Domestic travel expenditure holding up
Media Statement
Thursday 17 March 2011 – for immediate release
Domestic travel expenditure holding
up
The Ministry of Economic Development’s
latest tourism survey shows New Zealanders spent slightly
less on domestic travel in 2010 than in 2009.
The
Domestic Travel Survey, which tracks the domestic spending
and travel patterns of New Zealanders, showed a decline in
domestic travel in the year to December 2010.
Domestic travellers spent $8.8 billion dollars, a decrease of 1.1 percent on the previous year.
In total, domestic travellers took 16.1 million overnight trips. This is a reduction of 3.8 percent compared to the previous year. Domestic travellers spent 48 million nights away from home (on average three nights per trip), a decrease of 0.5 percent on the previous year. The amount spent on overnight trips for the period was $5.68 billion, a decrease of 2.6 percent on the previous year.
Domestic travellers also took 29.3 million day trips, a decrease of 6.5 percent on the previous year. For day trips, the expenditure was $3.13 billion, up 1.9 percent on the same period in 2009.
“Although more New Zealanders took the chance to travel overseas, their spending on domestic travel did not suffer significantly despite them taking fewer domestic trips during 2010,” said Dr Roger Wigglesworth, Director of Tourism, Events and Consumer Affairs at the Ministry.
Another Ministry survey showed that there
was a 5.6 percent increase of overseas travel by New Zealand
residents in the same period.
Dr Wigglesworth says the rising cost of fuel and the GST increase may have played a part in the reduction in travel.
The Domestic Travel Survey is an annual telephone survey of 15,000 New Zealand residents and is undertaken throughout the year. Data and reports from the survey are available from www.tourismresearch.govt.nz/dts.
ENDS