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Internatio­nal tourism not seen rebounding until 2023 — UN report

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GENEVA — Internatio­nal tourism arrivals are set to stagnate this year, except in some Western markets, causing up to $2.4 trillion in losses, a U.N. study said on Wednesday, adding the sector is not expected to rebound fully until 2023.

COVID-19 vaccinatio­n and certificat­es are key to restoring confidence in foreign tourism, which provides a lifeline for many countries, especially small island states that rely heavily on the sector to provide jobs, it said.

In 2020, internatio­nal arrivals plunged by 73% from pre-pandemic levels in 2019, causing estimated losses of $2.4 trillion in tourism and related sectors, according to the report by UNCTAD and the UN’s World Tourism Organizati­on (UNWTO).

“The outlook for this year doesn’t look much better,” Ralf Peters of UNCTAD’s trade analysis branch, told a news conference.

“The first three months were again bad, there was not much travelling happening,” he said.

“There is an expectatio­n of a certain recovery in the second half of the year, at least for North America and Europe to a certain extent,” he told Reuters, crediting vaccinatio­ns. The report sets out three scenarios for 2021, showing internatio­nal tourism arrivals forecast to drop by between 63% and 75% from pre-pandemic levels, resulting in losses of between $1.7 trillion and $2.4 trillion.

“In internatio­nal tourism we are at levels of 30 years ago, so basically we are in the ‘80s ... Many livelihood­s are really at threat,” said Zoritsa Urosevic, Geneva representa­tive of the Madridbase­d UNWTO.

“What we are looking at in the long run is...meeting the 2019 numbers after 2023,” she said.

Sandra Carvao, chief of market intelligen­ce at UNWTO, said that it would be a “very diverse recovery,” varying by region and by country.

The European Union’s digital COVID-19 certificat­e, due to come into force on Thursday, represents the only regional harmonizat­ion to date, she said.

Ms. Carvao, referring to travel corridors, said: “We see for example AsiaPacifi­c is still one of the most closed regions in the world at this moment most of the borders in the countries are either totally closed or with significan­t restrictio­ns.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? PEOPLE have their picture taken next to El Oso y El Madrono (The Bear and the Strawberry Tree) statue, at Madrid’s landmark Puerta del Sol square, Spain, June 7.
REUTERS PEOPLE have their picture taken next to El Oso y El Madrono (The Bear and the Strawberry Tree) statue, at Madrid’s landmark Puerta del Sol square, Spain, June 7.

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