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Home / Hawkes Bay Today / Business

Japanese tourists will 'stay away' says economist

Hawkes Bay Today
31 Mar, 2011 04:00 PM2 mins to read

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The number of Japanese tourists visiting New Zealand will fall by 45.5 per cent to the lowest level since 1985 in the second quarter of this year due to the earthquakes in both countries.
The quarterly drop will have a large impact on total New Zealand tourism spending because Japanese tourists spend $4500 each on average, nearly double the $2300 most tourists spend.
This is according to an analysis of the impact on the tourism sector of the recent traumatic events in Christchurch and Japan by Philip Borkin, an economist at Goldman Sachs & Partners New Zealand.
He concludes, after studying the impact of other natural disasters on tourism, that the impact varies but it is usually temporary.
Overall, he expects the number of tourists arriving in New Zealand to fall by 10 per cent in the second quarter of this year. Visitor arrivals are expected to rebound in the third quarter and be back to pre-earthquake levels, excluding the Rugby World Cup, by the end of the year.
"Our analysis of other major disasters suggests there is no 'standard template' for the impact these events have on visitor arrivals into those countries," the Goldman Sachs report said.
"However, what does appear to be common across the majority of the events is that any impact is relatively short lived."
Visitor arrivals recovered quickly after the 1999 Taiwanese earthquake, as they did in Thailand after the 2004 tsunami.
"Of course, we do not know ... what arrivals would have been if the event had not occurred," the report said.
The report also says disaster events strike the tourism sectors of smaller nations harder.
The magnitude 7.1 earthquake in Christchurch in September did not hit the tourism sector. As at January 2011, seasonally adjusted visitor arrivals were 2.7 per cent above the pre-quake level.
But a "sharp negative response" was expected to the magnitude 6.3 earthquake in February as damage was greater, lives were lost and international media coverage was greater, the report said.
Goldman Sachs expected this reaction to abate as the "shock and awe factor" died away.

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