1. Introduction
Sustainable agriculture is the practice of using an integrated farming system of plants and animals that employs ecological and economic principles and considers the relationship between stakeholders and the environment. Sustainable agriculture tourism (agritourism) was introduced to farmers’ stakeholders in Thailand to rehabilitate natural resources and the environment. The goal of sustainable agritourism is not only to optimize the economic benefits but also to achieve maximum benefits for the stakeholders, improve quality of life, and promote environmental conservation. Agritourism in Thailand is promoted to help farmers become self-sufficient and is practiced by all professions throughout the country. Agritourism activities are based on ecological and environmental preservation to ensure that the health of ecosystems, the human population and the natural environment can be sustained. Agritourism includes diverse and integrated activities aiming to improve the environment and agricultural production, combines agriculture and forestation and focuses on cultivating cash crops and improving soil quality and biodiversity, increasing the variety and quantity of agricultural products.
Hence, agritourism is a subset of rural tourism that uses a diverse array of farms as tourist destinations [
1]. This is an economic activity with potential social, economic, and environmental or triple bottom line (TBL) impacts that are highly dependent on the local characteristics of a region [
2,
3,
4,
5]. Agritourism has the potential to stimulate rural economies via its positive effects on farm income [
6,
7,
8,
9]. However, the extent of the financial benefits and economic impact is still contested due to conservative estimates [
3,
10,
11]. Yang [
12] presented the economic and sociocultural attributes of agritourism. Other studies on agritourism have reported noneconomic (i.e., environmental and sociocultural) benefits, such as an increase in sustainable agricultural operations, the enhancement of farmers’ economic benefits, and the stimulation of rural economies through ripple effects [
13,
14,
15]. There is a consensus in the literature that social, environmental and economic perspectives are important for sustainable development. However, strategic agritourism attributes needs to be identified to understand the consensus on sustainable agritourism [
16]. Hence, the attributes of sustainable agritourism must be considered.
Interest in agritourism has increased in both studies and policy because it presents a path for farm diversification to generate supplementary income [
15,
17,
18]. Farms used for agritourism are often privately owned and provide tourists with recreational opportunities based on traditional local activities [
19,
20]. Farms also provide lodging coupled with authentic indigenous cultural experiences [
8,
21]. Agritourism thus requires a rural locality with a pristine natural environment, which, in turn, requires committed investment and business models to ensure that the local ecosystem is preserved in an attractive state. Scholars have argued that agritourism can support rural development by generating business revenue and has secondary ripple effects such as increasing employment and increased environmental protection [
13,
22,
23,
24]. There is a need to study how agritourism should be properly performed to address future challenges.
Agritourism can contribute to sustainable development in rural areas by preserving the local culture while generating supplementary incomes [
13,
25,
26]. For example, scholars have quantified its economic and sociocultural impact on farming communities [
27]. In addition, scholars have explored the influence of socioeconomic attributes on the effectiveness of agritourism businesses [
28]. Scholars observed that farms engaged in agritourism usually do not use systematic strategic planning [
29]. There are a limited number of agritourism studies based on the sustainability perspective, particularly on farms diversifying their green operations to engage in sustainable agritourism [
30,
31]. A lack of long-term strategies and reliance on ad hoc management often leads to unsustainability [
3,
4,
5,
32]. Farmers are vulnerable to declining incomes and thus must adopt business strategies to mitigate such risks. To fill this gap in the literature and to support sustainable agritourism activities, a set of attributes needs to be identified.
Prior studies have applied descriptive methods to identify effective agritourism business models [
8,
13,
33]. For instance, Yang [
12] used a qualitative information approach to study agritourism focusing on economic and sociocultural attributes that increase environmental and cultural conservation. In addition, those attributes are described using linguistic preferences, which are inherently vague and difficult to process in the model. Prior studies also assumed that linear relationships exist among the identified aspects. Prior studies do not identify a set of valid attributes [
3,
13,
27]. Complicated interrelationships exist among the attributes, and there are studies presenting the interrelationships that exist among the hierarchical structure; however, these studies merely present the interrelationships among the attributes [
22,
34]. These studies do not properly address the interrelationship and qualitative information. Hence, this study proposes using fuzzy set theory to address the qualitative information, and a decision-making trial and evaluation laboratory (DEMATEL) is used to handle the interrelationships among the attributes.
The objective of this study is to identify the attributes for sustainable agritourism using qualitative information. This study applies an expert’s linguistic preferences to the qualitative information and identifies the interrelationships among the aspects. The contributions of this study are as follows. (1) A set of attributes are identified based on qualitative information; (2) this study identifies the interrelationships among the aspects using a causal model; and (3) the criteria for improving industrial performance are presented.
This rest of this study is organized as follows.
Section 2 discusses the background of agritourism, the proposed method, and the proposed attributes.
Section 3 describes the methodology in detail.
Section 4 presents the industrial background and results specifically for Thailand.
Section 5 discusses the theoretical and industrial implications. The last section provides the conclusions and suggestions for future studies.
3. Methods
This section discusses the industrial background and proposed fuzzy DEMATEL method.
3.1. Industrial Background
The tourism industry relies on tourists’ desire for relaxation and immersion in an authentic local experience. Thailand, which is already a popular destination for foreign tourists, stands to benefit from the enhancement of the economy’s agricultural sector through the adoption of agritourism. In Thailand, there are 400 agricultural firms engaged in a variety of activities are engaged in agritourism. The Thailand government promotes agritourism as an alternative rural development mechanism and regulates it. Agritourism is a subsector of the tourism industry. Agritourism supports farm activities targeting tourists, including farm demonstrations, farm visits, farm training, etc., as well as on-site value-adding and sales of farm products. Agritourism occurs on a working farm or agricultural plant and is conducted for the visitors’ enjoyment and to generate supplemental income for farmers. Agritourism and nature-tourism farms might include a diverse array of activities such as outdoor recreation, farming experiences, cultural entertainment, hospitality services and on-farm direct sales.
Agritourism is a subset of rural tourism that includes resorts, off-site farmers’ markets and other leisure and hospitality businesses that attract visitors to the countryside. The attributes of tourism, as a market, are important. Attributes are often differentiated and recognized by tourism marketers as being important for decision makers of sustainable agritourism development. This study considers value-added agritourism activities and their attributes. Agritourism is still in the new development stage, and there are many attributes to be developed. Hence, this study identifies the attributes considering expert validity and context validity. This study provides an assessment based on the input of 21 experts from the academic, tourism and government sectors. These experts are experienced in agritourism activities in Thailand, see
Appendix A. The proposed attributes are selected based on the literature review and actual agritourism activities that occur in Thailand. Rounds of questionnaires were sent out to the experts, and the anonymous responses were aggregated and shared with the research group.
3.2. Delphi Method
For this study, a group of experts on agritourism was selected. All participants were confirmed, and all the members of the group received a questionnaire with instructions to comment on the selected attributes based on their personal opinions. The questionnaires were returned, and the comments were grouped. This study considers this set of attributes to further assess agritourism activities in Thailand.
3.3. Fuzzy DEMATEL
Triangular fuzzy number (TFN) provides an effective means of quantifying human linguistic preferences into computable form [
3,
53]. TFNs can be defined in terms of membership functions
and processed in terms of well-established rules for fuzzy arithmetic (See,
Table 2) [
54]. These computations can be embedded into the DEMATEL technique, which provides a way to elucidate the complex interrelationships that exist among attributes in a given problem [
55]. DEMATEL can also provide a visual representation of these interrelationships to aid in decision-making. The use of TFNs in DEMATEL results in a fuzzy DEMATEL analytical process.
Assume that a proposed measure is composed of a set of attributes The attributes are confirmed in terms of content and expert validity. The content validity ratio is measured by the yield values, which range from +1 to −1; positive values indicate that at least half of the domain of expert raters rated the attribute as essential. The content validity ratio is thus an indicator of overall test content validity. A particular value for pairwise interdependency is decided for modeling this mathematical relation. The analytical procedures are presented below.
Calculating the fuzzy direct relation matrix between attributes requires the comparison scale to be designed into five linguistic preferences: no influence, very low influence, low influence, high influence and very high influence. Suppose there are members in the decision group that make the assessment , which represents the fuzzy weight of the attribute affecting the attribute assessed by evaluators.
Normalizing the corresponding fuzzy numbers:
By computing the left
and right
normalized value:
The total normalized crisp value
:
We adopted the synthetic value notation to aggregate the subjective judgement for
respondents.
The initial direct relation matrix is a matrix obtained by pairwise comparisons.
denotes the degree to which attribute affects attribute . Moreover, the initial direct relation matrix is .
The normalized direct relation matrix
is generated as follows:
The normalized direct relation matrix assists in attaining the total interrelationship matrix
.
where
is
Employing the following equations, the driving power
and dependence power
can be obtained based on the total relation matrix by summing the rows and columns.
The causal interrelationship diagram can be drawn through the attributes using . is used to express the horizontal axis, which is called “Prominence” for presenting the importance of attributes. is the vertical axis and represents the “Relation” for displaying the cause and effect interrelationship among attributes. If an attribute’s has a positive value, the attribute belongs to the causal group; conversely, when the attribute possesses negative values of , it belongs to the effect group.
4. Results
Table 3 presents the aspects of TFN according to respondent 1. Defuzzification is applied in Equations (1)–(3). This study integrated the responses from 21 expert respondents from the Thailand agritourism industry to compose the initial direct relation matrix using Equation (4).
The initial direct relation matrix aggregates the expert’s responses. The initial direct relation matrix generates the normalized direct relation matrix using Equation (5). Equation (6) is used to develop the total interrelationship matrix . The total interrelationship matrix is used to judge the interrelationship cut-off value for the interrelationship levels (strong, medium, weak and no interrelationship).
Using Equations (7) and (8), we classify sustainable business performance (A1), sustainable economy of rural society (A2), sociocultural sustainability (A3) and diversification ability of farms (A5) as the cause aspects group, as shown in
Table 4.
Table 5 presents the cause group (A1, A2, A3 and A5) and effect group (A4). The aspect’s two-way effects occur for sustainable business performance (A1), sustainable economy of rural society (A2), and diversification ability of farms (A5). There are no interrelationships among A1 and A3.
Figure 1 presents the interrelationship among the aspects. The cause group includes sustainable business performance (A1), sustainable economy of rural society (A2), and diversification ability of farms (A5). Sociocultural sustainability (A3) is not interrelated with any other aspects. A medium effect exists among A1, A2 and A4.
Again, the total interrelationship matrix
is generated from Equation (6). Equations (7) and (8) are used to acquire
, which is used to express the horizontal axis, and
, which is the vertical axis, representing the “Relation”. This matrix illustrates the cause and effect interrelationships among the attributes, showed in
Table 6.
Figure 2 presents the cause and effect criteria groups. The top five important cause groups are the Development of local business value chain (C20), Involvement in government-led tourism promotion (C21), Agritourism-specific plan and implementation (C19), Participation of social and cultural activity in local areas (C12), and Environmentally-friendly farm and agribusiness practices (C13).
5. Implications
This section discusses the theoretical and industrial implications.
5.1. Theoretical Implications
Agritourism has often been implemented with enhanced farm revenue as the main objective [
9,
13,
48]. Recently, there has been growing interest in potential agritourism contributions to rural economies as well as the conservation of sociocultural heritage and local ecosystems. Prior studies attempted to quantify the value of agritourism based on incremental farm income, but the assessment of secondary impacts of sustainable agritourism has been largely ignored. Hence, this study clarifies the relationships among the key attributes to improve our understanding of the drivers of sustainable agritourism. Furthermore, ref. [
13] stated that agritourism has a great impact on the human capital of farms because household members can work on the farms. Sustainable business performance uses a balanced TBL perspective. The revenue gains based on increases in tourism levels need to be balanced with the need to conserve the local culture and environment. Sustainable practices thus ensure the long-term health and survival of businesses by considering the TBL perspective.
The results reveal a moderate mutual relationship with the sustainable economy of rural society (A2) and a weak mutual relationship with the diversification ability of farms (A5). These findings indicate that the complexity of sustainable agritourism is related to the interrelationship between the ability and adaptability of farms and the economy of the localities where the farms are situated [
11,
12]. In addition, sustainable business performance (A1) has a medium effect on environmental sustainability (A4). This is consistent with the notion that agritourism farms have positive environmental impacts, since diversified farms are usually engaged in environmentally-friendly farming practices [
13]. This study also reveals the importance of agritourism in establishing long-term environmental sustainability. In summary, economic sustainability refers to firms’ ability to provide for their current and future economic needs; social sustainability focuses on preserving the local culture while minimizing the permanent influence of the tourist influx; and environmental sustainability refers to the preservation of the environment so that agritourism remains attractive in the future.
This is consistent with the general understanding of agritourism as a means to supplement farm income. Nevertheless, the results clearly indicate that the sustainable economy of rural society (A2) and the diversification ability of farms (A5) are interrelated with sustainable agritourism. This study verifies that sustainable agritourism occurs only when there is a balance between the diversification ability of farms and the economic benefits of agritourism for both farms and rural society. Sociocultural sustainability (A3), however, does not have a relationship with the other attributes, has a minimal impact on sustainable agribusiness, and contributes the least to strategic agribusiness performance. Environmental sustainability (A4) is influenced by the long-term economic performance of both farms and rural society. The ability of farms to diversify impacts the environment. This finding indicates that agritourism is important for achieving environmental sustainability and suggests that agritourism should be designated one of the more sustainable rural development attributes because it has a less negative environmental impact than other forms of tourism.
5.2. Industrial Implications
The Thailand government coordinates development initiatives by instituting properly designed policies. Such policies provide the basis for individual farmers to select diversification pathways that do not overtax the local ecosystem or dilute the local rural culture. There is a significant risk of a sudden initial burst of development without such coordination; the farm owners act unilaterally to maximize their earnings from the tourist influx. This may lead to rapid growth in short-term earnings, but overexploitation leads to the erosion of both environmental quality and cultural authenticity. The community then incurs the long-term risk of losing the attributes that make for an attractive tourist destination and eventually, agritourism will underperform. In addition, proper regulation and coordination by the local authority can prevent poor economic performance. The cause aspects are sustainable business performance and the sustainable economy of rural society, which affect the environmental sustainability aspect. This study focuses on sustainable agritourism and shows that agritourism can be used as a diversification strategy to increase farms’ economic benefits. The cause aspect is related to farms’ revenue sources after they engage in agritourism to enhance their own sustainability. Operating sustainable agritourism is expected to increase sustainable business performance and enhance farm profitability.
The results identify the most influential attributes for sustainable agritourism providers and/or aspiring farmers who can use this information for promoting and marketing their products. Farmers may consider offering products or services to generate a profit, but this will have environmental and social impacts. Sustainable business performance should be aligned with TBL perspective planning. Thailand’s sustainable agritourism aims to expose agritourists to agriproducts in a more meaningful way and offers various activities that increase consumers’ involvement with agriproducts. Economic activities in localities are linked to agritourism. Benefits accrue to local entrepreneurs catering to tourist needs, which range from services (e.g., transportation) to tangible goods (e.g., food and local souvenirs). The provision of a local network that provides goods and services to tourists is essential to ensure successful agritourism and environmental sustainability. This integrated network serves to coordinate the activities of the local merchants to prevent either undersupply (which translates to opportunity costs) or oversupply (which can cause an undesired drop in the prices) of goods and services. Coordination within such a sustainable business network, in cooperation with the government agency in charge of agritourism, can also ensure the proper behavior of local businessmen and prevent practices that may detract from the long-term reputation of the tourist destination. An agritourism program should be designed to maximize the overall economic benefits to the sustainable economy of rural society and ensure that the farms and local merchants cater to tourist needs and that benefits from the program are equitably distributed among multiple stakeholders, as well as between the present and future needs of the rural community.
6. Conclusions
Agritourism stimulates rural economies by increasing farmers’ incomes due to activity diversification and satisfies the visitors’ needs. Rural regions with large volumes of visitors should consider the TBL perspective. Prior studies have used qualitative information to propose various attributes. Agritourism has the attribute of including various operational activities. This study concludes that activities in agricultural settings and the sociocultural environment are vital for sustainable business performance. This study identifies a set of sustainable agritourism attributes and constructs a causal model to improve our understanding of sustainable agritourism development. Hence, understanding the attributes can help decision makers in the government and private sector to develop efficient resource allocation. Qualitative information was used to identify the proposed aspects and criteria, and linguistic preferences exist. In addition, the attributes are interrelated. This study applies fuzzy DEMATEL to incorporate qualitative information and linguistic preferences into the analyses. The causal interrelationship model can be used to help decision makers understand the cause and effect relationships among the aspects.
The findings show that the interrelationships among the attributes show how sustainable business performance, sustainable rural economy development and farm diversification are interrelated. Sustainable business performance is a dominant aspect of sustainable agritourism performance, while sociocultural sustainability is interrelated with the aspects. Sustainable business performance incorporates the criteria and impacts the service processes, such as farm activities, inbound transportation, processing, waste collection, and outbound transportation. Visitors consider the design of the activities, the characteristics of the services and processes, consumption and disposal, and so on. These aspects are a part of the life cycle of the service and can be assessed. Nevertheless, sustainable business performance should focus on the TBL perspective for the whole service or operational process. The economic approach has forced firms to continuously improve their financial performance, while obeying market and government regulations. Meanwhile, visitors are demanding high-quality products and services that are consistent with their environmental cultural and social values.
The main contributions of this study are as follows. (1) This study identifies a set of attributes that can be used to assess sustainable agritourism; (2) by using qualitative information, this study develops a case and effect model based on the interrelationships among the attributes; (3) the proposed criteria are assessed for industrial practices, and we present the top five criteria in the cause group; and (4) this study shows that an agritourism-specific plan that takes into account the TBL should be integrated and implemented to ensure sustainability. The farmers have social and environmental responsibilities that require a continuing and progressive process of involvement and the development of the farms’ competences. This study presents the social and environmental issues associated with the economic benefits and stakeholders, such as direct collaborators, partners and shareholders, suppliers, consumers, the market, competitors, and the community.
This study has some limitations. This study collected questionnaires from academic, government and farming experts. Perhaps a future study might compare the stakeholders’ perceptions of sustainable agritourism. A future study might include some statistical data to assess the validity and reliability of the responses of the experts. This study considered five aspects and 21 criteria for assessing sustainable agritourism. A future study might increase the number of aspects and criteria. In addition, this study was based on the perceptions of a group of experts. The interviewees assessed qualitative information; perhaps quantitative data must be included in the study. These issues thus limit the generalizability of the findings. Finally, the mapping of the interrelationships among the aspects was based on the informants’ input; thus, the objective and subjective perceptions might introduce bias. A sensitivity analysis could be included in a future study.