Travel in the region
is roaring after a difficult few years. Tourism
is back, at last. This year the number of trips abroad is expected to
overtake levels reached in 2019. Spending by travellers, too, is projected to
exceed what was shelled out in 2019, according to the World Travel and Tourism
Council (wttc), a trade body. Cruising
is afloat
again. The return of mass
tourism has sparked protests in Western hotspots such as Barcelona and Majorca.
Talk to a hotelier or a travel agent, though, and the real action is further
east.
Travel to Asia had been slower to recover from the
covid-19 pandemic than in the West…Even as business in the rest of the world
stabilises, industry bosses are touting rapid growth in Asia. On August 6th Michael Glover, the finance
chief of IHG, a hotel group, pointed to its booming business in Thailand and
Vietnam. On August 7th Mark Galardo, an executive at Air Canada, a carrier,
said that new routes to Seoul and Osaka were performing “exceedingly well”. Westerners
are turning up in droves. The number of trips Americans took to Asia doubled
last year... Catherine Heald, the boss of Remote Lands, a travel agency for the
rich, notes that more of her clients are scuba diving off Indonesia’s Komodo
island, temple-hopping in Japan and taking gastronomical excursions across
Thailand.
The range of destinations and activities is
widening. Well-heeled tourists
can travel aboard the recently redeveloped Eastern & Oriental Express
through Singapore and Malaysia, run by Belmond, the hotels business of LVMH, a
French luxury giant. Over 500,000 hotel rooms were under construction across
Asia as of June, up by over 4% from last year. Getting to Asia is also becoming
easier, with home-grown and Western airlines increasing the number of flights
to and from the continent. British Airways, for instance, is relaunching
flights to Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur.
The biggest boost to Asian tourism, though, is
coming from the region’s own travellers. Chinese consumers have begun to holiday abroad
again, with international trips forecast to double this year compared with
2023, according to Oxford Economics, a research firm. Even then, the number of
trips will be below pre-pandemic levels, leaving plenty of room for growth.
Much of the travel by Chinese tourists will happen within their neighbourhood.
Three-quarters of the flights that left China last month went to East and
South-East Asia.
Thanks to rising disposable incomes, India’s consumers
are also heading overseas in growing numbers. They spent close to $20bn on foreign trips in the
year to March, more than three times the amount they spent five years ago. Many
also prefer to travel closer to home, not least because of looser visa restrictions
in the region. As incomes rise, Indian tourists will only become bigger
spenders. The WTTC reckons that by the
end of the decade only Americans and Chinese will splurge more on overseas
travel than Indians. Asia’s travel boom is just beginning.