The latest World Travel and Tourism Council – Economic Impact Report (EIR) has revealed that the Travel and Tourism sector is expected to create close to 126 million new jobs within the next decade.
The report indicates that the tourism sector will be the driving force of global economic recovery, thus creating one in three all-new jobs.
In a statement issued today, the WTTC announced that the forecast was delivered in Manila’s capital, in front of 1,000 delegates from across the global Travel and Tourism sector, including CEOs, business executives, government ministers, travel experts, and international media.
“The EIR report shows Travel & Tourism’s GDP is forecasted to grow at an average rate of 5.8 per cent annually between 2022-2032, outstripping the 2.7 per cent growth rate for the global economy, to reach US$ 14.6 trillion (11.3 per cent of the total global economy),”
the statement reveals.
According to the report, by 2023, the global GDP of Travel and Tourism may reach pre-pandemic levels, which means only 0.1 per cent below 2019 levels.
Such data also show that the sector’s contribution to GDP by the end of 2022 could increase by 43.7 per cent to almost $ 8.4 trillion, reaching 8.5 per cent of total global economic GDP or only 13.3 per cent behind the 2019 levels.
In addition, Travel and Tourism employment is expected to increase and reach the levels of 2019 in 2023, or remain only 2.7 per cent below. In this regard, WTTC President &CEO Julia Simpson noted that the WTTC predicts a brighter future, with GDP and employment, which is expected to reach pre-pandemic levels by next year.
“The recovery in 2021 was slower than expected due in part to the impact of the Omicron variant but mainly due to an uncoordinated approach by governments which rejected the advice of the World Health Organisation, which maintained that closing borders would not stop the spread of the virus but would only serve to damage economies and livelihoods,”
she pointed out.
According to the WTTC 2022 EIR report, Travel and Tourism GDP over the next decade is projected to move forward at an average annual rate of 5.8 per cent. Whereas in 2022, the Global Travel and Tourism employment is expected to increase by 3.5 per cent, accounting for 9.1 per cent of the global labour market, lagging behind 2019 levels by 10 per cent.
Besides, WTTC’s latest EIR report a year ago also found that 2021 saw the start of a recovery for the global Travel and Tourism sector, where its contribution to GDP increased by 21.7 per cent to reach $ 5.8 trillion.
The contribution of the Travel and Tourism sector to GDP before the pandemic was 10.3 per cent, falling to 5.3 per cent in 2020 when the pandemic was at its peak, representing a staggering 50 per cent loss. In 2021, the sector saw a recovery of more than 18 million global Travel and Tourism jobs, representing a positive growth of 6.7 per cent.
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