The Sunday Guardian

Rising incomes, lifestyle shift boost growth in tourism industry

- SIDDHI JAIN

With travellers rejecting frugality and digging deeper into their pockets to seek world-class experience­s, the Indian travel and tourism industry is firming up plans to cash in on their arrivals.

India has already moved up six places to rank 34th on World Travel and Tourism Competitiv­e Index 2019 released recently by the World Economic Forum (WEF). And with the United Nations World Tourism Organisati­on (UNWTO) predicting the country to account for nearly 50 million tourists by 2020, the Indian travel and tourism industry is eyeing a bigger share of the world tourism pie.

Digital payments platform PAYTM has recently announced an investment of Rs 250 crore in its travel business over the next six months.

“While large sectors in India are laying off people, the percentage of tourism jobs has risen by 2.9% in past years. Tourism is poised find a place among the top five career options for millennial­s, who also are a major traveller segment,” said Mohit Poddar, CEO & co-founder, Shoes on Loose.

“Rising personal incomes and changing lifestyles, availabili­ty of lower fares, diverse travel packages are pushing the more affluent Indian middle class to spend more on travel,” IPE Global MD Ashwajit Singh told IANS.

Ankit Rastogi, head of accommodat­ion and activities at Cleartrip, said Indians are allocating budgets to travel like never before and their own data corroborat­es the trend. “Comparable to developed economies of the world, Indians spent close to 11% of their average disposable income on travel and tourism.

“As per Cleartrip data, travellers are willing to spend more on travel, evident from the share of 4 and 5 star hotels moving up to about 40% in 2019. For accommodat­ion, 38% of the bookings are for hotels with average room rate per night Rs 5,000 and above,” said Rastogi.

And solo travellers are as much a part of this trend. “In terms of an absolute number, there are more male solo travellers. But if you look at the ratio over time, out of all solo travellers coming on Ithaka, in 2018, about 19% were women and this year their number has gone up to 26%,” Ithaka Travel cofounder and CEO Rahul Singh told IANS.

Data does indicate a rise in expenditur­e for air-travel and lodging, but what about something more niche, like cruises?

Tirun, the sole Indian representa­tive for Royal Caribbean Cruises that grew by 28% in 2018, finds people opting for unique experience­s for celebrator­y events like weddings, birthdays, anniversar­ies and other life milestone celebratio­ns.

According to its CEO Varun Chadha, India’s burgeoning middle class seeks novel vacation options apart from the traditiona­l fly land tour packages. “On a cruise holiday, guests get to see and do more, especially since they have the chance to visit multiple countries in one cruise.”

“Russia, Turkey, Vietnam, China and South Africa are among the countries becoming popular,” said Sunil Gupta, MD & CEO of car rental company Avis India. “For domestic travel, people prefer to explore destinatio­ns in states like Kerala, Gujarat, Karnataka, Uttarakhan­d, Himachal Pradesh, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh,” he said.

Indians are seeing internatio­nal destinatio­ns, especially short-haul ones, as affordable, but there is also a renewed zeal to explore domestic locations, propelled further by the weekend travel trend.

Almost all the companies that IANS spoke to lauded Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s invitation to countrymen to visit 15 destinatio­ns by 2022 and Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s promise of developing 17 model sites to encourage inbound tourism in her maiden budget speech.

Travel platform Tripadviso­r has also recently announced its strong focus on helping the Indian traveller discover more domestical­ly, be it iconic attraction­s or unique experience­s.

Dharamveer Singh Chouhan, Co-founder and CEO of hostel-booking giant Zostel, sees a change in the way the Indian travellers finalise their travel destinatio­ns—seeking to immerse themselves and experience more from its culture and surroundin­gs.

“A couple opting for a homestay in Kotgarh would be interested in trying its hands at organic farming and plucking apples from the orchard there. People are looking to ditch hotels for more experienti­al stays,” said Chouhan.

Going ahead, Ithaka Travel stresses upon the need for personalis­ation and trip curation along side travel deals, easy loan approvals and quick access to guidance for planning as both the travellers and the industry push the boundaries for new experience­s. IANS

 ??  ?? The percentage of tourism jobs in India has risen by 2.9% in the past few years.
The percentage of tourism jobs in India has risen by 2.9% in the past few years.

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