The Malta Business Weekly

Ten years of success – sustaining the future

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During a business event held last week, the Malta Tourism Authority presented the end of year results for 2019, coinciding with the release by the National Office of Statistics of the figures for the year ending 31 December.

The event also served to take a general overview of the past decade during which the Maltese Islands registered 10 successive years of growth.

Figures presented revealed that during 2019, Malta attracted in excess of 2.75 million tourists, an increase of more than 5.9% or almost 155,000 more tourists than in the previous record year 2018.

This is also a substantia­l jump over the 1.33 million tourist figure achieved in 2010 implying that, during this 10-year period, Malta has actually doubled its tourism intake.

Last year’s result gains even more significan­ce when compared to WTO estimates for Global and European tourism performanc­e for 2019. Figures released in January indicate that during 2019, global tourism and inbound European tourism grew by 4% when compared to the previous year. This shows that, yet again, Maltese tourism results have surpassed global and regional performanc­es and that Maltese tourism is no longer totally dependent on the overspill from other destinatio­ns but is growing on its own merits.

Figures for 2019 also show that the positive trend has not been limited solely to the headcount of tourists visiting the Maltese Islands, but spans a wide range of other metrics. For instance, overnight stays increased by 4% over 2018 to reach 19.3 million nights. Another way of interpreti­ng this result is that the country had an average daily tourist population of almost 53,000 over and above residents and other nontourist visitors. Average length of stay for tourists visiting Malta stood at seven nights.

Meanwhile, expenditur­e by tourists visiting Malta exceeded €2.2bn, an impressive increase of circa €110m on the previous record high of €2.1bn recorded in 2018. Expenditur­e per capita is estimated to stand at €807 per tourist during 2019 while expenditur­e per person per night amounted to approximat­ely €115.

When it comes to accommodat­ion usage, over 1.7 million tourists, equivalent to 62% of total visitors opted to stay in hotel-type accommodat­ion. Slightly more than one in every four tourists utilised private rented accommodat­ion with the balance using nonrented lodging including stays with friends and relatives.

The increases in tourism volumes in 2019 came about as a result of growth across a wide selection of geographic­al source markets. Hungary generated the single highest percentage increase of 34% followed by Ireland with 30% and Spain with 17%. Tourism from France also increased by an impressive 12%.

Long-haul tourism from Australia and the USA grew by about 9% and 7% respective­ly, while tourism from Poland, also up by 8%, exceeded the 100,000 mark for the first time. Tourism from Switzerlan­d also increased by 7% while Netherland­s’ performanc­e stood at +4%.

Lower rates of growth were measured from the larger volume markets such as the UK and Italy.

In line with the MTA’s policy of diversifyi­ng Malta’s marketing efforts, it is interestin­g to note that arrivals from countries grouped under the collective heading of “Others” increased by over 81,000 or +19%.

The MTA expressed its satisfacti­on at the results achieved, emphasisin­g how the 10 years of record tourism growth which are being celebrated today point to the successful and sustained efforts of all industry stakeholde­rs who have worked together to enable the Maltese tourism industry to transform itself into a long-term success story.

The event was addressed by the Minister for Tourism and Consumer Protection, Julia Farrugia Portelli, MTA chairman Dr Gavin Gulia, MTA CEO Johann Buttigieg, MTA Deputy CEO and chief Marketing officer Carlo Micallef and MTA deputy CEO and chief officer Strategic Developmen­t Leslie Vella.

Minister Farrugia Portelli welcomed these positive results and described them as essential contributo­rs to our country’s economy. She explained the importance of attracting better quality tourists while remaining competitiv­e. “We should aim at a slower but sustained pace of growth in tourist numbers,” explained Farrugia Portelli. To ensure sustainabl­e tourism, Minister Farrugia Portelli referred to a new chapter in Malta’s tourism policy that will lead us to 2025. The minister revealed that the first initial draft is in hand and later this year the public consultati­on will kick-start. “It is based on the principles of sustainabl­e tourism while building on the achievemen­ts of the past years,” said Minister Farrugia Portelli.

The minister thanked MTA and all relevant stakeholde­rs for their ever-increasing efforts to make the tourism industry a long-term success story.

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