Date: 13 December 2012
World tourist numbers hit 1 billion this week.
UNWTO says billionth tourist expected to touch down
somewhere in the world today.
MADRID: The number of annual tourists crossing international
borders will reach 1 billion this week, the United Nations World Tourism
Organisation said yesterday, with Chinese travellers the biggest growth driver.
Tourism grew between 3.5 percent and 4 percent in 2012, the secretary general
of the UNWTO said, with the billionth tourist expected to touch down somewhere
in the world today.
Chinese tourists, whose numbers increased 30 percent
year-on-year, and their Russian counterparts, whose numbers swelled 16 percent,
offer big opportunities for traditional tourist destinations like the
Mediterranean, but countries must do more to make travelling easier for them,
the UN said.
“It is not acceptable any more to spend so much money on
promoting some destinations and then spend even more money to tell people not
to come,” the UN’s Taleb Rifai said in an interview with Reuters.
Rifai said Mediterranean countries must relax visa
restrictions for visitors from nations like Brazil, Russia India and China
where growth has outpaced recession-hit Europe and emerging middle classes are
increasingly travelling outside national borders. “We need to be specially
tailoring and designing policies. A Chinese is not going to come to the
Mediterranean just to visit one destination…These are the travelers of the
future.”
He also warned against tax hikes that could scare away
tourists. Many European countries have raised taxes as part of austerity
programs to get government finances back on track. When Spain raised valued
added tax (VAT) for the leisure sector to 10 percent from 8 percent this year,
the industry estimated it could lose around 2 billion euros (US$2.6 billion) in
revenue. “We need to be sure that these taxes are designed in policy and in
practice so that they do not choke the industry and in layman’s terms, kill the
goose that lays the egg,” he said.
Spain, where tourism accounts for 11 percent of economic
output, and its highly indebted euro zone peer Greece, did not fare as well
from unrest in the Middle East this year as last. Tourism to Spain grew 3
percent this year, compared to 8 percent in 2011 when unrest in Arab countries
was flaring up. Visitors shunned North Africa last year as Arab Spring protests
spread across the region, redirecting up to 7.5 million tourists to sunny
Mediterranean destinations like Spain, Greece and the Balkans.
The UNWTO, which is based in Madrid, expects the number of
world travellers to reach 1.8 billion by 2020, when one in 10 people will be
employed in the travel and tourism industry.
Copyrights @ www.reuters.com
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