Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Cape Looks East To Tackle Global Tourism Slump

Awakening global economic giants China and India are sending more and more tourists to Cape Town, a sign that dramatic changes are happening to the Cape’s traditional visitor demographics, experts say.

Tourism authorities have detailed extensive plans to market Cape Town to the world, to help pull the city and province out of a worldwide slump.

The Cape Argus reported last week that many in the Cape’s crucial industry were speaking openly of a “crisis”, because of low occupancy rates in accommodation establishments, and a similar drop in trading across the industry.

But provincial Tourism MEC Alan Winde, Cape Town Tourism head Mariette du Toit Helmbold and Accelerate Cape Town head Guy Lundy have revealed extensive plans to bring more visitors to the Mother City.

Among these are innovative ways of bringing Gautengers to Cape Town, renewed efforts to attract the Cape’s traditional markets in Europe – despite their economic woes – and dramatic increases in the number of tourists from the “new” markets of China, India and Brazil.

Winde said the Western Cape would be promoted at key trade shows in Brazil and Argentina later this year. “If one analyses the statistics for the first quarter in these markets, it is clear the Western Cape is hitting the right target.”

In 2009, there were 26 975 visitors to the province. This increased to 41 532 last year, an increase of 54 percent.

Arrivals from India to the Western Cape grew from 14 960 in 2009 to 19 543 last year, a 30.6 percent increase.

One of the star markets for that period, Brazil, grew from 15 580 visitors in 2009 to 26 340 last year, a 69.1 percent rise.

Source: Argus

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