THISDAY

Tourism will Lose Minimum of $1.2tn to Pandemic, Says UN

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The COVID-19 crisis could cost global tourism and related sectors from $1.2 to $3.3 trillion in lost revenue, the United Nations said yesterday.

Lockdown restrictio­ns to control the spread of COVID-19 have hammered the tourism sector particular­ly hard, the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t said in a report.

The world tourism industry is expected to lose at least $1.2 trillion in the best-case scenario, UNCTAD calculated.

In a report entitled ‘COVID-19 and Tourism: Assessing the Economic Consequenc­es,’ UNCTAD modelled three scenarios that included the sector’s supply chain.

The scenarios are moderate, where a third of annual inbound tourism expenditur­e is removed, equivalent to a fourmonth standstill; intermedia­te, removing two-thirds, equivalent to an eight-month halt; and dramatic, where all expenditur­e is removed, equivalent to a 12-month shutdown.

In the most optimistic scenario, the world’s tourism sector could lose at least $1.2 trillion, or 1.5 per cent of global gross domestic product. That rose to $2.2 trillion or 2.8 per cent of global GDP during an eight-month halt.

In the most pessimisti­c scenario, UNCTAD projected losses of $3.3 trillion or 4.2 per cent of global GDP.

The report said that unemployme­nt could rise in some countries by more than 20 percentage points and some sectors could almost be wiped out if the standstill lasted an entire year.

Developing countries are among those set to suffer the steepest losses in GDP terms.

In just the moderate scenario, Jamaica would lose 11 per cent of its national output; Thailand nine percent, Croatia eight percent, and Portugal six percent.

The Dominican Republic, Kenya and Morocco would all lose five per cent.

In some countries, such as small island developing states, tourism accounts for more than half of GDP.

“These numbers are a clear reminder of something we often seem to forget: the economic importance of the sector and its role as a lifeline for millions of people all around the world,” said Pamela CokeHamilt­on, UNCTAD’s director of internatio­nal trade.

“For many countries, like the small island developing states, a collapse in tourism means a collapse in their developmen­t prospects. This is not something we can afford.”

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