viernes, 11 de marzo de 2011

Tourism and insecurity, where are we standing?

Published in Plaza de Armas, newspaper from Queretaro, March 7th 2011

During the recent weeks, a lot has been said about the numbers announced by the Ministry of Tourism referring to the increase on international tourism in the country during 2010. There is a lot of incredulity because there are many cities where the arrival of tourists has dramatically decreased due to insecurity problems.

Are the numbers unreal? Let’s analyze the situation of this important sector that represents 9% of the country’s GDP and more than 2 million direct jobs.

First, a clarification of terms. International travelers are foreign people that get into the country, no matter if they stay for a few hours or if they stay the night. Mexican Central Bank (BANXICO) records all those visits, meanwhile Tourism focuses only on the people that stay the night in the country, since they receive the definition of tourists.

This difference is important, especially on the borders where there is a very important flow of travelers that don’t stay the night, and therefore, they are not tourists.

BANXICO reports a fall in the total number of travelers in 2010, precisely because the border travelers that don’t stay the night had a significant decrease (7.8 million less than in 2009).

The groups considered as tourists (border travelers that stay the night and those that get beyond the borders) increased from 21.5 to 22.4 million. This confirms the increasing trend announced by Tourism, with a little different numbers (Tourism announced that they were 22.6 million). A 4.4% increase will always be good news, but we are just reaching 2008 levels.

Then, how is insecurity affecting tourism? Let’s see some data that can give us more clarity.

First result: world tourism increased 6.7% in 2010. Mexico is growing slower, therefore we had a relative decrease that makes us stay with a smaller piece of the world pie.

Second result: the country stopped receiving $230 million dollars on the border zone this year due to the fall of travelers. Besides, many hotels on different cities on the north zone reported occupancy levels of 40% during 2010, against 70% in 2009.

Third result: 3 cruises lines recently announced a reduction or elimination of their travels to Mexico. This sector, classified also as travelers and not as tourists, had an increase in 2010 and represents 8% of international travelers and 5% of foreign currency inflows.

Fourth result: United States, that represents 40% of foreign tourism in Mexico, has traveling alerts for half of the country’s states. This is a big red alert (fortunately, Queretaro is not on that list).

Are there good news? Yes. For instance, foreign currency inflows increased 5% in 2010 (every traveler and tourist spent more money on average). Also, the big national centers for international tourism (Cancun, Mayan Riviera, Cabos) are still outside the alert zones for the United States.

Although the perspectives were positive at the end of 2010, we can’t overlook current risks. We still may have an increase in the number of tourist in 2011 as a consequence of the world dynamic in this sector, but if we don’t have positive changes in the short term, the growing rate will be lower again, and tourists will concentrate more in a few destinations, that are already the ones more visited, at expense of the rest of the country.


2007
2008
2009
2010
2011 (estimated on Dec. 2010)
International tourists (million)
21.4
22.6
21.5
22.4
22.6 Tourist National Confederation
26.0 Ministry of Tourism
2007 to 2010 are data from BANXICO

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