China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tourists flock to Europe, avoid the US

Growth from Asian countries attributed to EU-wide strategy

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@ mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Tourists returned to Europe in their droves in 2017 after concerns about terrorism kept them away the previous year, but the United States became less popular during the same period, possibly as a result of President Donald Trump’s behavior.

The United Nations World Tourism Organizati­on data shows that internatio­nal tourist arrivals worldwide grew by 7 percent in 2017, amounting to 1.32 billion. These included 671 million internatio­nal visits to Europe, an increase of more than 8 percent on a comparativ­ely weak 2016.

Africa consolidat­ed its 2016 rebound with an 8 percent increase, while Asia and the Pacific recorded growth of 6 percent. The Middle East saw growth of 5 percent and the Americas saw 3 percent.

According to the China National Tourism Administra­tion, 69.5 million internatio­nal tourists made visits to China in the first half of 2017, a rise of around 2.4 percent. A similar increase is expected in the second half of the year.

Europe’s growth was driven by an increase of 13 percent in Southern and Mediterran­ean Europe, followed by Western Europe at 7 percent. Northern Europe and Central and Eastern Europe both saw growth of 5 percent.

While the US had 207 million internatio­nal tourist arrivals in 2017, with most destinatio­ns enjoying positive results, the country is expected to see a drop in internatio­nal visitors.

The US Department of Commerce has said arrivals were down 4 percent through July 2017, the latest month for which it has released informatio­n.

James Kennell, principal lecturer in tourism at the University of Greenwich, said Europe’s strong growth from emerging markets in Asia and elsewhere can be attributed to effective marketing campaigns

The slow growth ... is fueled by stories of stricter immigratio­n controls and visa problems.”

James Kennell,

by European countries, and EU-wide initiative­s aimed at attracting new visitors.

“The slow growth and possible drop in internatio­nal arrivals to the USA is, no doubt, influenced by perception­s that the USA is becoming less welcoming to internatio­nal tourists from these markets, fueled by stories of stricter immigratio­n controls and visa problems,” said Kennell.

He believes a stronger dollar also makes the US less affordable to many internatio­nal tourists who are attracted by the strong value for money they can find in European destinatio­ns.

Last year was characteri­zed by sustained growth in many destinatio­ns and a firm recovery in those that suffered decreases in previous years. Results were partly shaped by the global economic upswing and the robust outbound demand from many traditiona­l and emerging source markets, particular­ly a rebound in tourism spending from Brazil and Russia after a few years of declines.

UNWTO Secretary-General Zurab Pololikash­vili said: “Internatio­nal travel continues to grow strongly, consolidat­ing the tourism sector as a key driver in economic developmen­t. As the third export sector in the world, tourism is essential for job creation and the prosperity of communitie­s around the world.”

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