12. December 2005
The Travel Bug - Issue 8
Air Vanuatu Update
Air Vanuatu is very pleased to announce the introduction of a
third service Port Vila - Auckland for the 2006 New Zealand peak season. This extra service will operated from
Tuesday from 06 June through to 31 October 2006. It is displayed in the system and ready to sell. It will
complement the current Wednesday and Saturday services and will address the demand experienced this year during the
same period.
Below are the schedule details of this new
service:
Tuesday
Vila- Auckland Departs 15:40 Arrives 20:40
Auckland-Vila Departs 21:40 Arrives 23:00
Air Vanuatu looks forward to your strong support for 2006 and
in particular in the New Zealand market. (Source: Vanuatu Tourism Office
09/12/2005)
Tourism Worth $2.6b to South Pacific
Tourism was worth an estimated $2.6billion to the South Pacific region, a research commissioned by the South Pacific Tourism
Organisation revealed. The report, 'The Economic Impact of Tourism in SPTO Member Countries' prepared by the New
Zealand Tourism Research Institute said the economic value of tourism had grown by over 60 per cent since 2000.
Tourism accounted for over 50 per cent of GDP in some Pacific countries and often accounted for between 10 and 20
per cent of formal employment. SPTO said tourism was a sector which had strong backward and forward linkages so
that when tourism developed, nearly every other sector of the economy benefitted.
As part of the study, a survey was undertaken of tourism
operators in the South Pacific to better ascertain the inter-industry linkages that tourism provides. The report
estimated that a total of $638million was spent by the tourism industry on local wages and salaries in 2004, whilst
a further $655 million was directed to the purchase of materials/supplies from within the local economies of
(either local or imported goods sold through local wholesalers) and $478million was spent on other costs (including
areas such as financial services and insurance). In simple terms, for every $1.7million of visitor expenditure in
the region, $1.1million of local wages/salary payments and other purchases were made from local economies in the
region. The report indicated that it was clear the industry had great potential to generate further downstream
benefits for island economies.
For the SPTO country members as a group, departure tax
generated well over $34.9million in 2004. The report estimated that government revenue from direct tourist
expenditure alone in 2004 in SPTO member countries was $791million. This figure included departure tax and
conservative estimates of corporate tax taken from industry revenue. The figures do not include duties, tariffs and
other tourism related taxes. "The Report provides some very valuable data; clearly tourism is a major driver in
most Pacific economies and a major source of direct revenue for most governments," Ross Hopkins, the policy and
programs adviser at SPTO indicated.
The research indicated the figures (in terms of the value of
tourism) were currently understated due to lack of data and they do not include cruise ship tourist expenditure or
tourist expenditure on airline services. TRNZI indicated the underestimate may be at least 20 percent, which would
make tourism worth at least $3.1billion to the region. "It is interesting to note however that despite most
governments giving priority to tourism development, most donors do not have the sector very high on their agenda,"
the SPTO said. "Clearly there is a need for donors to further consider how tourism can be developed at a regional
and country level and to support initiatives through their own programs." (Source: SPTO Update in November
2005)
« 25 November 2005 Archive 25 December 2005 »
|