International
tourist arrivals grew by a healthy 4.5% in the first eight months of
2011 according to the latest data from UNWTO. Europe (+6%),
surprisingly, showed the strongest growth amid continuing economic
uncertainty.
January-August 2011: Positive note despite increased uncertainty
International tourist arrivals grew by
4.5% in the first eight months of 2011 to a total of 671 million (29
million more than in the same period of 2010).
The Northern Hemisphere summer peak
season months of July and August showed encouraging results with growth
at close to 4% over 2010, corresponding to an extra 8 million arrivals.
At 118 million, July saw the highest number of international tourist
arrivals ever recorded in one month (August: 112 million).
Contrary to the trend in recent years,
growth in arrivals during the first eight months of 2011 was higher in
advanced economies (+4.9%) than in emerging ones (+4.0%), due largely to
the particularly strong results of Europe (+6%). In Northern Europe
(+7%) and Central and Eastern Europe (+8%), recovery from the 2009
decline, which began in 2010, gained momentum this year. The same is
true for some Southern European destinations (+8%), which this year also
benefited from the shift of travel away from Middle East (-9%) and
North Africa (-15%).
Contrasting with growing economic
uncertainty, European Union destinations (+6%) benefited strongly from
this growth, bringing some relief for those destinations facing major
economic challenges such as Greece (+14%), Ireland (+13%), Portugal
(+11%) or Spain (+8%).
“Despite current volatility,
international tourism is proving to be an important economic driver for
many European economies, bringing much needed foreign exchange and
helping to ease the pressure on their balance of payments,” said UNWTO
Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai. “UNWTO encourages European governments
to support tourism and consider the sector as one that can back economic
recovery given its capacity to distribute wealth and create jobs across
the region,” he added.
In Asia (+6%), destinations in
South-East (+12%) and South Asia (+13%) remained the rising stars, with
double-digit growth rates, while arrivals slowed in North-East Asia –
partly due to the decline in Japanese outbound tourism – and in
Oceania.
South America (+13%) continues to lead
growth in the Americas (+5%) benefiting from positive economic trends in
the region and increased regional integration. Results in the other
sub-regions – North America (+3%) Central America (+4%) and the
Caribbean (+4%) – were slightly below average.
In Africa arrivals were down by 4% as a result of the downturn in North Africa; Sub-Saharan African destinations grew by +4%.
In spite of the current situation in the
Middle East, some destinations such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates continue to grow steadily. Results of recent months (July and
August) also show an improvement in arrivals to Egypt.
Source markets: Emerging economies lead among spenders
Data on receipts from and expenditure on
international tourism for the first eight months of 2011 confirm the
positive trend in arrivals.
Among the top ten destinations in
international tourism receipts, the two main earners - the USA (+11%)
and Spain (+10%) – show exports from tourism growing above the rate of
arrivals, while growth in Italy (+6%), Germany (+6%) and the UK (+7%)
was also significant.
In terms of source markets, expenditure
on travel abroad continued to be very strong from the emerging economies
of China (+30%), Russia (+21%), Brazil (+44%) and India (+33%). Major
mature markets such as Germany (+4%), the USA (+5%), Canada (+6%) and
Italy (+4%) also performed positively, while growth in expenditure on
travel abroad from the Scandinavian markets, the Republic of Korea and
Australia was particularly strong.
Outlook for 2012
Growth is expected to soften in the
remainder of 2011 and international tourist arrivals are projected to
end the year at between +4.0% and +4.5%, in line with UNWTO’s forecast
at the beginning of the year. For 2012, growth is forecast to be in the
range of +3% to +4%, slightly lower than in 2011 but sustaining the
positive results of 2010 (+7%) and 2011.
“A stalled economic recovery and
increased financial and fiscal challenges have brought growing
uncertainty to the tourism market. Nevertheless, the trends of recent
months make us confident that though at a slower pace, international
tourism will continue to grow in 2012, creating much needed exports and
jobs in many economies around the world,” said Mr. RifaSOURCE: UNWTO
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