By an observer of Maldivian economics

Male, March 30 (Maldivian Economy) – After four decades of treating tourism as the Maldives’ national salvation, the country faces a harsh reality; the sector, while supplying foreign exchange, has not delivered a resilient economy.

For more than four decades, successive Maldivian governments have invested heavily in tourism and promoted it as the country’s economic saviour. It became the organising idea of national development; expand resort capacity, attract more arrivals, earn more foreign currency, and assume prosperity will follow.

Today, that belief looks increasingly misjudged. Tourism unquestionably transformed the Maldives from a low-income island economy into a middle-income state, lifting public revenues, creating employment, and enabling major infrastructure expansion. The question today is not whether tourism delivered benefits, but whether reliance on it alone created structural strength.

Tourism should not be casually described as the Maldives’ primary economic engine. A more precise description is that it is the country’s primary source of foreign exchange. That is not a small semantic correction. It goes to the heart of the country’s present economic strain.

Tourism brings in the dollars needed to pay for imports, service external debt, and support the balance of payments. But that is different from saying it has built a broad, self-sustaining domestic economy. Much of the value generated by tourism is diluted by structural leakages through imported fuel, imported food, imported construction materials, imported labour, and external debt repayments. The sector earns foreign exchange, but it also depends on significant foreign exchange outflows to sustain itself.

The headlining figures still appear impressive. Tourist arrivals reached a record 2.05 million in 2024, up 8.9 percent from the previous year, while real GDP growth was estimated at 5.5 percent. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) projected a growth of around 5 percent in 2025, again supported by tourism. Those figures are often used to defend the long-standing model.

But the same data also exposes the weakness beneath. The World Bank reported that real GDP growth slowed to 2.5 percent in the first quarter of 2025, even as tourist arrivals rose 9.4 percent, largely because shorter stays reduced overall visitor spending. Average inflation reached 5 percent in the first half of 2025. In other words, more tourists did not automatically produce proportionately stronger domestic outcomes.

The celebration of job creation in tourism often overlooks a central economic reality; when growth depends on imported labour, part of the income created exits the economy.

One of the clearest structural weaknesses in the model lies in labour. Tourism growth is often praised for creating jobs, but in the Maldives, this is not an uncomplicated positive. Domestic population growth and labour supply have not kept pace with the demands of resort expansion, hospitality operations, and related construction. The result has been a structural reliance on foreign workers rather than a deepening of the domestic labour base. A 2025 migration review reports that migrant workers account for about 60 percent of the labour force, concentrated especially in tourism and construction, while official labour statistics show that recent employment growth has been driven largely by increases among foreign workers.

This dependence also generates foreign exchange leakage. In economic terms, leakages refer to income that leaves the domestic economy rather than circulating within it, reducing the multiplier effects that normally strengthen local production and employment. Wages are earned in the Maldives, but a significant portion is remitted abroad rather than retained and recirculated domestically. As a result, the celebration of job creation in tourism often overlooks a central economic reality; when growth depends on imported labour, part of the income created exits the economy. The sector may look strong in gross terms, yet the net national benefit retained within the domestic economy is smaller than headline employment figures suggest. This is an inference supported by the Maldives’ documented dependence on migrant labour and the structure of its external accounts.

A resilient tourism model depends on strong domestic linkages. Local agriculture, fisheries, manufacturing, and services should supply the sector wherever possible. Where those linkages remain weak, tourism revenue circulates externally rather than building internal economic depth.

The stress is significantly more apparent in the Maldives’ balance of payments and reserve position. The Maldives Monetary Authority (MMA) reported an overall balance of payments surplus of USD 136.7 million in 2024, but that surplus was helped by a USD 400 million swap drawdown from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Even then, gross international reserves stood at USD 856.5 million at end-2024, while usable reserves were only USD 65 million. That distinction matters more than the headline reserve figure. It shows that the country’s immediately deployable foreign currency buffer was extremely thin.

The IMF has warned that macroeconomic imbalances have widened and that restoring sustainable public finances and debt dynamics should now be the country’s immediate policy priority.

The broader external accounts remained deeply strained. The World Bank estimated the current account deficit at USD 1.3 billion, or 18.3 percent of GDP, in 2024, improving only modestly to USD 1.1 billion, or 15.3 percent of GDP, in 2025. By July 2025, official reserves had risen to USD 774.5 million, but still covered only 1.8 months of imports, while usable reserves, alarmingly, remained below one month of imports. This is a vivid example of why reserves remain under pressure despite strong tourism receipts — the country continues to earn foreign exchange through tourism while losing substantial amounts through imports, remittances, and debt obligations.

The debt burden makes the picture even starker. The World Bank reported that public and publicly guaranteed debt reached USD 9.4 billion, or 134.2 percent of GDP, at the end of 2024. The IMF has warned that macroeconomic imbalances have widened and that restoring sustainable public finances and debt dynamics should now be the country’s immediate policy priority.

This is why the old development narrative no longer holds. Tourism did not transform the Maldives into a diversified, resilient economy. It supplied foreign currency to an economy that remained heavily import-dependent, externally indebted, and increasingly reliant on foreign labour. Rather than curing vulnerability, it allowed that vulnerability to be financed and prolonged.

Regional instability now adds another layer of risk. A prolonged Middle East conflict, including tensions linked to Iran, threatens higher fuel prices, freight costs, and imported inflation. For a country as dependent on imported essentials as the Maldives, this is not a secondary concern. Tourism may continue to bring in foreign exchange, but the cost of maintaining the wider economy rises with every external shock. The sector is therefore less a symbol of national economic strength than a lifeline keeping an exposed system operational.

Tourism generated foreign exchange, but it did not eliminate wider structural weakness.

The harder truth is now difficult to avoid. The Maldives did not simply fall short of a tourism-led development strategy. It may have spent four decades overcommitting to a model that carried structural weaknesses from the beginning. Tourism generated foreign exchange, but it did not eliminate wider structural weakness. It masked it, financed it, and made the country more dependent on a single external-facing sector whose gains are persistently offset by leakages and obligations.

For years, tourism was sold as the answer. What the numbers increasingly show is something far less comforting; it kept the Maldives liquid, but it did not make it strong.

The policy challenge ahead is not to abandon tourism, but to rebalance the economy around it. Strengthening domestic production, reducing import dependence, improving labour productivity, and managing debt sustainability will determine whether future growth builds resilience rather than further deepened dependence.

https://www.maldiveseconomy.mv/post/tourism-kept-maldives-liquid-but-not-resilient

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