UNWTO Expresses Great Concern over the Change of Status of the Spanish Tourism Secretariat
While the decision of the Spanish Government to implement a series of austerity measures to address the public deficit is fully understandable, UNWTO expressed great concern that such measures have translated into the end of a separate Secretariat for Tourism. This decision sends out the wrong message to the market and comes at a critical moment, at the beginning of the tourism high season and as the sector still struggles to recover from the loses of 2009.
“UNWTO strongly advocates the importance of building strong national tourism administrations which can fully maximize the potential of tourism to generate wealth and create jobs” said UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai. “This has been recognized by many countries worldwide. Countries such as Argentina, Greece and Italy have all upgraded tourism to a full ministerial portfolio. It is not understandable that Spain, a leading tourism destination, would do the reverse,” he added.
Tourism is one of the most transversal economic sectors, requiring close coordination with other government areas and therefore it is critical that it is represented in decision making at the same level as other sectors.
Spain is a worldwide leading tourism destination, ranking second in international tourism receipts and third in tourist arrivals. Tourism represents 10.5% of Spain’s GDP, 7.5% of its workforce and almost 20% of the country’s total exports. Tourism can thus play a particularly important role in the current economic recovery. At a time of low domestic consumption levels, tourism provides much needed export and tax revenues as well as jobs.