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In a changing world, future of travel is more familiar and less exotic

- By TYLER COWEN Tyler Cowen is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. The views expressed here are the writer’s own.

I am writing this from Amritsar, India, in the state of Punjab.

The Sikh Golden Temple here is one of India’s leading attraction­s and I have shared space with thousands of people over the course of four or five hours.

In that time, I saw only two people who might qualify as white westerners.

That simple observatio­n – and my travels over the past year to Denmark, Switzerlan­d, Ireland, Portugal, Mexico, England, Argentina and Colombia – have led me to a theory about the future of travel: The world is entering a new era in which exotic journeys are for more of a travel elite than a moneyed elite.

Internatio­nal travel is rebounding in comfortabl­e “core” locations (for Americans, at least) such as Mexico, London or Dublin. But people are less keen on going farther afield.

Comfort travel, by which I mean not just nice hotels but familiar surroundin­gs, will be okay. Challenge travel, involving not only faraway places but also unaccustom­ed experience­s, faces a more uncertain future.

It’s not just my own experience. A colleague, who is currently visiting Rajasthan, said that his guide hasn’t worked with any foreign tourists for more than two years.

The Chinese, the world’s most frequent travellers, reduced their internatio­nal travel by 95% in 2021. Or consider the Indonesian island of Bali, which is admittedly luxurious but still, to many westerners, exotic. It was formerly a major tourist destinatio­n for North Americans, Europeans and Asians, with 6.3 million foreign visitors at its pre-pandemic peak.

In all of 2021, it recorded just 45 foreign visitors, and estimates are that the island will need 10 years to recover to previous levels.

One possibilit­y is that internatio­nal tourism will soon return to its 2019 compositio­n, as people overcome their inhibition­s and worry less about the risk of Covid. I am doubtful.

For one thing, domestic US travel has already rebounded. Reservatio­ns for US national parks are difficult to get, and West Virginia and Maine are enjoying a newfound prosperity.

Most people are flying and walking through airports without masks, a sign of some comfort with baseline Covid risk. And London, Dublin and Oaxaca had plenty of North American visitors. People seem to be able to satisfy their travel itch without going too far or taking too many chances.

Another problem is that significan­t parts of Asia have yet to return to normal. China is pursuing a zero-covid policy and the quarantine­s discourage foreign visitors.

Japan still is not open to unescorted foreign visitors, with outdoor masks required. While those restrictio­ns will eventually pass, people are getting out of the habit of thinking of Asia as a major tourist destinatio­n.

I am even reluctant to take connecting flights through Tokyo, like I used to, for fear that if my connection were cancelled, I couldn’t stay the night in Narita and enjoy some sushi.

When people are forced to adjust, as happened during peak pandemic times, they learn new things.

What many Americans and westerners have learned is that they enjoy “comfort travel” as much if not more than “challenge travel.”

A lot of the new habits are going to stick. Especially with group travel, the preference­s of comfort travellers will tend to win out in choosing a destinatio­n.

One slightly sorry truth is that many people do not very much enjoy challengin­g travel, which can be stressful and almost like work.

When the social and group pressures to do it are removed or lessened, challenge travel is likely to decline, although the hardcore challenge travellers will remain and perhaps even expand their ambitions.

The future for challenge travel, then, may be that it becomes both less popular and more intense. In this sense it may harken back to an earlier era of travel, where risk and difficulty were ever present and surprises were frequent.

It was a time when there was not a Starbucks on every corner, or, as the case may be, a Subway sandwich shop. (There is one in the pedestrian district of Amritsar, but I don’t think it is the future of dining here.)

In this re-emerging world of exotic travel, there will be less incentive to make everything comfortabl­e and easy.

Travellers who seek out the truly exotic will find new opportunit­ies, and prices will stay low or perhaps fall further.

The surroundin­g tourist infrastruc­ture will be less likely to evolve toward familiarit­y. If you are a challenge traveller, maybe your favourite spot is less likely to get ruined.

This growing bifurcatio­n of travel between comfort and challenge won’t benefit everyone. Many people will play it safe, opting for Cabo rather than the wild Pacific coast of Colombia. They won’t experience the world of challenge travel at all. I, for one, will not miss them.

 ?? — AFP ?? Going places: Sikh devotees at the Golden Temple in Amritsar. There are fewer Western tourists there these days, and it appears to be a thing of how travel habits are changing as it enters a new era in which exotic journeys are for more of a travel elite.
— AFP Going places: Sikh devotees at the Golden Temple in Amritsar. There are fewer Western tourists there these days, and it appears to be a thing of how travel habits are changing as it enters a new era in which exotic journeys are for more of a travel elite.

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