ADB: Pacific Tourism Rebounds, Hope for Recovery
MANILA, PHILIPPINES (9 November 2009) – A recent
increase in Australian and New Zealand tourists to Pacific
island countries has raised hopes the region's vital tourism
industry is recovering after being buffeted by the global
financial crisis, according to a new Asian Development Bank
(ADB) publication.
The November issue of Pacific
Economic Monitor, a quarterly economic review of 14 Pacific
island countries and Timor-Leste, noted that the number of
Australian tourists to the region in July and August
increased by 16.1% year-on-year, a sharp rise after modest
gains in April and May. Meanwhile, the number of New Zealand
tourists visiting the Pacific also climbed in August, to
2.6%, after eight consecutive months of
contraction.
The Monitor described the tourist
figures, together with a price rise in tree crops such as
cocoa and palm oil, as "positive news for the Pacific" and
an indication of a recovering global economy. The report
also notes that Samoa, which was hit by a tsunami last
month, is coping better than expected with the impact of the
disaster because of financial support provided by Samoans
living overseas and the broader international community.
Rehabilitation efforts may now see a small economic
expansion in 2010.
However, the report warns against
complacency in the region, saying that improvements in the
global economy will be gradual and will take time to fully
flow through to the Pacific.
"Notably, unemployment
is still on the rise in the Pacific's key neighboring
economies, and this will delay prospects for a much-needed
turnaround in remittances," the report said.
Most
Pacific economies that have contracted because of the global
economic crisis may find they can only hope for a solid
economic recovery by late 2010, or perhaps even 2011. Fiscal
pressures have intensified in many Pacific island economies,
and the stress is likely to build in 2010 due to higher
international oil prices.
The Monitor called for
concerted government action to help bring about an economic
recovery in the region, noting that a delayed response would
adversely impact on the region's poor.
“It is
estimated that an additional 50,000 people will fall below
the poverty line in the Pacific in 2010 because of the
crisis,” said S.Hafeez Rahman, Director General of ADB's
Pacific Department. “Governments must therefore strengthen
fiscal efforts to speed up economic recovery.”
The Monitor provides an update of developments and
policy issues in the region. The ADB publication uses data
from Australia, New Zealand, US, and Asia to supplement data
from the region and provide more up-to-date assessments and
broader coverage of the Pacific economies.
ADB, based
in Manila, is dedicated to reducing poverty in the Asia and
Pacific region through inclusive economic growth,
environmentally sustainable growth, and regional
integration. Established in 1966, it is owned by 67 members
– 48 from the region. In 2008, it approved $10.5 billion
of loans, $811.4 million of grant projects, and technical
assistance amounting to $274.5
million.
ENDS