Friday 20th July 2012 |
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The number of short-term arrivals rose to a seven-year high for the month of June as a flood of Australians and Chinese tourists came to visit last month.
Some 151,100 people came to New Zealand for a short-term visit in the month of June, the most for that month since 2005 when the British and Irish Lions toured the nation, Statistics New Zealand said. That was 15 percent more than in June last year, when flights were cancelled by the Chilean volcanic ash cloud. Annual short-term arrivals rose 5.4 percent to 2.6 million from a year earlier.
The increase was led by a 25 percent gain in the number of Australian visitors to 64,800, of which 29 percent were kiwis living across the Ditch, and a 7.4 percent increase in the number of Chinese tourists to 6,700.
The figures come after national carrier Air New Zealand chief executive Rob Fyfe this week told MPs not enough is being done to promote the country as an attractive destination. The tourism sector has been in the doldrums since the global financial crisis in 2008, when financial markets collapsed and oil prices surged, causing widespread unemployment and eroding people's discretionary spending on long-haul travel.
New Zealanders continued to quit the country for Australia in June, with 1,029 more people leaving than arriving.
There was a net outflow of 1,029 migrants in June, smaller than 1,491 a year earlier, taking the annual outflow to 3,191, turning around an inflow of 3,867.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
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