PARIS, France – A post-pandemic recovery in tourism risks faltering as the global economy loses momentum amid the energy shock triggered by Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, high inflation and weakened household purchasing power, according to a new OECD report.
OECD Tourism Trends and Policies 2022 says many countries saw a strong rebound in tourism in 2022 on the back of pent-up demand, household savings and travel vouchers. However, international tourism is now not expected to recover until 2024 or 2025, or even later.
After six decades of consistent growth, the sector was dealt a huge blow by COVID-19. International tourism came to a near complete halt at the height of the pandemic, which accounted for 77c of every USD 1 of lost revenue in service exports in OECD countries in 2020. With domestic tourism also constrained, tourism’s direct contribution to GDP fell by 1.9 percentage points in OECD countries with available data.
COVID-19 highlighted the vital role tourism plays in global, national and local economies, says the report. Before the pandemic, tourism directly contributed 4.4 percent of GDP and 6.9 percent of employment, and tourism generated 20.5 percent of service-related exports on average in OECD countries.
The latest evidence indicates that tourism has performed above expectations in many countries. International tourist flows in July 2022 were just 19.9 percent below July 2019 levels across reporting OECD countries, although there were marked variations across regions. Arrivals in Denmark, Greece, Luxembourg, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain exceeded 2019 levels but in countries bordering Russia and Ukraine, tourist numbers were at least 30 percent below pre-pandemic levels in July 2022. In OECD countries in the Asia Pacific region tourist arrivals were at least 40 percent lower than in 2019.
“The pandemic exposed underlying weaknesses in the wider tourism economy,” OECD secretary-general Mathias Cormann said. “Fallout from Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine is now threatening the sector’s recovery. The challenge for governments and businesses is not only to boost tourism in the short-term, but to also ensure the sector’s longer-term strength and sustainability.”
Tourism businesses, already struggling to recover from the pandemic, are now also facing rising energy, food and other input costs. The sector faces huge uncertainty regarding labour and skills shortages which further risk constraining recovery. Restoring safe mobility is also required to bring back traveller confidence and tourism demand.
To support recovery and to transform the tourism sector, policy action is needed to:
Read more about the 2022 edition of “OECD Tourism Trends and Policies”, co-funded by the European Union.
Source: caribbeannewsglobal.com