Scoop has an Ethical Paywall
Licence needed for work use Learn More

Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 

Government drops funding for Accommodation Survey

6 June 2019

Hospitality New Zealand is concerned for the future of NZ tourism, following news that MBIE will stop funding for the Commercial Accommodation Monitor - the primary source of crucial data and insights for New Zealand’s number one export earning industry


According to statements released separately today by Stats NZ and Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), funding will cease later this year for the Commercial Accommodation Monitor (CAM), also known as the Accommodation Survey. According to MBIE, the last and final edition of the Accommodation Survey is now expected to be published on 14 November 2019 (featuring data from September 2019).

MBIE and Stats NZ have both stated that funding for the Accommodation Survey will cease due to “significant cost pressures” making it difficult to run on “present funding.”

The monthly CAM reports are currently curated by Stats NZ on behalf of MBIE, as 32 regional reports and a national overview. The CAM reports provide the tourism and hospitality industry with vital data and insights regarding visitor volumes and activity across New Zealand, at national and regional levels, including guest night numbers, capacity, number of establishments and occupancy rates.

On behalf of commercial accommodation members located across New Zealand, Hospitality New Zealand is concerned that defunding this crucial information resource will harm both the hospitality and tourism sectors, and reduce their capacity to work towards a sustainable industry, in line with the Government’s own goals set out in the New Zealand-Aotearoa Government Tourism Strategy (released earlier this year).

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

The tourism and hospitality sectors have previously made requests to Government that the Commercial Accommodation Monitor be updated and improved to also include data from peer-to-peer accommodation providers (such as Airbnb and Bookabach). The statement from MBIE released today acknowledged the failure by Government to do so. However, Hospitality New Zealand is extremely concerned by MBIE’s decision to cease funding for this vital resource altogether. This decision has been made by the Government without consultation with relevant tourism and hospitality industry representatives.

In response to the defunding of the Commercial Accommodation Monitor, Hospitality New Zealand COO Julie White commented: “Currently, all commercial accommodation providers nationwide, including hotels, motels, holidays parks and hostels, are required to provide their monthly data to Stats NZ. This information goes towards creating reports that are a vital resource for those accommodation businesses. The hospitality and tourism sector has not been consulted in the Government’s decision to cease funding for this resource that is not only vital to the health of the accommodation sector, but in turn, to New Zealand’s economic growth and health, since tourism is New Zealand’s number one export earner, contributing over 20 percent of our foreign exchange earnings, and generating over $100 million per day for New Zealand.”

White added: “The data provided in the monthly Accommodation Survey complied by Stats NZ is a crucial insight towards achieving NZ’s key tourism strategies, including but not limited to successfully spreading the tourism dollar out in to our regions, as well as identifying seasonality issues. There are wider ramifications of ending this source of data, that stretch beyond the accommodation sector, including limiting much needed investment in to NZ’s regions.”

In the New Zealand-Aotearoa Government Tourism Strategy released in May 2019, the Government included better data and insights for the tourism industry as one of its four top priorities for 2019/2020, stating: “Better data and insight, including implementing the Tourism Data Domain Plan, identifying future trends that could impact on the tourism system and coordinate and share data and insight to support the industry.”

ENDS

© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.