Showing posts with label Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report 2013. Show all posts

07 May 2015

Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2015 - the Southern/Eastern African countries

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has released the biennial Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Report 2015. The report, which features the latest iteration of the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index (TTCI), measures "the set of factors and policies that enable the sustainable development of the Travel & Tourism (T&T) sector, which in turn, contributes to the development and competitiveness of a country." The TTCI benchmarks the T&T competitiveness of 141 economies. It comprises four subindexes, 14 pillars, and 90 individual indicators.
Based on the TTCI, the report reveals that Spain, France and Germany lead the world in terms of travel and tourism competitiveness. The United States, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Australia, Italy, Japan and Canada complete the this year's top 10.
South Africa is the highest-ranked Sub-Sharan African country in the Index on position #48 (regional rank #1), followed by the Seychelles (#54|#2), Mauritius (#56|#3), Namibia (#70|#4) and Kenya (#78|#5).


South Africa (global #48 | regional #1)
  • positive: rich natural and cultural resources, positive business environment, relatively good infrastructure compared to neighboring countries, still reaping the benefits of the 2010 World Cup (several sport stadiums that can host significant entertainment events), several association meetings taking place in the country, abundant wildlife, severeal World Heritage Sites, ranked 24th in online searches for nature-related activities, attention to forestry, attention to participation in international treaties
  • negative: further efforts should be taken to protect coastlines, further efforts should be taken to protect biodiversity, further efforts should be taken to protect land, development needed in terms of security, development needed in terms of health, development needed in terms of labour market, visa policy ("In addition, South Africa’s visa policy (where the country currently ranks 67th) is poised to become more stringent with the imposition of new immigration laws that also impact visitors, this could certainly harm South Africa’s T&T competitiveness going forward." [The Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2015, p.22])
Seychelles (#56 | #3)
  • positive: safe environment, business-friendly environment, qualified human resources, a ground and tourist service infrastructure that can adequately transport and receive the almost 1 million tourists visiting the country annually
  • negative: air transport infrastructure is somewhat less developed, balancing infrastructure development with conservation is becoming more challenging (a high share of species under threat and limited protected areas), greater attention to all aspects of environmental conservation could be beneficial
Kenya (#78 | #5)
  • positive: natural resources, high number of online searches for natural tourism, home to many species, home to many UNESCO heritage sites, Kenya invests approx 7% of its budget in tourism, Kenya has carried out an effective marketing campaign, environmental sustainability is an area of strength
  • negative: main areas of improvement are security, health and hygiene, ICT readiness
Botswana (#88 | #7)
  • positive: natural resources, strong price competitiveness advantage, a relatively conducive business environment, better safety and security levels than many peers
  • negative: ground transport and air and tourist service infrastructures need significant upgrades, rich cultural resources are not well leveraged, country branding is relatively poor
Southern & Eastern African countries in the Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Report 2015:
  1. South Africa (global #48)
  2. Seychelles (#54)
  3. Mauritius (#56)
  4. Namibia (#70)
  5. Kenya (#78)
  6. Botswana (#88)
  7. Tanzania (#93)
  8. Rwanda (#98)
  9. Zambia (#107)
  10. Swaziland (#108)
  11. Uganda (#114)
  12. Zimbabwe (#115)
  13. Ethiopia (#118)
  14. Madagascar (#121)
  15. Malawi (#126)
  16. Lesotho (#129)
  17. Mozambique (#130)
  18. Burundi (#135)
  19. Angola (#139)

21 March 2013

Study: Rwanda is the most welcoming country in East & Southern Africa

All tourism publications seem currently to be talking about Bolivia as the most unfriendly country for tourists in the world and Iceland as the most friendly country for tourists, so I had a look how the World Economic Forum (WEF) acutally assesed the friendliness towards foreign tourists in East and Southern Africa.
According to the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2013, in which the WEF compared the (un)friendliness of 140 countries, Rwanda has the best "Attitude [of population] towards foreign visitors" in East and Southern Africa. Zambia was ranked the second most friendly country in the region, followed by Uganda and South Africa.

Attitude of population towards foreign visitors (East & Southern Africa)
["How welcome are foreign visitors in your country?" | 1 = very unwelcome; 7 = very welcome]
  1. Rwanda - 6.6 (overall ranking #21)
  2. Zambia - 6.5 (overall ranking #34)
  3. Uganda - 6.4 (overall ranking #40)
  4. South Africa - 6.4 (overall ranking #42)
  5. Kenya - 6.4 (overall ranking #51)
  6. Burundi - 6.3 (overall ranking #63)
  7. Ethiopia - 6.3 (overall ranking #67)
  8. Swaziland - 6.2 (overall ranking #69)
  9. Namibia - 6.1 (overall ranking #85)
  10. Mozambique - 6.1 (overall ranking #91)
  11. Botswana - 5.9 (overall ranking #103)
  12. Madagascar - 5.9 (overall ranking #105)
  13. Zimbabwe - 5.9 (overall ranking #106)
  14. Tanzania - 5.8 (overall ranking #115)
  15. Lesotho - 5.7 (overall ranking #120)
  16. Malawi - 5.7 (overall ranking #121)

08 March 2013

Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2013 - the Southern/Eastern African countries

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has released the biennial Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2013. The report assesses 140 economies worldwide based on the extent to which they are putting in place the factors and policies to make it attractive to develop the travel and tourism sector. Based on the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index (TTCI), the report reveals that Switzerland, Germany and Austria lead the world in terms of travel and tourism competitiveness. Spain, the United Kingdom, the United States, France, Canada, Sweden and Singapore complete the this year's top 10.
The Seychelles is the highest-ranked Sub-Sharan African country in the ranking on position #38 (regional rank #1), followed by Mauritius on rank #58 (#2), South Africa on rank #64 (#3), Namibia on rank #91 (#4), Botswana on rank #94 (#7) and Kenya on rank #96 (#8).



South Africa (regional ranking #3 - overall ranking #64)
  • positive: natural resources, cultural resources, creative industries, many international fairs and exhibitions, infrastructure (air, road, rail), policy rules and regulations
  • negative: safety and security, level of health and hygiene (incl. impact on human resources, workforce), increase of fuel prices, increase of ticket taxes, increase of airport charges
Namibia (#5 - #91)
  • positive: rich natural resources, focus on environmental sustainability, ground transport infrastructure
  • negative:  to costly & time comsuming to start a business, health & hygiene, human resource base
Botswana (#7 - #94)
  • positive: natural resources, price competitiveness, policy environment
  • negative: Air Service Agreements not rewarded as open, much time is needed to start a business, transport infrastructure, information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure, low hotel room concentration, limited presence of international car rental companies, low ATM density, health & hygiene (esp. health of workforce)
Kenya (#8 - #96)
  • positive: natural resources, tourism recognised as priority, strong focus on environmental sustainability,
  • negative: policy environment (esp. property rights), high costs to start a business, infrastructure, human resource base, security situation
Other rankings:
  • Rwanda - regional #9 - overall #105
  • Zambia - regional #11 - overall #108
  • Tanzania - regional #12 - overall #109
  • Uganda - regional #13 - overall #116
  • Zimbabwe - regional #15 - overall #118
  • Swaziland - regional #16 - overall #119
  • Malawi - regional #19 - overall #124
  • Mozambique - regional #20 - overall #125
  • Madagascar - regional #26 - overall #131
  • Lesotho - regional #27 - overall #135