UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai |
Emphasising the significance of tourism as a major driver
of new socio-economic model, UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai, at the New
Economy Forum said that UNWTO expect a staggering 1.8 billion international
tourists by 2030.
“In 1950, 25 million tourists travelled internationally.
Last year that number hit one billion: one billion international tourists
travelling the world in a single year. Around five billion more travelled
domestically within their own countries.
At UNWTO we forecast this number to continue to rise. We expect a
staggering 1.8 billion international tourists by 2030. Never before have so
many people travelled to so many places.
Few places on the planet have escaped the curiosity of the traveller and
few are now unreachable,” said Taleb Rifai.
He added, “These tourists generate over US$ 1 trillion in
exports for the countries they visits, close to 6% of the world’s exports of
goods and services, and 30% of exports if we consider services alone. One in
every 12 jobs worldwide is connected to the tourism sector.”
Our world has been fundamentally transformed over the
past decades. It is commonplace to say
we now
live in a globalized world – a
complex, interlocking and independent network across which flows of
goods, capital, ideas,
information and now people move faster than ever before.
This process of globalization has behind it a number of
forces which are not simply outcomes of a more globalized world, but its very drivers. First: information
technology and telecommunications. The
“IT Revolution” has allowed us to communicate and process information in digital form
and in real time like never before; quite simply transforming
our lives.
Second: migratory trends. The “Age of Mobility” has seen
millions traveling in their own
countries and across borders in pursuit
of opportunity. The world is fast
becoming urban, with over half the world’s population now living in urban
areas. By 2030 this number will swell to almost 5 billion.
These are two long-term trends that have not been
diminished by the global economic crisis. In fact, the opportunities created by
technology and mobility have not slowed
and suggest the world economy can again be set on a prosperous path. But there
is yet another powerful “mega-trend” of globalization at play in this new world which often goes
unnoticed, despite the fact that it involves nearly the entire global population and brings our world to a
screeching halt whenever it is disrupted:
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