CONDITIONS OF TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN POLISH VOIVODSHIPS

The research project concerned mainly aims at presenting the methodology of selecting and gathering indicators describing tourism development at the national and regional levels and at discussing selected indicators gathered for individual voivodships in Poland. It presents the structure of the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index developed and computed for the World Economic Forum as well as the index results and components for Poland. The 2015 TTCI for Poland was 4.08, ranking Poland 47th among the 141 countries covered. The second part presents the assumptions of studies of the competitiveness of the sixteen Polish voivodships based on a set of indicators designed at the Institute of Tourism in Warsaw in 2004. The values of specific indicators for particular voivodships have been presented in the reports entitled Turystyka Polska. Układ regionalny since 2004. The article also contains examples of tables from the 2015 report. Finally, the article presents the ranking of voivodships according to the value of the overall Tourism Competitiveness Index developed on the basis of eight sub-indices.


Introduction
The research project concerned mainly aims at presenting the methodology of selecting and gathering indicators describing the regional development of broader tourism and at discussing selected indicators gathered for individual voivodships in Poland.
It must be emphasised that the fundamental objective of creating a system of indices and their standardisation at the international level is to produce various rankings. In our index analysis, we focus on selecting measurable indicators necessary to design and, subsequently, evaluate the implementation of multiannual and annual tourism development programmes in specific voivodships in Poland.
The system of creating standardised indices is a widely recognised tool for producing various rankings mostly aimed to assess movements in the positions of the entities concerned (countries/regions/cities). Opponents to standardised indices usually point to excessive diversity of particular entities. They also stress enormous subjectivity in the selection of specific non-measurable indices as well as a frequent lack of objectivity in the arbitrary specification of values of indicators hard to measure. It is indicated that it is difficult to justify combining significantly biased indices (e.g. a subjective assessment of the legal system in a country) with those characterised by accuracy (the surface area of a country). Therefore, especially for territorial units with indices hard to measure, most specialists tend to create time series for particular and relatively easily measured indices without aggregation, assuming that qualitative analysis will lead to correct and well-grounded conclusions, useful in economic and business practice.
Additionally, in the selection of indices considered for analyses it is frequently more important to be able to gather numerical data or to choose indices for which there are well-formulated methods of estimating their numerical values.
Composite indices of the competitiveness performance of countries according to the WEF When assessing conditions of tourism development in a region and the impact of tourism on the regional economy, it is worth drawing on a most comprehensive list of indicators used by the authors of annual reports prepared for the World Economic Forum in Geneva for the purpose of presenting rankings of the competitiveness performance of individual countries.
Competitiveness is defined as the set of institutions, policies, and factors that determine the level of productivity of an economy, which in turn sets the level of prosperity that the country can earn.
The Global Competitiveness Index combines 114 indicators that capture concepts that matter for productivity. These indicators are grouped into 12 pillars: institutions, infrastructure, macroeconomic environment, health and primary education, higher education and training, goods market efficiency, labor market efficiency, financial market development, technological readiness, market size, business sophistication, and innovation (Schwab, 2015).
Let us now describe the place of Polish economy in WEF ranking. According to The Global Competitiveness Index 2015-2016 ranking published by the World Economic Forum in The Global Competitiveness Report 2015-2016 (Schwab, 2015), Poland's economy ranks 41 st among the 140 countries covered, with the overall score of 4.49 (for the top and poorest performers, Switzerland and Guinea, the respective indices were 5.76 and 2.84).
The overall index was calculated on the basis of three sub-indices -Basic requirements, Efficiency enhancers and Innovation and sophistication factors -each of which was composed of several pillars (a total of 14). Put rather simply, it may be assumed that the values taken by the fourteen pillars constitute an assessment of conditions indicating the position of the Polish economy in the modern world.
With regard to our investigation of tourism development conditions, in selected areas it may be methodologically important to take account of another composite index, also prepared by the World Economic Forum and published

Cultural Resources and Business Travel (5 indicators).
The Survey data is derived from responses to the World Economic Forum's Executive Opinion Survey and range in value from 1 to 7. Hard data were collected from various sources. Hard data indicators used in the TTCI are normalized to a 1-to-7 scale in order to align them with the Executive Opinion Survey's results.1 The standard formula for converting each hard data indicator to the 1-to-7 scale × country score -sample minimum 6 + 1 . sample maximum -sample minimum The sample minimum and sample maximum are the lowest and highest scores of the overall sample, respectively. For those hard data indicators for which a higher value indicates a worse outcome (e.g. fuel price levels), we rely on a normalization formula that, in addition to converting the series to a 1-to-7 scale, reverses it, so that 1 and 7 still correspond to the worst and best, respectively: × country score -sample minimum -6 + 7 . sample maximum -sample minimum Each of the pillars has been calculated as an un-weighted average of the individual component variables. The subindexes are then calculated as un-weighted averages of the included pillars. In the case of the Human Resources and Labour Market pillar, which is, itself, composed of two subpillars (Qualification of the labour force and Labour market), the overall pillar is the un-weighted average of the two subpillars (Schwab, 2015).

Bo . zena Radkowska, Krzysztof Łopaciński
Calculated on the basis of the 90 indicators, the overall 2015 Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index for Poland was 4.08, making Poland 47 th among the 141 countries covered (it ranged from 5.31 obtained by Spain, the top performer, to 2.43 for the lowest ranking Chad).
In 2015, the authors of the above-mentioned report mainly focused on analysing the responses of the Travel and Tourism (T&T) sector to health, security and economic shocks experienced over recent decades by the world economy. It was assumed that a strong and resilient T&T sector was crucial for job creation and economic growth in both advanced economies and developing countries.
The indicators having a considerable downward effect on Poland's position were those where Poland ranked low. Those are as follows: -extension of business trips recommended (135), -government prioritisation of T&T industry (132), -particulate matter (2.5) concentration (µg/m3) (130), -efficiency of legal framework in settling disputes (117), -no. of days to start a business (112), -sustainability of T&T development (110) Conditions of tourism development in Polish voivodships population, GDP and GDP per capita, international tourist arrivals in Poland and international tourism receipts as well as the share of the travel and tourism industry in the national economy and in employment.

The system of indicators of tourism development in voivodships according to the Institute of Tourism
In 2003, for the needs of the central government and regional (voivodship) authorities, the Institute of Tourism designed a set of and gathering methodology for indicators describing the development of broader tourism in individual voivodships (Borne-Januła, Byszewska-Dawidek, Kulesza, Legienis, Radkowska, 2003).
The main objective of the selection of indicators was to provide information necessary in the preparation of tourism development strategies for voivodships and in ongoing assessments of the current situation in the tourism industry and related sectors. It was also important to ensure full comparability of information in particular voivodships.
In addition, a significant assumption was to make the maximum use of information collected in various databases by the Central Statistical Office (Główny Urząd Statystyczny -GUS) and of the results of surveys carried out by the Institute of Tourism and commissioned by the department of tourism.
Since 2003, the set of indicators for three consecutive years prepared on an annual basis for marshal offices was supplemented with brief descriptions of tourism in all the voivodships and with a comparative analysis of the level and structure of tourism-related expenditure from the budgets of marshal offices. The first report covering The set of indicators with descriptions adopted in 2004 and applicable until 2015 included the following groups: 1. Characteristics of accommodation facilities: the number and regional distribution of collective tourist accommodation establishments, hotels and similar establishments (hotels, motels, boarding houses), hotels by category, other collective tourist accommodation establishments (other than hotels, motels or boarding houses), camp-sites and holiday centres, individual tourist accommodation establishmentsaccommodation at rural tourism holdings. 2. Other aspects of services supplied to tourists: a) All travel agencies and travel agencies broken down into tour operators and intermediaries; b) The length of tourist trails. 3. Air transport, cultural and environmental protection establishments: a) Airports and passenger service at airports; b) Museums and visitors to museums and museum exhibitions; c) National parks -the area and number of visitors. 4. Tourists at collective accommodation establishments (the number of guests and overnight stays, also of foreign tourists, and foreign tourists staying at accommodation establishments by group of countries).

Domestic tourist traffic and foreign tourist arrivals:
a) The total number of domestic tourist arrivals in destinations located in the voivodships and broken down into long-stay (5 or more days) and short-stay (2 to 4 days) tourists; b) The number of foreign tourist arrivals and the composition of arrivals by group of countries; c) Expenditure of foreign tourists (average expenditure per person and per day of stay per person in USD). 6. Level and structure of tourism-related government expenditure from budgets of marshal offices.

Bo . zena Radkowska, Krzysztof Łopaciński
For each indicator, rankings of voivodships in particular years were prepared, in order to illustrate the dynamics of change and to allow voivodship administrations to carry out comparisons between voivodships.
The method of presenting individual indicators is shown in two tables containing the following information: -the number of travel agencies registered in particular voivodships, with a ranking of voivodships, -the number of accommodation establishments in particular voivodships, with a ranking of voivodships. Similar tables were prepared for a total of 27 indicators. Furthermore, the level and structure of tourism-related expenditure in budgets of marshal offices (a total of 4 indicators) were presented.
As already mentioned, the values of specific indicators for selected voivodships can be presented as time series for the whole period covered. Such a graphical presentation of the number of visitors to the Pomorskie voivodship is exemplified in Figure 1. It is worth pointing out that the values of this indicator in specific years were estimated on the basis of surveys of foreign tourists visiting Poland carried out on an annual basis at border crossings.

Bo . zena Radkowska, Krzysztof Łopaciński
To make joint ranking of voivodships we may use eight ranks of sub-indices. The results obtained are presented in Table 2.

Conclusions
The system of creating standardised indices is a widely recognised tool for preparing various rankings, mostly for assessing the positions of entities covered and for comparing changes observed in subsequent years.
Gathering information constituting a specific set of indicators included in the overall tourism index allows to carry out a number of comparisons and assessments of positions and of reasons for specific positions on the tourism competitiveness map. In addition, a comprehensive set of indicators also facilitates identifying the causes of an increased or decreased competitiveness of a country or region in the ranking.
The analysis of the ranks obtained in the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index ranking by Poland and its competitors, contained in the document entitled "The Marketing Strategy of Poland in the Tourism Sector for 2012-2020" (Marketingowa strategia..., 2011), prepared by the Polish Tourist Organisation, can be used as the basis for selecting indices to be improved as a matter of priority in order to simultaneously enhance Poland's position in the ranking and to move ahead of specific countries.
Improving the place of Poland in the ranking was defined as one of the main indicators of the attainment of the marketing strategy objectives.
A similar -even if somewhat simplified -role in assessing the tourism sector and tourism-oriented activities of the regional administration authorities in voivodships is played by comparisons of values of individual indicators across voivodships. Evidently, regional governments attach greater importance to changes in the index values in specific years and to improving the position of the voivodship concerned in the ranking. The choice of the main indicators to be observed also reflects the priorities adopted in the tourism policy of the voivodship in question.