The Star Malaysia - Star2

All for local travel

With Covid-19 under control, Vietnam and New Zealand see different travel trends.

- By KANUPRIYA KAPOOR and Khanh Vu

LAURA Douglas’ tourism start-up, a farm surrounded by snowtipped mountains in southern New Zealand, was attracting hundreds of mostly foreign visitors a month until the coronaviru­s pandemic brought it to a sudden halt in March.

“It’s like I’ve been mourning the loss of my business,” Douglas, 33, said in an interview, adding she had to take on a second job as a vet to pay the bills during a strict lockdown that included sealing the country’s borders.

The rebound for New Zealanders who are reliant on tourism is expected to be slow, in marked contrast to how the tourism sector is faring in Vietnam, another nation that was hailed as a success story in Asia for containing the coronaviru­s.

Both countries have emerged from lockdown almost virus-free, lifting all restrictio­ns except those on internatio­nal travel. While New Zealand’s tourism sector is struggling pending arrivals from abroad, Vietnam’s has rebounded, according to travel data and industry members.

This is thanks to how much domestic tourism has filled the gap, reflecting in part how badly the coronaviru­s hit the two economies. While New Zealand’s economy is expected to contract by as much as 20% in the first half of the year, according to the central bank, Vietnam has kept its yearly growth target above 5%.

July is normally a peak travel season in New Zealand, along with Christmas, but scheduled flights are down 40% compared to the same month last year and even many of those are being cancelled, according to figures from travel analytics firm Cirium.

Weekly demand for Airbnb and Vrbo properties through July are down 55% from last year and a recovery is unlikely until later this year, according to forward-looking bookings from AIRDNA.

Across the ocean in Vietnam, the story is very different. In July, more than 26,000 flights are expected to transport five million people.

Nguyen Thi Thuy Anh, owner of a travel agency called Minh Viet Booking, says he is handling a surge in bookings as businesses slash prices to attract local travellers.

“Many people who couldn’t afford five-star services before are taking advantage of the programmes to experience the services,” he said, referring to central and provincial government efforts to boost mass domestic tourism.

In a country with poor rail and road infrastruc­ture, air travel is already a popular mode of transport, and even more so now, with airlines adding routes and offering tickets for as low as 69,000 Vietnamese dong (RM12).

In New Zealand, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is asking people to “experience your own backyard”. She is urging employers to consider fourday work weeks and has said the government is actively considerin­g more public holidays this year so people can travel.

Recently,

Ardern launched the country’s ski season in the tourist destinatio­n of Queenstown, hoping that will give another boost to domestic travel.

Some New Zealanders appear to be heeding her encouragem­ent and taking weekend road trips.

Demand for hotels and shortterm rentals, while depressed overall, still ticks up over the weekends according to STR, an analytics firm that looks specifical­ly at the hotel industry.

But tourism business owners say a pot of Nz$400mil (Rm1.08bil) set aside by the government to subsidise wages and other costs for the industry will not be enough to tide it over while foreign tourists are still barred.

For Douglas, the downturn means digging deep in her own pockets and pivoting as much as possible to attract local travel to her 15,000ha farm.

“The farming mentality is that you’re not always going to have good seasons,” she said. “Right now, Kiwis are going to be the best gift for us and I’m hoping they will come with their gumboots on.” – Reuters

 ?? — reuters ?? local tourists posing for photos on the the Huc bridge at Hoan Kiem lake in Hanoi, Vietnam. the country’s domestic tourism is recovering fast.
— reuters local tourists posing for photos on the the Huc bridge at Hoan Kiem lake in Hanoi, Vietnam. the country’s domestic tourism is recovering fast.
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