Fri Mar 8,
2013 2:46am EST
* European
tourism seen up 2-3 pct in 2013
* Greece bookings
rebound, Alltours sees 30 pct rise
* Emerging
markets to be main driver of global tourism
By Michelle
Martin and Victoria Bryan
The desire
for a beach holiday closer to home for cost-conscious consumers in Europe is helping to revive tourism demand in the
country, battling recession and a debt crisis.
Doerte
Nordbeck from market research group GfK showed in a presentation at the ITB
travel fair this week that bookings to Greece
from Britain , Germany and the Netherlands for this summer were up
10 percent.
Tourism
income for Greece ,
its chief money spinner, fell by 4.6 percent to 9.89 billion euros from
January-November in 2012 according to the country's central bank.
Arrivals
from Germany, Greece's biggest tourism market, dropped by almost a fifth,
partly on fears about a backlash on German tourists caused by Berlin's tough
austerity demands on Athens.
Alltours,
Germany's No. 4 tour operator, said bookings for holidays in Greece were up 30
percent on the year by March 5, boding well for the country where tourism
accounts for around one fifth of output and one in five jobs.
"The
tourism industry in Greece
has overcome the crisis of the last two years and is now back on top
form," said Willi Verhuven, chief executive of German tour operator
Alltours.
Verhuven
said the company was in particular seeing a surge in bookings from repeat
customers who had ditched Greece
in favour of other resorts.
Europe's
largest tour operator TUI Travel is also seeing a comeback for Greece , with
bookings at the group's German unit up 4 percent. Bookings from the UK are
performing strongly, a spokesman said.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, who opened the ITB fair this year, called on trade
fair visitors to take holidays in ailing euro zone states like Greece , Spain ,
Portugal and Italy to help
to create jobs.
"I
also wish that European countries which are famous for tourism get good custom
- I name Greece , Spain , Portugal ,
Italy
- all countries in which growth is really necessary at the moment and where we
have to make an effort to finally get people back into work," she said.
Globally,
the tourism industry - worth an estimated $1.15 trillion last year - is
expected to grow by between 3 and 4 percent in 2013, driven by up to 6 percent
higher visitor numbers in emerging markets, according to latest estimates from
the UN World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO).
It sees
growth in Europe , the world's No. 1 tourist
destination, slowing to 2 percent or holding steady at 3 percent as the
region's debt and financial crisis rumbles on.
But Germany 's
federal tourist association BTW forecasts growth of just 1 to 2 percent this
year due to the uncertain economic environment.
"If
the weak economy begins to seriously affect the employment market and domestic
demand then this will also impact on the tourism industry," group
president Michael Frenzel said.
Emerging
markets like China and Russia will
continue to be the main driver of growth for international tourism, Rolf
Freitag, head of tourism consultancy IPK, said.
Asia
Pacific is seen recording the biggest increase in visitor numbers this year,
with growth of between 5 and 6 percent, followed by Africa ,
where arrivals are expected to increase by between 4 and 6 percent, UNWTO said.
Last year,
emerging market countries attracted 4.1 percent more tourists while their
mature counterparts catered for 3.6 percent more travellers, according to UNTWO
data. (Editing by Jane Merriman)
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