Economy May 12, 2020 - 7:47 am

Pandemic’s impact on Dominican tourism sector

Santo Domingo.- On May 7 the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) released estimates on the impact of the pandemic on the world tourism sector.

It said in a statement that international tourism had contracted by 22% during the first quarter and that contraction could reach 60% to 80% by year end.

The contraction to March meant 67 million fewer tourists, or US$80.0 billion in lost income.

“The world is facing an unprecedented health and economic crisis. Tourism has been hit hard, and millions of jobs are at risk in one of the sectors of the economy that employs the most labor,” said UNWTO Secretary-General Zurab Pololikashvili.

The Dominican Republic, the tourism leader in the Caribbean and Latin America, is no exception to the pandemic that collapses the countries’ health system and paralyzes their economies.

In a normal year like 2018, the tourism sector generated foreign exchange for the country for US$6.6 billion and was an important catalyst for economic growth due to its trade links with the rest of the sectors of the economy.

COVID-19

April 30, 2024 - 10:04 am

SeNaSa hires more than 1,500 doctors

April 26, 2024 - 9:23 am

Pro Consumidor clears rice brands of harmful metals

April 22, 2024 - 1:21 pm

Ney Arias Lora Hospital and CMD appeal ruling

April 15, 2024 - 8:40 am

Cyber attack exposes Covid-19 vaccination records in Dominican Republic

MOST READ

World

Seven countries to contribute mission agents to Haiti

Economy

Dominican Republic breaks ground on Punta Bergantín Innovation Hub

Tourism

Hyatt to add 1,000 rooms in Dominican Republic with two new hotels

Economy

Dominican Republic wraps up 1st LatAm Trade Show with $28M in contracts

MORE NEWS

Tourism

Collado: Tourism key to Americas’ economic growth

Tourism

Dominican tourism press, Puerto Plata Cluster partner up

Local

Caribbean Cinemas expands reach with acquisition of Palacio del Cine theaters

World

Haitian gang leader rejects disarmament without state negotiations