from 68,754 in 1998 to 193,480 in
2009 (data for 2010 and 2011 not available). The average availability in 2009 is
consequently 10.1 beds per operator, versus the initial number of 7.7 beds per farm in 1998.
A similar expansion can be observed for the estimated turn-over, defined as the gross value
of goods and services sold to clients.
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The 19,019 agritourism farms registered in 2009 were unequally scattered all over Italy
(Table 2), with peak concentrations in a few regions like Tuscany and Trentino - South Tirol,
where respectively 21.3% and 16.8% of the Italian agritourism farms were located. In the
same Table it is possible to notice that in these two Regions the relevance of agritourism is
extremely high: in Trentino - South Tirol, on the Alps at the North-eastern border with
Austria, 11% of the active farms are engaged in agritourism activities, and in Tuscany 10%
of the active farms are involved in this sector, against an Italian average of 2.4%
It is clear that also in this case, like for all other kinds of innovations, there are early adopters
as well as laggards [9] and that in many parts of the Italian Peninsula and of the Islands still
there are potentialities to be explored. In Sicily and Puglia, for example, only 0.6% and 0.3%
of farmers are involved in agritourism, while both regions offer incredible landscapes,
beaches, cultural heritage sites and an extremely rich gastronomy. Low cost flight operators
have discovered these destinations and masses of tourists are pouring into these two
regions, from Northern European countries, but farmers still have to mobilize themselves to
intercept at least a small part of this flow.
When the first modern agritourism activities started in the early ‘60s, several problems
appeared, because of the lack of formal regulations and the consequent struggles with the
local branches of the Ministry of Interiors, responsible for the recording the movement of
tourists, the Ministry of Finances, responsible for the tax system, and with the Health
Ministry, responsible for the health of customers. Even the Chambers of Agriculture and the
Municipalities, responsible for issuing the authorizations to operate, did not know how to act.
In several occasions, the first pioneers have been fined and even obliged to close their
activities, or they were given the option the set up a totally different firm, regulated,
registered and taxed as a normal restaurant and hotel. For most small operators, with a few
rooms and a seasonal business, this was unrealistic.
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The continuous pressure by the agricultural sector finally has led the National Parliament to
issue the Law 730/1985, updated in 1996 by the Law no. 06, recognizing that agritourism,
within certain limits (number of rooms, number of beds, number of seats at the restaurant,
source of ingredients for the meals, etc.) is an agricultural activity, regulated for the value
added taxation and for income taxation purposes by the same rules that supervise all other
agricultural activities. Each one of the 19 Regions and two autonomous provinces
composing Italy has then issued its own regional or provincial legislation, sometimes with
some minor adaptations to the specificities of local agriculture, culture and traditions.
It is worth mentioning that several local administrations have been very active for the
promotion of agritourism. Agricultural products, special foods, cheeses, wines and olive oil,
have been used to attract tourists out of the main tourist attractions and into smaller towns
and the countryside. In 1990, the Association “Towns of the Truffle” was established,
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followed in 1993 by the Movement “Tourism of the Wine” and in 1994 by the Association
“Towns of the Olive Oil”. In 1999, the National Parliament issued the national Law no. 268
“Routes of the Wine”, with the norms and guidelines to set up and manage, at local level, an
entire system, where the agritourism farms play a major role to attract national and
international tourists.
Local authorities, in cooperation with the private sector, have done much for the promotion of
their territories, through an active participation in national and international tourism fairs,
where large operators interact to elaborate package tours. Another action is the coordination
of events, linking local products, culture, art exhibition, music and sports, to have something
– always new and attractive, to motivate tourists to come. Another important public action,
often implemented also with European funds, has been the rehabilitation and maintenance
of common goods, such as pathways, lakesides, natural ponds and rivers, which can be
used by the agro-tourists for walks and excursions.
Since 1985, within the first Integrated Mediterranean Programs, and then with the reform of
the structural policy in 1988 (Objective 1 and Objective 5b and the Community Initiative
LEADER), and nowadays within the Rural Development Plans several actions for the
expansion and improvement of agritourism have been co-financed by the European Union to
local authorities, to groups and even to individual farmers: feasibility studies, training courses
and extension activities, rural museums, territorial promotion, etc. have facilitated the
synergies between public and private actors (Pesce A. Lo stato dell’agriturismo in Italia:
situazione attuale e prospettive nella politica di sviluppo rurale. unpublished ppt,
Osservatorio Nazionale sull’Agriturismo – INEA. Roma. 2010).
Within the broad concept of agritourism, there are at least two main categories: the landlords
and the family farmers. Although the reality shows itself as a continuum, some typologies
might be listed:
• Absentee landlords, living in town, even at great distance, with a mansion in the
farm and several independent houses (once occupied by sharecroppers or seasonal
workers) that have been restructured into independent apartments, each one with
kitchenette; swimming pool and other facilities complete the offer. The relationships
with the guests are minimal and managed by an administrator;
• Landlords with large mansions, even a castle, with luxurious rooms, very elegant
dining room and several elegantly furnished common spaces (reading room, fumoir,
billard room, piano, etc.); facilities include swimming pools, gym, spa, various sports,
horse riding, game reserve. High quality staff manages the whole business, with
occasional presence of the owner.
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• Farmers with medium – large farm, with buildings transformed into several rooms
and apartments (with or without autonomous kitchenette), some common spaces,
small swimming pool, some facilities (bikes, archery), occasionally with a restaurant
also open to outside guests. Most work is provided by family members, who try to
have a relationship with the guests;
• Small farmers, with a small mansion, where only two – three rooms and apartments
have been created, simply furnished, with a small dining room, where sometimes
guest and family eat together. Outdoor facilities are minimal;
• Didactic or teaching farms are designed for urban children, to teach them subjects
related to nature, agriculture, food and nutrition, and are normally managed by
cooperatives or medium size farmers;
To the first two categories belong all those operators who once managed their large estates
with share croppers and farm hands, and also used large amounts of seasonal landless
workers. During the green revolution, from the ‘50s through the ‘70s, these large producers
have simplified their cropping systems and mechanized all operations. Many of these
landlords lived and still live in town, have other sources of income, and the farm is managed
by a supervisor. These estates had a large number of houses for the sharecroppers and
their families, and buildings for the farmhands. In this category, we often find luxurious
agritourism operations, offering independent apartments, hotel – like treatments, facilities
such horse club, spa, archery, etc. The human relationships between the landlords or the
farm supervisor and the clients are almost zero. Tourists are mostly received and interact
with employees, who generally have received some training or even an higher education for
the hotel industry.
rd th th
To the 3 , 4 and 5 category belong the “evolved” family farmers, who have always
managed their relatively small farms with the workforce provided by the family members,
occasionally helped by some neighbours and more rarely by farmhands. Also the operators
of this category have mechanized their operations and simplified their production systems,
but they live on the farm and their family income is largely dependent on agriculture.
Compared to the ‘50s, the size of the family has decreased and there are vacant homes and
other buildings suitable for agritourism. Within this category, we find simpler on farm
accommodations (rooms and apartments), restaurants if the case, and other facilities.
Concerning human relationships, in these farms the guests may link directly with the farmers
and their families, but the quality of the services might not be as good as in the previous
category. In several parts of Italy, back in the ‘60s and ‘70s, these types of farmers have
established production cooperatives, some of which have recently diversified into
agritourism.
Another specialisation within the agritourism, dealing mostly with kids, from 5-6 to 14 years,
is represented by the so – called [11] Didactic or Teaching farms, where urban kids,
accompanied by teachers and sometimes by some parents, can learn about several aspects
of the countryside and more generally about natural cycles. There are presently about 2,225
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British Journal of Economics, Management & Trade, 3(3): 186-200, 2013
farms of this type, with their own association (www.fattoriedidattiche.it). The establishment
and the operations of a didactic farm require special attention and very qualified people. The
whole farm must be carefully organized, to avoid even the smallest risk for kids, and all
facilities must be sized to let kids work and learn. Some didactic farms have a bakery or a
dairy lab where kids can make bread and cheeses under the guidance of an instructor. All
didactic farms have a sort of a small zoo, where most farm animals can be seen and
touched. The home garden is designed to facilitate the work of kids, who have properly
dimensioned tools and implements. The didactic farms offer a variety of options, from the
half a day visit to one week stay, full board, from Monday to Friday. There are even didactic
farms offering summer weeks with full immersion in English, with mother tongue animators
who take care of the young guests.
Another peculiar type of agritourism is represented by the 1,299 organic agritourism farms,
[12] where the customers are ensured that the surrounding environment is chemical free and
that the food is 100% organic. In some cases, also the renovation of the farm buildings has
been realized by respecting the guidelines of organic architecture, and the furniture and all
textiles have been produced organically. Other aspects are also considered, regarding
energy production and energy saving devices, water use and its recycling, composting of
food wastes, etc. ICEA, an important Italian certification body for organic products, certifies
and classifies the organic agritourism farms into five categories (from one to five “suns”),
based on a set of five groups of criteria (protection of environment, ecological management,
promotion of local culture, organic food and sustainable transportation; some criteria are
compulsory, whereas other ones are optional); presently, this voluntary certification has
been asked only by 105 operators.
On farm tourism represents an opportunity for farmers and landlords to make full use of their
assets and to diversify their activities, with a positive impact on employment and incomes.
To practice agritourism, existing buildings need to be renovated and to respect the most
recent norms about safety for all visitors and access for people with disabilities. In Italy,
where tens of thousands of farm buildings, houses, mansions and even castles in the
countryside had been abandoned during the “rural exodus” of the ‘50s and ‘60s, agritourism
has represented a great opportunity for many landlords and family farmers alike, who have
recuperated and modernized empty buildings often with astonishing results of great quality.
The impact of such renovations on the rural economy has been impressive, because small
local firms and craftsmen have been involved,.
In some cases, the decision to venture into agritourism is accompanied by an at least partial
modification of the crops and of the whole farming system, to produce goods for the tourists
and, when the case, for the on farm-restaurant. Fruit trees of all sorts and several types of
small animals, eliminated from the farms during the “industrialization” of agriculture have
been reintroduced. Horses are quite frequent, normally of breeds known for their peaceful
and calm attitudes, and in recent years even mules and donkeys have been reintroduced, for
riding and for transporting heavy loads, if excursions lasting several days are among the
possibilities offered to the guests. Very frequently, small facilities, always controlled and
authorized by the Health Service, are realized for on farm processing of jams, sauces,
meats, dairy products, breads, cakes and pies, etc. There has been an enormous effort to
revitalize ancient and typical products and recipes [13], to be used at the on farm restaurants
and for items to sell to customers
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The family members can be engaged in activities which are generally less heavy, less
dangerous, better paid and more rewarding (INEA, Indagine sulle tipologia di offerta e sulle
motivazioni delle imprese, unpublished document, Rome. 2010) than the traditional
agricultural tasks: receiving the guests, cooking the meals, guiding the tourists through the
farm and nearby wild areas, explaining how to rear animals, teaching how to make
marmalades and pies, etc. Some of these tasks might seem simple and traditional, but they
require good communication skills and proper attitudes, while other tasks surely demand
appropriate training and even specific education. For example, many potential and actual
clients are not Italians and do not speak Italian. Nowadays, most advertising and booking
take place through internet and potential customers expect that agritourism operators can
write and talk at least in English. Such tasks and the consequent good income normally give
more space to the younger members of the family, who might otherwise be tempted to leave
and move to town. When young people are not available within the family, there are job
opportunities for outsiders, who can be employed with annual or seasonal contracts.
The final result of all these efforts is that the average net farm income per adult working unit
is much higher for the agritourism farms than for the farms without agritourism. When the
agritourism farms are managed with organic methods, the economic result is even better
(Pesce A. Lo stato dell’agriturismo in Italia: situazione attuale e prospettive nella politica di
sviluppo rurale. unpublished ppt, Osservatorio Nazionale sull’Agriturismo – INEA. Roma.
2010).
The diversification of the offer is very important. Most tourists come to the countryside to
relax (Table 3), but they do not want to lay idle. After motivations like relax and natural
beauty of the surroundings, guests are attracted by the agritourism experience to practice
sports, or to taste food and wines, and to visit the surroundings and the cultural heritage.
To meet the expectations of the incoming guests (Table 4), tasting activities are organized
by 66.5% of the operators, walks by 53.3%, followed by cultural activities by 43.7%, bike
rides by 40.9%, cooking classes by 33.5% sporting events area available by 20.8% and so
on. Many operators rent bikes, horses, canoes, organize excursions to natural attractions
and to nearby monuments. In many villages and small towns there are museums, churches,
and ancient manors open to the public worth a visit. In some cases, weekend long courses
or one week courses are proposed, generally in cooperation with local artists or craftsmen to
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learn how to paint, to make ceramics, or to carve objects in wood. In other cases, very exotic
programs are offered, such as yoga courses, alternative medicine, or classes of various
philosophies.
Services % Activities %
Rooms / apartments 89.1 Tasting 66.5
Farm shop 79.2 Walks 53.3
Restaurant 68.5 Cultural activities 43.7
Swimming pool 37.1 Bike rides 40.9
Camping 10.7 Cooking classes 33.5
Tennis 4.8 Didactic farms 33.2
Indoor gym 2.3 Cultural meetings 28.4
Other services 5.6 Excursions 24.4
Sporting activities 20.8
Horse rides 14.0
Handicraft courses 8.4
Other activities 10.9
Source: INEA, Indagine sulle tipologia di offerta e sulle motivazioni delle imprese, unpublished
document, Rome. 2010
When these activities are not possible within one single farm, the presence of this flow of
tourists ignite other off farm activities, proposed by local firms, such as fishing and canoeing,
paragliding, ballooning, tree climbing, etc., all activities linked with nature and normally
managed and staffed by young rural people.
To accommodate the tourists, not only the buildings, but also the surrounding areas must be
improved and nice looking. The road leading to the farmhouse, from the farm gate to the
parking lot must be kept in good status, decorative shrubs and trees must be planted, and
flowers must embellish the entire area. Taking into consideration the long and hot Italian
summers, the presence of a swimming pool is nowadays almost a must and as a matter of
fact the pool is present in 37% of the agritourism farms. In some cases, there are also other
facilities, like a small gym and a sauna. All these aspects do not only make the tourists
happy, but they also contribute to the improvement of the life quality of all farm family
members [15], who also obviously enjoy the pool, the gym and the whole improved setting.
Agritourism operators normally show a higher level of self and job-satisfaction, when
compared with the normal farmers, because they feel more appreciated and better
understood by the society at large. It is not only a matter of higher income (which is normally
the rule), but a sum of different factors: the higher quality of their houses and surroundings,
the appreciation of the clients, the fact that many visitors express their positive judgement in
the international websites, etc.
The expansion of the number of agritourism farms has been accompanied by a constant
increase of the arrivals of guests, from Italy and abroad (Table 5). The number of Italians
coming to agritourism farms to spend at least some of their holidays has grown from 847,000
in 2005 to 1,298,000 in 2010 (+ 53%), without any sign of downturn. The number of days
spent at the farms has shown a lesser growth (+ 39%) and these two combined phenomena
determine that the average stay of an Italian tourist has decreased from 3.95 nights to 3.59
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(Table 6). The same can be said about the foreign visitors, whose total number of arrivals
from 2005 to 2010 has grown even more, by 61%, but whose average stay has decreased
from 6.38 to 5.96 nights.
Much of this modification can be due to changing patterns of tourism, with people preferring
shorter and more frequent holidays, distributed throughout the year, with the so called
“vagabond tourism”, with people moving, during the same holiday, from region to region, and
consequently changing hotel or agritourism every two-three days.
The nationality of the foreign guests is another important aspect (ISMEA. La domanda di
agriturismo in alcuni mercati europei, unpublished document, Rome. 2012), since it
influences their behaviour and must be considered in any promotional activity. Most
foreigners come from nearby German speaking countries, like Germany, Austria and
Switzerland and they normally reach their destination with their own car. A similar behaviour
can be observed for the Dutch, who have enormously increased their presence in the
agritourism farms and more recently for citizens of Eastern European countries, like Croatia,
Slovenia, Poland, Czech Republic, etc.
Most European tourists [16] plan carefully their holidays and spend long time browsing the
net: they visit the websites of the likely destinations, ask for more information from the
agritourism operators, and compare prices. Tourists from other countries, like Spain, United
Kingdom, the Nordic Countries and Russia normally arrive by air and tend to prefer the
traditional destinations: towns like Rome, Venice, Naples, sea resorts like Capri or the
Riviera and the Alps. Something similar can be said for the Japanese, Korean and Chinese
tourists [17], who furthermore rarely travel alone and normally came with well organized
package tours, which leave no time to the countryside and agritourism; most US citizens
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come to Italy in groups and just a small minority comes to visit the countryside, but their
number is growing.
A major problem for agritourism farmers is the growth of non farm rural tourism. The rising
demand for holidays in the countryside is luring non agricultural investors and operators, to
offer several other types of hospitality: hotels, pensions, maison de charme, relais et
chateaux, bed and breakfast, hotels with a nearby farm, rural houses, camping sites, etc.
Another type of competition, in the upper part of the market, is represented by the wellness
centres established in the countryside, sometimes built from scratch, sometimes built on pre-
existing farm buildings, where rich people come for a one or two week body and mind
treatment, with massages, spa, personalised menu (generally bio, macrobiotic and
vegetarian), relaxing walks in the countryside, etc. All these activities are surely positive for
the rural economy, but many customers, both Italians and foreigners, confuse these
experiences with agritourism, and consequently they represent a direct competition with the
original on farm tourism.
The relative gravity of the situation is demonstrated by the decreased utilization rate of the
available rooms (Table 7), that for all agritourism farms was in 2012 only 31.7%, twelve
points below the average of all hotels.
The best performance was shown by the five star hotels, with a utilization rate that was near
to 60%. This difference is surely due to several factors, that make the 5 star hotels unique
and unreachable, such as the locations and the quality of services, but another aspect to
consider is the amount of resources spent for advertisement, promotion and coordination
with large scale tourism operators. Most agritourism farmers are aware of this weakness
[14]: 80.9% think that their promotion needs a profound change and only 7.5% believe that
they are already doing the best they can do.
In the actual competitive and globalized world, the individual promotion, implemented by
each agritourism, must be mainly made through internet, with an updated and interactive
website, in several languages, with videos and photo gallery and possibly at least one video
cam offering 360° view of the farm in all moments o f the year. Old style leaflets and
brochures may still be used, to be distributed at national and international fairs of the sector,
like Agri&Tour held in Italy annually, and the BIT (International Exchange of Tourism) held
also in Italy in Milan, mainly for international operators, but to attract large numbers of
clients, the links with some foreign and domestic tour operators could be a more appropriate
– although partial solution, proposing some sorts of packages. In this case the problem is
that tour operators purchase in advance a large number of nights, beds and services, but
squeeze the prices and the margins become extremely thin. Another option, not yet fully
explored is a more attractive and diversified prices policy for the different moments of the
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year (peak season, mid-season, national holidays, low season, etc.) and for the different
categories (singles, elderly, families with children, groups of at least n persons, etc.). There
are periods of the year when families with kids at school cannot travel, but older people have
more freedom. In some periods, the climate might not be attractive for Italians, but it could
be more than satisfactory for Northern Europeans, who fear the hot of the summer instead.
More and always diversified activities are needed [17], on the farm or nearby, also in
cooperation with other agritourism farms, artists and local craftsmen. The local and national
consumers can be attracted when a range of possibilities are offered, ranging from pottery to
textiles, from food processing to paintings, all sorts of yoga courses and so on.
Time has also arrived to recognize formally that agritourism farms do not all belong to the
same category. Like hotels and pensions, there should be national standards, based on
multiple criteria, to assess the quality of the structures, of the personnel and of the services.
Like for the hotel industry, agritourism farms should be given a final score, from one to five,
with one meaning very low quality and five meaning top class; the Ministry of Agriculture has
already elaborated a proposal (Proposta per una metodologia unitaria di classificazione
dell’agriturismo italiano. unpublished document. Rome. 2010) that must be shared and
improved by the Regional Governments, to which in Italy agricultural policy has been
devoluted. About ten Regions, out of the twenty composing Italy, have already introduced a
classification system, with farms having from one to five “wheat ears”, but the parameters
and the scoring methods are not homogeneous.
4. CONCLUSION
For almost three decades, since the early ‘80s, agritourism has represented a very good
opportunity for increasing on farm employment and income. Within the new paradigm of
multifunctionality, agritourism has facilitated both horizontal and vertical diversification.
Millions of tourists have been at least partially diverted from the classic destinations and
attracted into rural areas. Places never visited before by any tourist have been discovered by
Italians and foreigners, lured by the beauty of landscapes, the quality of foods, the relaxing
atmosphere and the friendly hospitality. Agritourism has played a pivotal role for rural
development, with a multiplying effect on induced activities [18,19].
This initial take-off phase, characterized by a good dose of naïveté, with many operators
entering into the sector with much enthusiasm but without proper planning or proper training,
is nowadays over. This is not typically Italian, because similar problems can be found also in
other countries [20] The low and decreasing utilization rate of the last two years, also in
comparison with other segments of the tourist sector, confirms that the Italian agritourism
movement needs a higher level of professionalism and a better organization. The
sustainability, i.e. long term economic survival of the whole sector, without continuous public
financial support for private (investments) and common goods (promotion), needs to be
revisited and better understood [21].
Concepts like market segmentation should become familiar and should be applied: the same
type of offer cannot be proposed to young Italian couples and to older Germans. Each
category of potential clients (children, the elderly, families, organic and vegetarians, rich
Russians and alternative Americans, animal lovers, adventurers and relax lovers, and so on)
should be the object of study and of appropriate offers, organized in a package, to be
marketed online or through travel agencies.
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British Journal of Economics, Management & Trade, 3(3): 186-200, 2013
COMPETING INTERESTS
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