Abstract
This study examines the disconnect between sustainability rhetoric and fiscal practice in the Balearic Islands' tourism tax policy (Spain). Using a novel AI-assisted method, we analyze 297 tax-funded projects worth €845.8 million and 357 civil society proposals from 2016 to 2025. Findings reveal a shift from eco-social aims toward a green growth agenda, prioritizing competitiveness over redistribution or ecological limits. Despite growing public demand for tourism degrowth and justice, governance structures marginalize civic influence. The study highlights how sustainability language is co-opted to legitimize expansion, raising concerns about greenwashing. We argue for redesigning tourism taxes with participatory governance, progressive criteria, and sufficiency-based goals. This approach can transform tourism fiscal tools into genuine levers for environmental justice and systemic transition.
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•AI-assisted analysis reveals green growth bias in tourism tax-funded projects.•Civil society demands post-growth reforms, but its influence in governance is limited.•Sustainability rhetoric is used to legitimize tourism expansion and suppress dissent.•A progressive, participatory tax design is key to eco-social transformation.