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Thursday 27 August 2020 6:00 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 26 August 2020 4:39 pm

The travel industry will not survive without a radical U-turn

By: Ali Shah

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Alice Springs Airport Houses Planes Grounded Due To The Coronavirus Pandemic

The UK has a rich history as a global transport hub. While we all value our holidays as individuals, the value of travel to the UK economy cannot be overlooked. In 2019, the 40.9m overseas visitors who came to the UK spent £28.4bn. 

While many of us don’t consider the UK economy to be as dependent on tourism as some of our European counterparts, in 2018 the UK ranked 8th  in UNWTO international tourist arrivals league and 11th in the international tourism earnings, accounting in total for 2.7 per cent of global arrivals. London is also the second most visited city in the world, behind only Hong Kong. 

Read more: Travel industry ‘desperately’ calls for help as jobs crisis looms

Travel has therefore profoundly shaped the modern UK economy. The industry accounts for 9.6 per cent of total UK jobs and nine per cent of the UK’s GDP. Yet the emergence of Covid-19 has unquestionably provided us with our biggest challenges to date, and they are continuing to mount. The complete global shutdown of the industry was devastating, but as we have reopened government strategy is now in real danger of causing irretrievable harm to every aspect of the sector.

Spain and France, the UK’s two biggest travel partners, are now both under quarantine measures, and the latest game of travel musical chairs has seen restrictions placed on Austria, Croatia, Trinidad and Tobago. STA Travel, the pandemic’s latest travel victim, is testament to the struggles endured by an industry practically starved of income since March, and now facing short notice changes to quarantine requirements and a cascade of new cancellations. 

Read more: Tourism slump to cost UK £22bn with London worst-hit, says WTTC

For many tour operators and agents, the situation could soon prove terminal. The international Air Transport Association has already revised its prediction for recovery by another year to 2024, and over 90,000 travel workers have lost their jobs or are at risk of redundancy. The “stop-start”  quarantine rules, combined with the wind down of the furlough scheme, will inevitably trigger tens of thousands more losses.

Of course, managing a pandemic is no easy task for the government, and the travel industry must take some responsibility in adapting to the new reality.  Many companies have faced the task head on, drastically restructuring their businesses, and providing customers with more flexibility and support. 

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Read more: Gatwick Airport to cut nearly a quarter of its workforce

Yet so far this has not proven enough to safeguard the ailing travel industry. Many passengers are still experiencing frustrating refund delays, and travel agents have found themselves in a constant battle trying to get customers’ money back for cancelled flights. Over 100 airlines have prevented agents applying for refunds in the normal way — and introduced more difficult and time-consuming systems. Many of those more complicated refunds are still pending and remain at the mercy of airlines. 

If we are to restore consumer confidence in travelling, it is time passengers felt like governments, airlines and travel companies were on their side. Along with clearer guidance and warnings on quarantine rules and consumer rights, government ministers and the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), need to consider a drastic rethink of the way the industry operates. We need to provide flexibility like never before, and trust that people will keep faith with travel. 

That’s why we’ve been proposing that the CAA introduces a new system, in association with the International Air Transport Association, whereby money is only transferred to the relevant airline once the flight has departed. This would enable funds to be returned quickly if the flight does not leave. This new system would replicate what happens in other areas of the industry, and similar schemes have been shown to work for travel consortia.

Arriving in the UK in 2002, I was bewitched by the opportunities offered by the rich and expansive UK travel industry. I have been enduringly impressed by the resilience and adaptability of the industry, so watching it falter under the weight of the pandemic has been agonising. While I am sure that my company can survive, many smaller businesses may not be so lucky — unless more is done to safeguard the industry.

Lockdown has given every sector a chance to reassess how it operates with a “pause moment”. When it comes to travel, we must continue to campaign for the change that is needed for us to adapt and learn to live with this virus, and perhaps leave some lasting positive change on the industry. 

Main image credit: Getty

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