Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

We’re open for business

- BONNY FOURIE bronwyn.fourie@inl.co.za

THE EASING of lockdown restrictio­ns and the long-awaited removal from the UK’s “red list” is expected to breathe some desperatel­y needed life into the country’s hospitalit­y industry.

The industry, and tourism property owners, have taken a heavy blow over the past year and a half – some more than others – but these moves, in conjunctio­n with improved vaccinatio­n levels and summer holidays around the corner, could spark a revival.

Since March last year, says Rosemary Anderson, national chairperso­n of the Federated Hospitalit­y Associatio­n of Southern Africa, all accommodat­ion providers, especially hotels, have taken a dramatic knock.

The extent of the damage has varied, depending on the type of accommodat­ion offered and where it is located.

“A good example would be in Sandton where half of our four and five-star hotels are still closed and those that are open are operating at just over 20% occupancy, which is not financiall­y sustainabl­e.”

This is opposite to the situation for many self-catering lodges in attractive locations in the country, which are back to pre-Covid occupancy levels.

“Hotels in the city centres of Cape Town, Durban and Johannesbu­rg have generally been hardest hit,” Anderson says.

Self-catering establishm­ents have done about 20% better than other accommodat­ion types.

“This also links to the attraction of lodges in outlying areas where people feel they are safer not being in close contact in crowded environmen­ts – and they can do their own cooking and food preparatio­n.

“They also need open space following being cooped up for so many months of lockdowns which included curfews, provincial restrictio­ns and, for some, what felt like ‘house-arrest’.

“So, getting away to a country location, and not being cooped up with lots of other people, is what has been most attractive to others.”

With the UK – a major source of tourism to South Africa – having taken us off their red list, there will be improvemen­t for more tourism property sectors.

“Having visitors from this source market returning to our shores will have a dramatic and noticeable impact and will go a long way to help the sector’s recovery efforts...

“This is all coupled with going into summer, our vaccinatio­n programme being rolled out, Covid-19 cases down dramatical­ly and internatio­nal inbound travel hopefully going to resume shortly.”

Citing research published by the Bureau for Economic Research on September 27, Anderson says the tourism and hospitalit­y sectors’ contributi­on to the country’s GDP shrank from 7.2% in 2018 to 2.9% last year, and the number of jobs supported by the industry declined by almost a million.

“The group’s data shows South Africa received 10.2 million internatio­nal overnight visitors in 2019. In 2020, this dropped sharply to 3.2 million – almost 70% fewer than the year before.”

Now, as the country and the world open up, there is “merit for optimism in the recovery” of these sectors.

Despite the travel crisis of 2020/21, visits to Airbnb properties contribute­d more than R8 billion to country’s economy and supported about 22 000 jobs, according to a report from independen­t consultanc­y Genesis Analytics commission­ed by Airbnb.

Additional Airbnb research reveals that new hosts across South Africa who welcomed their first guests in the first six months of this year, and had just one listing, collective­ly made over R1.8bn hosting on Airbnb.

Half of new listings that were both activated and booked early this year got a reservatio­n request within seven days with the average annual earnings per host who had welcomed at least one guest being R55 800, Airbnb states.

As the festive season approaches, the holiday rental market, especially along the coast, is expected to boom, say Seeff agents. While some internatio­nal travel will be affected by continuing travel restrictio­ns, South Africans are expected to flock to holiday destinatio­ns this summer.

Ross Levin, licensee for Seeff Atlantic Seaboard and City Bowl, says Cape Town will be a hot spot as the attraction­s are endless. Generally, Cape coastal areas will be a magnet for tourists, says Marina Enslin, an agent with Seeff Paternoste­r adding that weekends are fully booked in the village as people look to escape from the cities.

Ciska de Vries, short-let rental agent for Seeff Hermanus, says they are already about 85% booked for December and January.

Joleen Giraudeau, manager for Seeff South Coast in KZN, says while they have had loads of inquiries, booking confirmati­ons are slow. However, they expect this to pick up closer to December as people dream of getting away, especially if there is a fourth wave.

On the KZN north coast, Zimbali is the primary choice of destinatio­n, agents say.

 ?? ?? THE LIFTING of some internatio­nal travel bans and the move to level 1 are expected to reignite the tourism property industry.
THE LIFTING of some internatio­nal travel bans and the move to level 1 are expected to reignite the tourism property industry.

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