WTTC calls on G7 Leaders to recover millions of jobs by restarting international travel

Travel Biz News —
The World Travel & Tourism Council has called on UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the G7 Heads of State, to lead a coordinated response to restart international travel safely, which it says will be critical to the global economic and social recovery.
WTTC, which represents the global private sector, made the plea in an open letter to UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, Chair of the G7 group of nations in 2021, just days before leaders are due to meet at Carbis Bay in Cornwall.
The letter laid out the critical role the G7 must play to drive real change and save the global travel and tourism sector by safely restoring international travel and mobility through three key measures.
The first is to put travel and tourism at the heart of all governmental decision making globally, recognising its economic and social importance and committing to stronger global public-private collaboration.
Secondly, to commit to implementing a consistent framework to safely reopen international travel, through the use of testing, health & hygiene protocols, and digital health travel passes to ensure the safe and seamless flow of people.
Finally, to reopen international borders between countries with similar successful vaccination rollouts and low levels of infection, such as the US and the UK. This move would unlock both inbound and outbound travel and provide a significant boost to both economies, based on clear, consistent metrics and following a data-driven approach.
In the letter to Boris Johnson, WTTC said the travel and tourism sector will play a key role in achieving the G7 policy priorities set by his Presidency.
“The global tourism body said we will not achieve global recovery unless international mobility resumes and helps bring back millions of jobs into the economy; enabling free and fair trade to flourish once again. Travel and tourism will also play a key role in enhancing our preparedness and resilience against future pandemics, as well as tackling climate change,” WTTC said in a statement.
According to WTTC’s latest Economic Impact Report (EIR), in 2019, travel and tourism contributed to 10.4 per cent of global GDP and created more than 330 million jobs, that’s one in ten jobs across the world.
However, following a year of global lockdowns and closed borders, some 62 million jobs in travel and tourism have been lost around the world, with many more at risk, and the sector’s contribution to global GDP has slumped by US$4.5 trillion (-49.1 per cent).
8 June , 2021 Photo : WTTC