Nepal relies on its geography to lure visitors. It can do far more.
Rajan Sharma & Shreyasi Rana
Nepal has spent decades defining itself as a country that others should want to engage with on account of its mountains, its geography and its spiritual heritage. That representation isn’t incorrect; however, it has been passive. When a country solely relies on its geographic attributes to entice visitors, it remains at the mercy of how others choose to value those attributes. It is time to focus on the ability to oversee and leverage the conditions that determine who arrives, from where and to what end.
At the heart of this transformation lies the integration of tourism, trade logistics and connectivity into a unified national framework. Diplomacy in trade and tourism implies going beyond standard bilateral agreements and analysing what Nepal can offer that its neighbours need. India, Bangladesh and Bhutan are three economies with distinct but interlocking interests, and Nepal sits in the middle of that arrangement in chronically underused ways. Bangladesh lacks direct air access to Bhutan. Nepal's airports could serve as transit hubs for that route. This kind of arrangement is a negotiated exchange that generates traffic, revenue, and diplomatic capital simultaneously.
Smaller economies have demonstrated what this looks like in practice. Singapore built its economic identity around being the most reliable connector in its region—for goods, people and capital. The UAE, with no particular natural advantage beyond location, turned Dubai into a global transit node through investment in infrastructure and aggressive air service negotiations. Neither country waited for traffic to arrive organically. Connectivity is not a byproduct of development; it is a deal that gets made.
Expanding air connectivity beyond Kathmandu falls under this diplomatic agenda. Provinces with airports that currently handle minimal traffic represent untapped capacity. Routing international charter traffic or regional flights through Pokhara or Bhairahawa, tied to pilgrimage circuits, trekking seasons or cargo movement, requires negotiation with foreign carriers and neighbouring governments, which should be driven by a clear national position.
Constraints in Nepal's trade and tourism performance are not a shortage of policy ideas. There is no deficiency of master plans and roadmaps that correctly diagnose the gaps and recommend sensible action.
The problem lies between the document and the outcome, which is almost always an institutional problem. Tourism, commerce, civil aviation and physical infrastructure are managed by separate ministries that coordinate poorly and are subject to different political pressures. An investment in Lumbini's tourism infrastructure involves multiple ministries and agencies, each with its own approval chain. Projects stall not from lack of intent but from the absence of a single mechanism that holds the different parts accountable to a shared timeline.
What Nepal requires is the establishment of an inter-ministerial task force with a clear mandate, comprising representatives from tourism, business, civil aviation and infrastructure, and having oversight from the Prime Minister’s office. Nations successful in boosting their commerce and tourism performance have tended to do so through the formation of execution groups that transcend conventional bureaucratic procedures. The task force approach is effective if it has substantive decision-making power and its success is measured against tangible outcomes.
More importantly, logistics tends to be treated as a background function—the part of the economy that moves things around after the real decisions have been made. That framing undervalues what logistics actually does, particularly where physical constraints are significant and the margin for supply chain failure is low.
In the context of international business, logistics companies determine whether Nepalese exporters will be able to provide credible assurances to their customers. A carpet maker in Kathmandu and an exporter of herbal products from the mid-hills area will not be able to develop buyer-client connections due to the uncertainty of delivery schedules. Cold chain facilities, bonded storage close to border crossings and cargo services at regional airports should not be mere afterthoughts in export growth.
Tourism has a logistics dimension that rarely appears in policy documents. The food served at hotels in Pokhara, the handicrafts stocked in Lumbini's retail circuit and the medical supplies on trekking routes—all depend on supply chains that currently run through informal networks with limited reliability. Building logistics-backed supply clusters near major tourism destinations would lower operating costs for hospitality businesses, improve the consistency of visitor experience, and generate local employment less exposed to fluctuations in visitor numbers.
Thailand’s strategy to develop tourism supply chains around destinations like Chiang Mai and Phuket, where local supplies have been deliberately tied up with hospitality demand through procurement processes, is a good example. Treating logistics as infrastructure instead of a cost centre completely restructures the industry.
Although air connectivity has improved, the status of roads and railroads is another story altogether. Border-crossing roads between Nepal and India have an inconsistent performance record. While some integrated check posts have succeeded in streamlining procedures, the overall border crossing journey by both freight and passengers has been uneven. Documentation needs at each end of the border have often failed to align.
Rail may be a long-term consideration, but slow implementation of rail lines such as those connecting Raxaul with Kathmandu, among others, does have implications today. The rail link could make a significant difference for pilgrim tourists, an important sector of tourism that has very large numbers and is directly connected with India’s domestic tourism industry.
Investors in tourism infrastructures and logistic services consistently cite two concerns in Nepal: approval processes that are slow and often unpredictable, and uncertainty around profit repatriation. Policy frameworks have been revised several times, but confidence among foreign investors remains lower than Nepal's fundamentals warrant.
The connection between investment climate and connectivity outcomes is straightforward. A logistics firm considering a cold storage facility near Bhairahawa will make that decision based on whether the regulatory environment is stable and whether earnings can be repatriated without administrative friction. Investors evaluating a mid-scale property in Lumbini will weigh FDI approval timelines alongside market projections. The changes required in these sectors need not be revolutionary; rather, they should be predictable and consistent.
Nepal retains the assets, the geography and the heritage. But what it lacks today is an integrated approach that will help convert its potential into a consistent international hub. With its focus on tourism diplomacy, connectivity and logistics, Nepal can go from its passive position to becoming an active participant in the world arena. The question is no longer whether Nepal has the assets, but whether it has the institutional discipline to negotiate their value.
It was originally published on thakathmandupost.

