According to Volume I of the annual PATA Asia
Pacific Visitor Forecasts 2015-19, destinations in Asia Pacific
stand to welcome 33 million more foreign arrivals in 2015 than in
2014, lifting the expected total inbound volume to around 547
million by the end of the year.
That increase averages out to an annual growth
rate of 6% for Asia Pacific as a whole.
At the destination level, some inbound
growth performances well exceed even those averages. According to
PATA CEO Mario Hardy.
“Destinations to watch this year include
Palau, Myanmar and Papua New Guinea as their individual growth
rates are expected to be around 20% or even higher,” said Mr
Hardy. “At
the volume increase level we expect 11 of the 38 destinations
covered in these forecasts to see increases of more than one
million foreign arrivals during the year, with several at levels
of four million or more. Overall, 25 destinations will see their
foreign inbound counts rise by more than 100,000 for the year.”
Intra-regional travel continues to dominate
in 2015, with more than 80% of the flows from Northeast Asia
heading to other destinations within Northeast Asia. Southeast Asia
is marginally lower with three-quarters of the total flows in 2015
from that sub-region arriving at other destinations within
Southeast Asia.
The source markets responsible for
generating these increases are spearheaded by those of Northeast
Asia, with China well in front adding an expected 13.5 million
additional arrivals into Asia Pacific destinations this year
alone.
Asia destinations will absorb most of the additional
volume from China, with other Northeast Asia destinations expected
to capture around three-quarters of that additional volume and
Southeast Asia around 17%.
Southeast Asia also remains an
important generator of international arrivals into Asia Pacific
with Malaysia and Thailand in particular each expected to generate
in excess of an additional one million arrivals above the 2014
count, during the year; likewise the USA which is forecast to
deliver an addition 1.5 million arrivals to the collective Asia
Pacific destinations during 2015.
Overall, some 25 origin
markets will generate additional arrivals numbers in excess of
100,000 for the year over those generated in 2014.
This
first volume of the PATA Asia Pacific Visitor Forecasts 2015-2019
gives an overview of how the tourism landscape in Asia Pacific is expected to develop over the next five years and is
available now. The companion volume II, which details arrivals, departures and receipts (where data are available) at the
quarterly and annual levels, will be released before the end of
the first half of the year.
PATA,
Arrivals,
Traffic,
ADR,
RevPAR
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