Asia and the Pacific continued as a hot spot for international tourism in 2012, attracting what is expected to be in excess of 350 million international visitor arrivals, expanding its collective inbound count by more than 5 per cent and generating more than 18 million additional foreign visits, year-on-year. This is according to preliminary results released today by the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA). This is the third consecutive year in which foreign arrivals growth has remained positive for the region.
Of the 40 separate destinations covered, only five reported contractions for the year. Most of those were relatively marginal for the region as a whole. The only exception was China, which, with a contraction in growth of 2.2 per cent, is estimated to have lost around three million international arrivals (foreign and compatriot) from its 2011 total international inbound count.
Southeast Asia was the strongest performer in 2012 in annual percentage growth terms, with a gain of 9.9 per cent for the year. This equated to an increase of more than eight million additional arrivals over the previous year and pushed the ASEAN aggregate international inbound count to almost 89 million.
Within this sub-region, Myanmar had a staggering increase of almost 52 per cent in arrivals, while Cambodia and Lao PDR reported gains of 24 per cent and 22 per cent respectively. All three destinations created new records with Myanmar breaking the million arrivals mark (in total) for the first time. Cambodia and Lao PDR both also broke the three million mark. They were not alone either as every destination within the ASEAN region set new highs in terms of international arrivals.
Japan turned in the strongest percentage growth with a gain of 35 per cent for the year, a performance that saw the destination recoup the losses in visitor arrivals following the tsunami of 2011 and move once again into record arrivals territory. Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong SAR and Korea (ROK) also added to the sub-regional performance with growth increases of 20 per cent, 16 per cent and 14 per cent respectively.
The Northern Marianas (+17.4 per cent), Vanuatu (15.1 per cent) and Guam (+12.8 per cent) reported the strongest percentage gains, while Hawaii, Australia and Guam posted the greatest gains in additional arrivals for the year.
Across the Asia/Pacific region, preliminary figures suggest that the top five destinations, by growth in international visitor arrivals, were: Myanmar, Japan, Cambodia, Lao PDR and Chinese Taipei; each had a year-on-year increase of 20 per cent or better.
In volume terms, there were six particularly significant outcomes with Hong Kong SAR, Thailand, Japan, Singapore, Korea (ROK) and Chinese Taipei each securing in excess of one million additional arrivals in 2012; the SAR of Hong Kong saw 6.7 million additional international arrivals.
Martin J Craigs, CEO of PATA, said, “Asia and the Pacific continue to add substantially to the global international arrivals count. We expect that to continue for some time yet. The players shift and change of course and we can expect some movement in terms of generating and receiving markets. But across the region we expect substantial gains in both the volume and the value of these movements for some time yet. How we measure and determine the impacts of this growth in traffic is becoming more important, however. That is why PATA is working to promote the concept of the Complete Visitor Economy throughout its membership and across the wider industry.”