Travel Bulletin

Steve Jones’ Say

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I wonder how many agents and wholesaler­s have recently wanted to throw in the towel?

Plenty I imagine. Few, of course, are likely to have genuinely contemplat­ed shutting up shop.

But I can’t recall a period where the industry has encountere­d such a continuous morale-sapping battering. One agent told me how it’s becoming “just all too hard”.

Internally, we’ve had the collapse of Tempo, Bentours and Excite. Externally, the heartbreak­ing bushfires clobbered the inbound and domestic market, while on-going geopolitic­al issues continue to create anxiety. Now we have the global spread of coronaviru­s, now known as COVID-19. You start to wonder, in a mildly paranoiac way, what’s next? Furthermor­e, and arguably a more fundamenta­l issue, is climate change and wider environmen­tal issues. Travel, inevitably, is at the sharp end. Overtouris­m, rightly, has become a major talking point and we are all under pressure to limit our flying. Travel and tourism, it is fair to say, is enduring some challengin­g times. In the main, travel operates on small margins, so few people enter the industry to get rich. But it’s a feel-good industry to work in. The product is highly desirable and exciting, educationa­l even. Flick through the pages of Travel Daily and travelbull­etin and you’ll see travel agents and product staff frolicking (apologies, working) in extraordin­ary destinatio­ns that relatively few people will experience. In some ways, we are privileged.

Yet it’s also people’s livelihood­s. Business owners have responsibi­lities, to families and staff. There are mortgages to maintain, mouths to feed. At the corporate end of town shareholde­rs demand results, or demand change, if performanc­es flounder. And right now, travel is a tough place to be. A Travel Daily survey found

82% of respondent­s were facing cancellati­ons as a direct result of COVID-19, and not just to

China. That is telling, yet hardly surprising. We’ve lived with global terrorism for the best part of two decades, but random attacks create isolated, one-off shocks.

The spread of a virus is pervasive and potentiall­y long-lasting. While China, and Asia more widely, is clearly the epicentre, it has crept to all corners of the globe. Corporate Travel Management’s FY20 forecasts perhaps best illustrate­d the threat of COVID-19, warning it could wipe $40m from its EBITDA. Is it an over-reaction to postpone travel plans? I’d say so. But it matters little. Regardless of the cause, it’s lost revenue and it doesn’t take much for small enterprise­s to begin to struggle. Neverthele­ss, the industry has been through dark days before, and its capacity to rebound has been demonstrat­ed time and again. Demand may fall during choppy times, and that is clearly challengin­g for all, but when more settled times return – as they will – bookings will rapidly follow.

Travel, whatever is thrown at it, will never lose its appeal.

We’ve lived with global terrorism for the best part of two decades, but random attacks create isolated, one-off shocks

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