Santa Fe New Mexican

Travel expected to add record $11.1T to global economy in ’24

- By Lebawit Lily Girma

The travel industry’s global economic impact continues to gain ground. This year, it’s expected to reach a record-breaking $11.1 trillion, surpassing its prior high of $10 trillion in 2019. In another decade, tourism is forecast to become a $16 trillion industry, at which point it would make up 11.4% of the global gross domestic product.

Today, 1 in 10 people are employed in jobs that relate to tourism; by 2034, that will climb, with an estimated 12.2% of global jobs contributi­ng to the sector.

All this is part of the 2024 global Economic Impact Research released this month by the World Travel & Tourism Council, the leading advocacy group focused on quantifyin­g the industry’s economic impact a global level. The findings were produced in collaborat­ion with research advisory firm

Oxford Economics.

In order to create its forecasts, the WTTC analysts collect data from government­s and industry groups that report on topics like internatio­nal tourism arrivals and expenditur­es in the previous year, and combine it with proprietar­y, forward-looking assessment­s of travel supply and demand.

To the experts at WTTC, the biggest numbers are the least surprising. The growth of the tourism industry being reported now is in step with previous projection­s reported by the group; last year, a similar study predicted that the sector would represent $15.5 trillion by 2033.

But details within the report provide a more nuanced and notable picture: Travel’s record-setting rebound in 2023 came without much help from the Chinese and American markets, where internatio­nal arrivals continued to lag significan­tly behind pre-pandemic levels. The likelihood that those markets will soon recover is what sets up the potential for record-breaking numbers this year.

The 14-figure sums headlining WTTC’s report can be broken down into three types of travel transactio­ns. Direct travel spending includes all expenses that are most clearly connected to the act of traveling: Think hotels, tours, and transporta­tion, plus public investment in these types of services.

Then there’s indirect travel spending, which quantifies the ripple effect of spending from those businesses. Among the types of expenses included in this category are sheets and towels that hotels purchase from local vendors, or ingredient­s purchased in bulk for the breakfast buffet.

Lastly there’s induced spending, which accounts for the trickle-down effects of hospitalit­y employees using their salaries to stimulate their local economies.

Julia Simpson, president and chief executive officer at World Travel & Tourism Council, speaking to Bloomberg from Boston, says the U.S. travel sector has been one exception because of how the dollar has strengthen­ed, making a trip to the States more expensive for people in countries that are struggling with inflation.

Ongoing visa delays have also been a factor, she adds. US inbound internatio­nal visitation spending remains at more than 25% below pre-pandemic levels. In China, visitor spending lags by 60%, making it the least-recovered tourism economy out of 185 countries in WTTC’s report.

Also notable is the fact that more money continues to be spent on domestic travel versus internatio­nal trips. This year, it will make up a record $5.4 trillion, a 10% increase from 2019 levels.

All told, 142 out of the 185 surveyed countries are expected to exceed their 2019 tourism performanc­e levels in 2024, and almost all of those are additional­ly expected to see year-over-year growth. That means that not only will the travel economy at large be breaking records this year-assuming all pans out as expected-but it will break records at each of those local levels, too.

“Travel isn’t just back, travel is booming,” says WTTC’s Simpson. “We’re talking about a really, really strong sector.”

Travel isn’t just back, travel is booming.”

Julia Simpson, World Travel & Tourism Council

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