世界旅游组织世界旅游晴雨表和统计附件,2021年1月

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摘要

在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行爆发导致前所未有的卫生、社会和经济紧急情况之后,2020年旅游业遭遇了有记录以来最严重的危机。由于广泛的旅行限制和需求大幅下降,2020年国际游客人数(过夜游客)比前一年下降了74%。国际旅行的崩溃估计导致出口收入损失1.3万亿美元,是2009年全球经济危机期间损失的11倍多。2020年,亚太地区的国际游客人数减少了84%,比上一年减少了约3亿人。中东和非洲的入境人数都下降了75%。在欧洲,游客人数下降了70%,国际游客减少了5亿多,而美洲则下降了69%。世界旅游组织专家小组的最新调查显示,2021年的前景喜忧参半。近一半的受访者(45%)预计2021年的前景比去年更好,25%的受访者预计表现相似,30%的受访者预计结果会恶化。2021年经济反弹的整体前景似乎已经恶化。50%的受访者现在预计反弹只会在2022年发生,而2020年10月这一比例为21%。其余一半的受访者仍认为2021年可能出现反弹,但低于2020年10月调查时的预期(79%的受访者预计2021年将出现复苏)。专家预测,随着国内旅游和“慢游”体验获得越来越多的兴趣,人们对露天和自然旅游活动的需求将不断增长。展望未来,大多数专家认为在2023年之前不会恢复到大流行前的水平。事实上,43%的受访者认为是2023年,而41%的受访者预计2024年或更晚才能恢复到2019年的水平。联合国世界旅游组织2021-2024年的扩展情景表明,国际旅游业可能需要两年半到四年的时间才能恢复到2019年的水平。预计COVID-19疫苗的逐步推出将有助于恢复消费者信心,有助于放松旅行限制,并在未来一年慢慢使旅行正常化。
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Barómetro OMT del Turismo Mundial y anexo estadístico, Enero 2021
Tourism suffers its deepest crisis with a drop of 74% in 2020 in international arrivals Tourism suffered the greatest crisis on record in 2020 following an unprecedented health, social and economic emergency amid the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. International tourist arrivals (overnight visitors) plunged by 74% in 2020 over the previous year due to widespread travel restrictions and a massive drop in demand. The collapse in international travel represents an estimated loss of USD 1.3 trillion in export revenues - more than 11 times the loss recorded during the 2009 global economic crisis. Asia and the Pacific saw an 84% decrease in international arrivals in 2020, about 300 million less than in the previous year. The Middle East and Africa both recorded a 75% drop in arrivals. In Europe arrivals declined by 70%, representing over 500 million fewer international tourists, while the Americas saw a drop of 69%. The latest UNWTO Panel of Experts survey shows a mixed outlook for 2021. Almost half of respondents (45%) envisaged better prospects for 2021 compared to last year, while 25% expect a similar performance and 30% foresee a worsening of results. The overall prospects for a rebound in 2021 seem to have worsened. 50% of respondents now expect a rebound to occur only in 2022 as compared to 21% in October 2020. The remaining half of respondents still see a potential rebound in 2021, though below the expectations shown in the October 2020 survey (79% expected a recovery in 2021). Experts foresee growing demand for open-air and nature-based tourism activities, with domestic tourism and ‘slow travel’ experiences gaining increasing interest. Looking further ahead, most experts do not to see a return to pre-pandemic levels happening before 2023. In fact, 43% of respondents point to 2023, while 41% expect a return to 2019 levels in 2024 or later. UNWTO’s extended scenarios for 2021-2024 indicate that it could take between two-and-a-half and four years for international tourism to return to 2019 levels. The gradual rollout of a COVID-19 vaccine is expected to help restore consumer confidence, contribute to ease travel restrictions and slowly normalize travel during the year ahead.
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