A relative study
- Growth was strongest in Asia and the Pacific (+6%), where the number of international tourists grew by 14 million to reach 248 million.
- Growth in South-East Asia was also accelerated (+10%), while more moderate results were seen in South Asia (+5%), Oceania and North-East Asia (+4% each).
- The Americas (+4%) saw an increase of six million arrivals, reaching a total of 169 million.
- Leading this growth were destinations in North and Central America (+4% each), while South America (+2%) and the Caribbean (+1%) showed some slowdown as compared to 2012.
- Africa (+6%) attracted three million additional arrivals, reaching a new record of 56 million
- The on-going rebound in North Africa (+6%) and the sustained growth of Sub-Saharan destinations (+5%).
- Mixed and volatile result was reported in Middle East (+0% at 52 million).
- Europe remained as the most visited region in the world welcoming an additional of 29 million international tourist arrivals in 2013, raising its total to 563 million. Growth (+5%) exceeded
- The forecast for 2013 and is double the region’s average for the period 2005-2012 (+2.5% a year). Central and Eastern Europe (+7%) and SouthernMediterranean Europe (+6%) had the best results
International tourist arrivals are expected to increase by 4% to 4.5% in 2014, above UNWTO’s Tourism Towards 2030 long-term forecast of +3.8% per year between 2010 and 2020.
Asia and the Pacific holds the strongest regional prospects in 2014 (+5% to +6%) and Africa (+4% to +6%), followed by Europe and the Americas (both +3% to +4%). In the Middle East (0% to +5%), prospects are positive yet volatile.
Quick fact:-
By 2030, the majority of all international tourist arrivals (57%) will be in emerging economy destinations
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