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Opinion: Australia’s Media Still Doesn’t Understand Bali

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Opinion: Australia’s Media Still Doesn’t Understand Bali
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Opinion: Australia’s Media Still Doesn’t Understand Bali

By Jamie McIntyre

If you judged Bali purely by reading some Australian newspapers, you could be forgiven for thinking the island was somewhere Australians should avoid.

Yet the opposite keeps happening.

Every year, hundreds of thousands of Australians continue to holiday, invest, retire and increasingly relocate to Bali. Flights remain full, hotels continue expanding, property development continues at record levels and Bali’s popularity appears stronger than ever.

This raises an obvious question.

Why do some sections of the Australian media appear to devote so much attention to Bali’s problems while giving comparatively little coverage to its extraordinary success?

Like every destination in the world, Bali has its challenges. Crime occurs. Scams exist. Traffic can be frustrating. There are unfortunate accidents involving tourists. These are legitimate subjects for journalists to report.

But if the overwhelming majority of stories focus only on the negatives, readers can easily develop a perception that bears little resemblance to the experience of the millions of visitors who safely enjoy Bali every year.

That is simply how modern media often works.

Bad news attracts attention. Conflict generates clicks. Controversy sells newspapers.

A headline warning Australians about Bali will almost always attract more readers than a story about another family enjoying a wonderful holiday or another investor successfully completing a property purchase.

This is not unique to Bali. It is a feature of much of modern journalism worldwide.

However, Bali presents an interesting case study because negative headlines have done remarkably little to reduce Australians’ affection for the island.

Australians continue returning because they experience Bali for themselves.

They enjoy its culture, hospitality, affordability, warm climate, restaurants, beaches, wellness industry and increasingly sophisticated property market.

Many also compare the cost of living with Australia’s rising housing costs and conclude that Bali offers an attractive alternative for holidays, retirement, remote work or investment.

That trend appears to be strengthening rather than weakening.

As someone who now lives in Indonesia and is involved in property development, I have seen firsthand how dramatically Bali has evolved over the past decade.

International schools continue expanding.

Healthcare continues improving.

Luxury hospitality continues growing.

Infrastructure is steadily improving.

Foreign investment remains strong.

The island today is very different from the Bali many Australians first visited twenty or thirty years ago.

Unfortunately, those positive developments often receive far less attention than isolated incidents.

Recently, some Australian media outlets have also published stories concerning me and businesses associated with me.

I disagree with aspects of that reporting and believe readers should always examine all available information before reaching conclusions about any individual or company.

Healthy journalism plays an important role in a democracy.

Equally, healthy scepticism should apply to all reporting, particularly where complex commercial matters are reduced to simple headlines.

Readers deserve context, not merely controversy.

The reality is that Bali’s popularity continues to grow despite decades of periodic negative headlines.

If those headlines were truly changing Australians’ perceptions, visitor numbers would likely tell a very different story.

Instead, Australians continue arriving in record numbers.

Perhaps that says more about Bali than it does about the headlines.

So my invitation is a simple one.

Don’t rely solely on headlines.

Come to Bali and see for yourself.

Experience the culture. Meet the people. Explore the restaurants, beaches, resorts and villages. Talk to the Australians, Europeans and Indonesians who have chosen to build their lives and businesses here.

Judge Bali based on your own experience, not someone else’s opinion.

If you’re interested in Bali’s rapidly growing tourism and property sector, I also invite you to visit the expanding LUX Property Group developments and see firsthand the progress being made.

You’ll find an expanding collection of completed and operating villas, hotels and resorts, together with our vision for the next generation of master-planned mini cities across Bali and Lombok.

Sometimes the best way to separate perception from reality is simply to visit and see it with your own eyes.

For accommodation and resort bookings, visit:

Luxbalistays.com

HotelKbookings.com

To learn more about our current and future developments, visit:

LuxProjectsBali.com

The best judge of Bali is not a headline.

It’s your own experience.

Millions of Australians have already discovered that.

I believe millions more will in the years ahead.

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