Domestic visitor spend softens
Domestic visitor spend softens
Research just released by
the Ministry of Tourism shows that spending by
domestic
travellers within New Zealand, in the year to December
2005,
decreased by 5.4% to $6.8
billion.
‘’These results come as no surprise,”
says Bruce Bassett, Research Manager,
Ministry of
Tourism. “The weakness of domestic travel activity has
been a
phenomenon we’ve been seeing for some
time.”
“It is clear that in 2005 when conditions for
overseas travel were highly
favorable because of the
high New Zealand dollar, affordable trans-Tasman
flights
and all-inclusive Pacific holiday packages, New Zealanders
opted to go
offshore rather than holiday at home.”
Mr
Bassett says that New Zealand has, effectively, experienced
a switch from
domestic to international travel, and this
is a characteristic that is being widely seen around the
world, including by Australia and many European
countries.
“This pattern is expected to soften into 2006
as the New Zealand currency weakens in relation to our
destination markets, but it is also clear that New
Zealanders have a great propensity to see the world, and
this is unlikely to
change.”
The research shows that
spending on overnight trips fell by 6.4% to $4.2
billion
and day trip spending fell by 3.9% to 2.6 billion. A key
factor that may
have affected the overall spend is that
expenditure on transportation
increased by 10% to $2.1
billion in 2005 compared to the previous year.
The
Domestic Travel Survey is a telephone survey of 15,000 New
Zealand residents undertaken throughout the year. Data for
the year ending March
2006 will become available in
October. A range of data and reports from the
survey are
available on the Tourism Research Council New Zealand
website
– www.trcnz.govt.nz.
ENDS