Tourism means South Tyrol isn't having an issue during Italy's recession


Skift Take

This German-speaking autonomous region of Italy has fended for itself for years and now a confluence of smart spending, pristine scenery, and dissatisfaction with Italy's economy has it considering going solo.
[caption id="" align="alignright" width="343"] People take pictures in front of the former church tower of the Village of Graun in South Tyrol which sticks out of the partially frozen Lake Reschen reservoir in Northern Italy November 29, 2008. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann[/caption] Source: Reuters Author: Lisa Jucca Pure spring water, solitary Alpine paths, the discreet hospitality of mountain people: this is the sober recipe with which the remote South Tyrolean hamlet of Sulden has won over German Chancellor Angela Merkel for seven summers in a row. Merkel, a keen hiker who shuns exotic holiday destinations, was introduced to this village, population 350, at the foot of the majestic Ortles glacier by Italy's best-known living climber, Reinhold Messner, over dinner in Berlin in 2004. "She was planning to go to Seiser Alm, another resort in the Dolomites. But then Messner's wife Sabine said: why don't you come to Sulden? And Merkel replied: I have never heard of it," said Messner's friend and expedition companion Paul Hanny. Six million tourists made their way last year to this pristine, mostly German-speaking Italian region wedged between the Swiss and Austrian borders, seeking refuge from the stresses of Europe's deep economic crisis and keeping South Tyrol's economy afloat while the rest of Italy sank into recession. Like elsewhere in South Tyrol, Sulden, nicknamed 'Merkel's Valley' after her frequent visits, relies on German tourism to make up for the shrinking presence of cash-strapped Italians. The region's inhabitants enjoy a much closer relationship with Eur