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When paradise becomes a product: Greek island Corfu for sale!

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak* 
In the timeless Greek canvas of Corfu, the sun bursts from behind mountains and sets along the picturesque shorelines of the Ionian and Adriatic seas. Forest-covered mountains and hilly landscapes bring life to the Ionian isle, with snaking coastal roads. The art, architecture, arcaded streets, tree-lined avenues, narrow lanes, and city squares of Corfu's city centre carry the diverse cultural heritage and architectural legacy of the Venetians. Bougainvillea blossoms from French-style balconies, absorbing the Ionian breeze, while waves greet the coastal landscape of Strongyli village in the southeast of the island — a place to retreat.
Yet the beauty, flora, fauna, and natural ecosystem of Corfu are under threat today due to the rise of hyper-tourism. The rent-seeking character of the Greek state promotes tourism and seeks foreign direct investment to develop tourism infrastructure, affecting the island's character by displacing local residents as house prices skyrocket. Corfu is becoming a paradise for real estate developers, hoteliers, the hospitality industry, and ancillary sectors. The beautiful island is turning into a hospitality hub for tourists arriving from across the world, but an inhospitable place for its own people, who consider Corfu their home and not merely a long-weekend destination.
Tourists from the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Poland constitute nearly 75 per cent of arrivals, with the remainder coming from around the world. Corfu is a traveller's paradise, but the Greek government frames it primarily as a tourism economy projected to generate more than one billion euros in 2026. According to the Corfu Chamber of Commerce, tourism supports a local economy that generated 2.75 billion euros in 2025, with tourism contributing close to one billion euros of that total. More than one million tourists arrive on the island via cruise ships each year, generating income and attracting investment, but also contributing to pollution in local coastal and marine areas.
As a tourist destination, Corfu effectively commodifies its coast, culture, and nature for profit. Tourism as an industry has weakened the island's other economic sectors. Agriculture, for instance, has declined with the growth of tourism, which provides seasonal income to local people but drives up the cost of living year-round. A hotel worker in Strongyli said she works longer hours and saves less because of rising living costs. House prices have increased with the expansion of tourist accommodation businesses, making it difficult for locals to buy homes. The costs of tourism are often ignored by economic planners in a rent-seeking economy, where tourist capitalism creates social distrust, cultural disharmony, and economic and ecological imbalance. Local hotels, bars, nightclubs, restaurants, and coffee shops are becoming financially inaccessible to residents. These invisible pressures are routinely overshadowed by the continuous selling of the island's experiences and natural beauty.
The Greek state and local authorities in Corfu frequently overlook the needs of local people while building capitalist infrastructure for tourists. State and city governments act as facilitators for investors and business interests while sidelining the needs and aspirations of local communities. The mass rise of tourism also disrupts collectivist lifestyles on the island, promoting a more individualistic culture centred on leisure and pleasure — values that reflect the core logic of tourism-led rent-seeking capitalism. The growing vulnerabilities of people and places in Corfu reveal the limits of an economic monoculture built on tourism, including its so-called sustainable variants within a capitalist framework.
City planners and policymakers are now considering a shift away from mass tourism toward a model that would attract only wealthy visitors, with the aim of increasing revenue while reducing visitor numbers. Such an approach, however, would not resolve the fundamental challenges facing Corfu and its people. It would only further establish the island as an elitist destination for the rich, leaving no room for ordinary people. A class-based tourism model would deepen capitalism's foothold on the island and fundamentally undermine the democratic and universalist approach to life, leisure, and pleasure.
Sustainable tourism demands public investment and public tourist infrastructure that serves local people, preserves natural spaces, and upholds the island's flora and fauna. The state and government must treat the needs and aspirations of local communities as their first priority if tourism in Corfu is to have any genuine future.

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