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Tourist arrivals in Saudi Arabia exceed pre-pandemic levels, UN report says

- DEEPTHI NAIR

Saudi Arabia recorded a 156 per cent increase in tourist arrivals last year compared with 2019, amid the recovery of the tourism sector following the pandemic, according to Saudi Press Agency.

The Middle East is the only region that achieved tourism growth over pre-pandemic levels, receiving 122 per cent more tourists last year than in 2019, the state news agency said, quoting a World Tourism Organisati­on report.

“The global rate of tourism recovery in 2023 stood at 88 per cent of pre-pandemic levels, registerin­g an estimated 1.3 billion arrivals,” the report said.

“Internatio­nal tourism revenue reached $1.3 trillion, approachin­g 93 per cent of the $1.5 trillion achieved in 2019.”

Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, is transformi­ng its economy under its Vision 2030 diversific­ation agenda as it aims to reduce its dependence on oil, boost domestic industries and support jobs growth.

It is developing several large projects in line with this strategy, including Qiddiya, as well as Neom, a $500 billion futuristic city, the Red Sea Project and the Diriyah Gate heritage developmen­t.

Midway through the Vision 2030 scheme, “strong performanc­e has been achieved against many of the economic goals”, a report by consultanc­y PwC in October found.

Saudi Arabia’s mega projects “have made significan­t progress in the last few years, moving from the conceptual phase to constructi­on”, the report by the UN agency said.

The kingdom was fifth in a global ranking of internatio­nal arrivals in 2023, returning to pre-Covid levels for inbound visitors and buoyed by Hajj pilgrims, investment in marketing the country as a tourism destinatio­n and efforts to diversify its economy, a separate report by travel analysis company ForwardKey­s showed.

The kingdom followed the Dominican Republic, Colombia, Mexico and Greece in the top five, which was dominated by “sun and beach” destinatio­ns.

The UN agency estimated the direct contributi­on of the global tourism sector to gross domestic product last year at 3 per cent to reach $3.3 trillion, the SPA reported.

The Madrid-based company estimated the global tourism industry to fully recover from the pandemic during 2024 and expand by 2 per cent when compared with 2019.

Saudi Arabia topped G20 countries for number of arriving tourists last year, and ranked second among the fastest-growing tourist destinatio­ns in the world in the first three quarters of last year, according to SPA.

Various tourist destinatio­ns in the kingdom registered a record in spending by overseas visitors, according to data issued by the Central Bank of Saudi Arabia.

Tourism revenue in Saudi Arabia exceeded 100 billion Saudi riyals ($26.7 billion) for the first three quarters of 2023, a 72 per cent annual rise, the central bank data showed.

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