• Thursday, April 18, 2024
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Pent-up demand to drive global travel recovery ‘despite inflation and war risks’ – report

Review on the book, ‘Air Transportation in Nigeria: The Lingering Expectations

Pent-up demand for air travel after two years of lockdowns will continue to buoy the industry’s recovery as restrictions ease, despite headwinds from inflation and geopolitical risks, new research from the Mastercard Economics Institute indicates.

An estimated 1.5 billion additional people globally are expected to fly in 2022, compared with last year, according to the MasterCard Economics Institute’s third annual travel report. Of these, Europe will record the biggest increase with about 550 million additional travellers, while the Middle East is expected to have 115 million more this year.

“As restrictions ease in many parts of the world, consumers are booking domestic and international travel faster than they can rip open a bag of in-flight pretzels,” the report said.

“While the recovery could still face delays, we have more reasons to be optimistic than pessimistic.”

The global aviation industry is recovering from the pandemic that dented demand for air travel, forcing airlines to ground aircraft and lay off workers. Now, the industry is facing the challenges of a shortage in staff to meet that demand, higher oil prices and spillover risks from the Russia-Ukraine war.

Tailwinds behind the industry’s rebound include a surge in hiring recently after millions of people faced unemployment in 2020, the report said. This means more people who can buy plane tickets and have the budget for other discretionary spending. More employed people also mean more potential to travel for business.

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Roughly 21 per cent of consumers expect to spend their money on domestic travel and 12 per cent on international travel over the next three months, according to a MasterCard study which surveyed 2,250 consumers across 15 markets. The survey also found that 54 per cent of respondents looking forward to big “make-up” trips after two years of little or no travel.

People have also paid off debt and other liabilities at a record pace over the last two years, the MasterCard travel report said. Higher-income consumers — those more likely to be travelling for leisure — are in a solid financial position, driven by excess savings set aside during the pandemic and a rise in asset prices such as housing.

However, those on lower incomes benefited less from asset price increases, especially those living from one payday to the next. Higher prices for essentials, such as rent and fuel, cut into most people’s spending on leisure travel, the report said.

Despite the rebound in travel bookings, there are considerable headwinds still facing the industry.

“High inflation is a meaningful headwind to the travel recovery and adds to stock market uncertainty,” the report said.

Incomes in most countries this year are expected to increase slower than consumer prices, MasterCard said.

“While incomes are expected to continue growing beyond 2022, the rising cost of goods and services puts a damper on people’s purchasing power, especially for large-ticket goods and services and discretionary purchases like travel,” the global payments company said.

This trend is likely to persist for the rest of 2022 for most markets but is not expected to last as long in some advanced economies, compared to developing economies, it added.