The travel and hospitality sector is on the road to recovery, with domestic tourism touching pre-Covid levels, and high interest for international travel in the new year
Rapid vaccination drives and easing of Covid-19 restrictions enabled the travel industry to bounce back stronger in Q2 of 2022, with many saying it is the year the sector took a rebirth.
While domestic tourism has touched pre-Covid-19 levels, inbound tourism, ie, foreigners travelling to India, continues to be affected, says Rajiv Mehra, the president of Indian Association of Tour Operators. “By March 2023, we will be at one-third the level we used to be before the pandemic.” He adds, “India has just opened up e-visas to UK nationals again, so that’s a big relief.”
By the end of the year, the travel industry is expected to touch the $14.92 billion mark, according to Rikant Pitti, co-founder of online travel aggregator (OTA), EaseMyTrip.
“We are going to get 66 new airports in the next decade. From 85 million domestic flyers in FY22, the number is going to shoot up to 330 million in FY32. The industry will grow 3.5 times in the next few years,” he says.
Hotels and resorts, like airlines, saw an improvement in business as well. At IHG Hotels and Resorts, for instance, owing to the growing demand for domestic leisure travel, early return of business travel, weddings and conferences, the business did significantly well, informs Sudeep Jain, MD, South West Asia.
(This story appears in the 30 December, 2022 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)