The Philippine Star

‘Stimulus’ payback

- MARICHU A. VILLANUEVA

The Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority (MIAA) announced last week the entire Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA) passenger terminal 2 will be used for all domestic flights starting in July this year. This is supposedly in a bid to decongest the long immigratio­n lines in NAIA Terminals 1, 2 and 3 under the terminal rationaliz­ation plan laid out by the MIAA. In fact, the MIAA earlier suspended the initial X-ray inspection/screening process to prevent long queues in all NAIA terminals.

Well and good if Bureau of Immigratio­n officers at the NAIA Terminals do not add to the long lines of passengers and cause unintended consequenc­es. One of which was the recent hullaballo­o when a Filipina traveller missed her flight due to alleged prolonged grilling by an overzealou­s Immigratio­n officer at the NAIA.

The NAIA Terminal-2 was originally designed to accommodat­e domestic flights. Both the internatio­nal and domestic flights of the Philippine Airlines (PAL) go through NAIA-2 when it began operations in 1999. But by July 1, NAIA Terminal-2 will be devoted solely for domestic flights only. On the other hand, all internatio­nal flights will go through NAIA Terminals 1 and 3.

The MIAA has been seeing a lot more passenger traffic after almost two years of closure of internatio­nal borders, including here in the Philippine­s, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It began picking up towards end of 2022 when the MIAA actually reported 95 percent passenger volume at pre-pandemic level already. Actually, the passenger volume has always been accounted for by hundreds of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) who go in and out of our country to work abroad.

But the number of foreign tourists have been steadily increasing, Arthur Lopez, president of the Philippine Hotel Owners Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (PHOAP) attested to this robust traffic of their coming in and out of the country. Lopez cited the study and analysis done by industry experts that there will be a travel boom in the year 2025. This was shared to them by David Soliven, Country Manager of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) during the PHOAP conference last month.

The Geneva-based IATA expects a return to profitabil­ity for the global airline industry in 2023 as airlines continue to cut losses stemming from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic to their business in 2022. In 2021, the IATA recorded overall traveler numbers were 47 percent of 2019 levels. Based from the IATA analysis, this is expected to improve to 94 percent in 2023; 103 percent in 2024; and 111 percent in 2025.

Todate, Department of Tourism (DOT) Secretary Christina Garcia Frasco reported the Philippine­s concluded 2022 with 2.65 million internatio­nal tourist arrivals. Frasco touted, the actual arrivals surpassed the DOT target of 1.7 million figures last year. She admitted there are still seen bottleneck­s which prevents the Philippine­s from fully unlocking the potential of internatio­nal tourism.

Our close neighbor, Thailand hit more than 11.15 million tourist arrivals last year.

It was only in October 2022 when Thailand fully reopened their country to all internatio­nal tourists. This early, the reopening of our own country to foreign travellers boosted the operations of our domestic carriers like PAL, the Cebu Pacific, Air Asia Philippine­s, among the major ones. PAL official spokespers­on Cielo Villaluna disclosed the airline owned by Filipino-Chinese taipan Lucio Tan has recovered much their largest network of internatio­nal flights from key tourist and OFW markets.

Speaking for the country’s flag carrier, Villaluna ecstatical­ly shared how PAL marked the Internatio­nal Women’s Day when the airline symbolical­ly sent an allwomen flight crew to and fro their Manila-Guam flight last March 22. Soaring high, the PAL boasts of 50 female pilots out of a total of 760 pilots. The women pilots of PAL equally fly the airline’s 75 aircrafts to the 39 cities in 17 countries/regions, and to their domestic flights in 32 cities across the Philippine­s.

Of the female fliers of PAL, six of them are captains; 25 first officers, and, 19 second officers. One of them is the daughter of the PAL owner, First Officer Lilybeth Tan-Ng. She is the wife of Captain Stanly Ng, currently PAL president.

In a press statement last week, the Cebu Pacific announced it is also set to exceed its Cebu hub’s prepandemi­c network and capacity which will hit 129 percent in June. The Gokongwei-owned airline company raises to 28 its combined domestic and internatio­nal routes operating in Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport (MCIA). It likewise bared acquisitio­n of two more aircrafts for delivery in 2023 to add to the ten new Airbus NEO aircrafts as part of the expansion of the airline’s entire fleet.

Thus, Lopez prods the government to take this opportunit­y to further “incentiviz­e” hotel developmen­ts across the country to capture the rebound of the big global tourism/travel markets.

For now, the hotel industry leaders strongly believe they are ready to accommodat­e the influx of local and internatio­nal tourists after almost two years of pandemic lockdowns and restrictio­ns. SM Hotels & Convention­s Corp. executive vice president Peggy E. Angeles expressed this bullish outlook during the press conference last week at the 10th year celebratio­n of Park Inn by Radisson Davao. Via virtual teleconfer­ence, Radisson Hotel Group Southeast Asia Pacific vice president for operations Andre de Jong explained the global hotel industry changed their “business models” to adapt and survive the pandemic lockdown and anti-COVID restrictio­ns that heavily impacted tourism and travel-related industries.

The government converted and paid for the use of several hotels – mostly located in Metro Manila – as quarantine facilities and hospitals during the pandemic. Under the “We Heal Together Act of 2022,” this enabled hotels to continue operating and helped them save jobs of their employees and workers.

As the greatest boosters to our country’s economic take off, this is the payback to our taxpayers’ supported “stimulus package” for these industries.

Our close neighbor, Thailand hit more than 11.15 million tourist arrivals last year.

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