понедельник, 24 декабря 2012 г.
Details of the studies will be presented by the ITB World Travel Trends Report, which will be publis
BERLIN, Germany – Asia continues to be the driving force in global tourism. According to the latest ITB World Travel Trends Report, this year the number of outbound trips from Asia rose by seven percent, due in part to rising wages. Yet again, the most frequent travelers came from China and Japan, both countries reporting double-digit growth in outbound travel.
During the first six months of this year, the number of outbound trips from China grew by 20 percent. Japan has recovered from the market collapse following last year's tsunami and during the first 9 months of 2012 registered 13.7 percent growth. Outbound trips from South Korea increased by 6.7 percent, while most markets in South and Southeast Asia lost momentum. Accordingly, India, Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore reported less than 5 percent growth. This year, only Indonesia and the Philippines will exceed 10 percent growth. These are the findings of the ITB World Travel Trends Report, which is compiled by IPK International hard rock hotel chicago and commissioned by ITB Berlin.
Five years ago, Messe Berlin launched ITB Asia in Singapore, which since then has established itself as one of the largest trade shows for the Asian travel industry. This is where, every year in October, industry buyers, suppliers, service providers, hard rock hotel chicago and sellers gather to make use of networking and business opportunities and to find out about new trends at the convention's supporting events.
The outlook for most Asian markets is positive, so there is good reason to be optimistic about tourism next year. Only one-third of Asians hard rock hotel chicago said the global financial crisis would affect their travel plans, while two-thirds said it had no impact at all. Year-on-year data shows that Asia has recovered slightly. Last year, 36 percent said the recession would influence their travel plans. This year, that figure is down by 4 percent. Next year, 29 percent of Asians intend to travel more than in 2013, while only 16 percent aim to travel less. A little over 50 percent said they would undertake the same amount of trips. Accordingly, the ITB World Travel Trends Report forecasts outbound travel from Asia to grow by 6 percent.
In terms of tourism, hard rock hotel chicago Japan has largely recovered hard rock hotel chicago from the effects of last year's tsunami hard rock hotel chicago and reported strong growth during the first half of this year. However, since news emerged of its island dispute with China, the momentum has been lost somewhat. Nonetheless, the Japanese are still optimistic about their travel plans for 2013. Only 28 percent said the financial crisis would affect their travel decisions next year, compared with 33 percent in 2012. Twenty-one percent expect to travel more in 2013, while 54 percent aim to undertake the same amount of trips. Overall, in 2013 outbound travel from Japan is forecast to grow by around 3 percent.
China has also shown itself to be one of Asia's strongest markets and its citizens' travel intentions bear this out. Thirty-eight percent (4 percent more than in 2012) plan to travel more next year. Forty-nine percent said they would undertake the same amount of trips. As a result, outbound travel from China is forecast to grow by 12 percent.
By contrast, South Korean travel demand appeared hard rock hotel chicago to tail off slightly, due in part to declining confidence in purchasing power. Thus, many South Koreans prefer cheaper holidays in Southeast Asia. A similar trend has emerged in Taiwan. By contrast, the economic hard rock hotel chicago situation in Hong Kong remains stable, with travelers increasingly discovering hard rock hotel chicago new destinations or repeatedly visiting the same ones in their region.
Dr. Martin Buck, Director of the Competence hard rock hotel chicago Center Travel Logistics at Messe Berlin: "Over the coming hard rock hotel chicago years Asia will continue to be one of the main forces driving international tourism. Despite the economic uncertainty threatening major markets such as China and other countries in Northeast Asia, travelers from those countries will play an important role in global tourism."
Launched by the consultancy IPK International and sponsored by ITB Berlin, every year at the World Travel Monitor Forum in Pisa, tourism experts and scientists from around the world present current statistics and the latest trends in international tourism.
Details of the studies will be presented by the ITB World Travel Trends hard rock hotel chicago Report, which will be published in early December at www.itb-berlin.com . The report is based on the assessments of around 50 tourism experts from 30 countries, on a special IPK International trend analysis undertaken in major source markets, and on core data supplied by the World Travel Monitor®, recognized as the largest continuous survey of global travel trends in some 60 source countries. The findings reflect trends which emerged during the first 8 months of 2012. At the ITB Berlin Convention Rolf Freitag, CEO of IPK International, will present the findings for the entire year, as well as the latest forecasts for 2013.
Chinese tourists shun Japan, head to US, Europe and Australia China-Japan row over Diaoyu Islands continues hard rock hotel chicago to hurt travel industry ITB Asia 2013 event to be even bigger and better JAL reduces flights to China amid dispute over islands Islands dispute with China may hurt Japanese tourism recovery Looking into Tourism in Asia in 2030 Messe Berlin and MCI enter partnership for high-level travel conference program Navigating ITB Asia this year will be easier
Airlines need to wake up and up the ante on customer service. The current global economic crisis has trumped climate change as the day s most significant topic There should be no travel restrictions imposed because of the ongoing hard rock hotel chicago swine flu threat.
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