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PATA RELEASES 2ND ISSUE OF 39 DESTINATION-SPECIFIC FORECAST REPORTS

FOLLOWING last month’s successful release of the “Asia Pacific Visitor Forecasts 2020-2024”, complete with updates in response to the current COVID-19 pandemic, the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) is announce the second issue of a suite of 39 destination-specific reports for the period 2020-2024, sponsored by Visa.

According to PATA CEO Dr. Mario Hardy said each report builds on the regional forecast by delving deeper into the changing dynamics of travel and tourism, in and across the Asia Pacific region at the single destination level. The reports also include additional data and insights from Euromonitor International.

“Each of the 39 reports covers a specific destination in Asia Pacific and individually forecasts: (1). Annual visitor arrivals into each destination, by source market, (2). Annual arrivals from the destination across other Asia Pacific destinations. (3). Aggregate visitor receipts, where data availability allows. (4). Estimates the income and price elasticities of tourism demand, (5). Highlights some key visitor trends over the forecast period, (6). Analyses scheduled inbound flights and seats,” he said.

Mario Hardy explained that each factor describes and details how demand preferences are shifting across the Asia Pacific region. Scheduled inbound international air seat capacity for example, shifts relatively quickly according to demand, so understanding where these shifts are occurring for the almost 1.2 billion inbound air seats scheduled for Asia Pacific destinations in 2019  is a useful barometer of potential demand that can translate into increased arrivals.

“Obviously, with the closure of many international borders as well as airports and the grounding of many commercial aircraft – entire fleets in some cases – these capacity figures are undergoing dramatic changes. Even so, they will most likely rebound slightly ahead of visitor numbers and should be monitored to see when and where such capacity begins to expand,” he added.

It could be reasonably expected that intra-regional air capacity will be the first to show substantive growth during the early stages of recovery, so here the growth in capacity between regional origins and destinations, for both Legacy and Low-Cost Carriers (LCCs), will be a significant indicator to track.

Similarly, for the elasticities of both income and prices, where for example the sensitivity of a particular inbound market to price changes in a destination may hold strategic value in determining price-based programmes for that inbound market. Income sensitivity also shows how markets may react to changes in their own relative incomes and again provides a metric worth valuing in better understanding a potential source market. Such indicators will be extremely useful in understanding the competitive position of destinations as they pursue recovering source markets in the near future.

“We are a heavily data-driven world and it is a focus on hard data that will offer a significant advantage to those destinations that best identify and cater to those source markets that first begin to travel again once this current pandemic is brought under control,” said PATA CEO Dr. Mario Hardy.

He affirmed that budgets are likely to be very tight in the near-term, so a strong alignment of activity directed toward those source markets with the strongest potential for conversion to travel, will be essential. Knowing those markets and when they are likely to rebound with travel will be critical in delivering cost-effective results. The income and price elasticities as shown for many source markets will be an important factor in this regard.

“This updated series of destination reports from the PATA Strategic Intelligence Centre is designed to present insights into the ever-present shifts and changes that occur in the travel and tourism sector in such a way that strategic actions can be better facilitated. This is particularly so when faced, as we are now, with the severe limitations to international tourism growth, brought on by COVD-19,” he noted

There will be a recovery, he continued of that we are sure – how and when that is likely to begin is one of the functions of these reports and is one that is well served by the ‘Asia Pacific Destination Forecasts 2020-2024. [sources/photo special]