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Global tourism lost $320bn in five months from virus: UN

Global tourism lost $320bn in five months from virus: UN

By Associated Press

Photo: Skanda Gautam/THT

UNITED NATIONS, AUGUST 25 The tourism global industry has been devastated by the coronavirus pandemic, with $320 billion lost in exports in the first five months of the year and more than 120 million jobs at risk, the UN chief said today. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a policy briefing and video address that tourism is the third-largest export sector of the global economy, behind fuels and chemicals, and in 2019 it accounted for seven per cent of global trade. “It employs one in every 10 people on Earth and provides livelihoods to hundreds of millions more,” he said. In addition to boosting economies, ‘it allows people to experience some of the world’s cultural and natural riches and brings people closer to each other, highlighting our common humanity’, he said. But the UN chief said that in the first five months of 2020, because of the pandemic, international tourist arrivals decreased by more than half and earnings plummeted. Guterres said this has been a ‘major shock’ for richer developed nations ‘but for developing countries, it is an emergency, particularly for many small island developing states and African countries’. Tourism for some of those countries represents more than 20 per cent of their GDP, he explained. Sandra Carvao, the UN World Tourism Organisation’s chief of market intelligence and competitiveness, said the $320 billion in lost exports from January through May is three times what was lost during the year 2009 at the height of the last global financial crisis. And as per the policy briefing, ‘export revenues from tourism could fall by $910 billion to $1.2 trillion in 2020’ and that ‘could reduce global GDP by 1.5 per cent to 2.8 per cent’. In addition to tourism jobs that are at risk, the policy paper said jobs in associated sectors, including food service, that provide employment for 144 million workers worldwide are also at risk. Guterres said tourism ‘is also a key pillar for the conservation of natural and cultural heritage’. As per briefing, some seven per cent of world tourism relates to wildlife, ‘a segment growing by three per cent annually’. “The fall in revenues has led to increased poaching and habitat destruction in and around protected areas,” the secretary-general said, ‘and the closure of many World Heritage Sites has deprived communities of vital livelihoods’. Guterres called for tourism sector to be rebuilt in a way that is safe for host communities, workers and travellers, and is also ‘equitable and climate friendly’. Noting that travel restrictions and border closures still remain though some have been lifted, Carvao said ‘recovery will be very much dependent on evolution of pandemic and economic situation’. A version of this article appears in e-paper on August 26, 2020, of The Himalayan Times.