1 / 19

New Zealand’s tourism data

New Zealand’s tourism data. Peter Ellis Manager Tourism Research and Evaluation 4 July 2012. What we’re covering today. Overview of tourism data Four of the key data sets Access to data Changes afoot. Information from firms. Information from tourists. Composite or analytical.

moana
Download Presentation

New Zealand’s tourism data

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Zealand’s tourism data Peter Ellis Manager Tourism Research and Evaluation 4 July 2012

  2. What we’re covering today • Overview of tourism data • Four of the key data sets • Access to data • Changes afoot

  3. Information from firms Information from tourists Composite or analytical International Travel and Migration (including “IVA”) Tourism Satellite Account Accommodation Survey (aka “CAM”) Regional Tourism Indicators (2012+) International Visitors’ Survey Convention Activity Survey Regional Estimates Tourism Industry Monitor Visitor Experience Monitor Domestic Travel Survey National forecasts Business scorecard(2014+) Convention Delegates Survey Insights Mood of the NZ traveller [Colmar Brunton – Automobile Association] Produced by: State of the Tourism Sector [with Lincoln University] Statistics New Zealand Longitudinal International Travel Influence and Motivations Study Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Tourism New Zealand Active Considerers Monitor Tourism Industry Association New Zealand Regional Visitors Monitor (stopped 2011)

  4. Four of particular importance: • International Travel and Migration • International Visitors Survey • Tourism Satellite Account • Regional Tourism Indicators

  5. International Travel and Migration • Arrival and departure cards • The “International Visitor Arrivals” is a subset of the wider travel information • Basically a count of visitors of 12 months or less • Collected by Customs and processed by Statistics New Zealand • Published monthly • Weekly provisional statistics released each Friday

  6. Growth in China is strong but it in absolute terms it is still small compared to Australia, and even to aggregated “other” markets:

  7. International Visitors Survey • Survey of outgoing visitors (in NZ <12 months) • Main estimation of interest is expenditure • total spend by country, purpose of visit • average value of different visitor types • Produced by Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment • Feeds into balance of payments and national accounts • Also includes highlights and disappointments

  8. The decline in real spend per person is across the board and can be seen in any combination of purpose of visit and country of origin:

  9. Compared to other visitors, disappointments reported by Chinese visitors give much more prominence toissues relating to quality, standards, service, accommodation etc Chinese visitors’ disappointments All visitors’ disappointments

  10. Tourism Satellite Account • A recasting of the national accounts • Produced annually by Statistics New Zealand • Percentage of GDP, employment, exports • Direct and indirect contribution of tourism • Only “direct” should be used to compare to other industries • Estimates of industry ratios and product ratios • ie how much each industry and product is involved in “tourism”

  11. Regional tourism indicators • Goes live later this year • Based on electronic transactions • Will give reliable indicators for each region: • Domestic and international tourist spend • Region (domestic) or country (international) of origin • Industry

  12. The regional tourism indicators will greatly improve current estimates of regional tourism • based on the accommodation survey; or • statistical modelling of combinations of surveys (see below)

  13. Access to data – three levels • Simple • Headline figures • One page “key tourism statistics” • “Key data” or “commentary” for each series • Moderate • Mostly consultants, industry groups, large firms • Cross tabulations and pivot tables • available on website (screen shot next slide) • Or via Harmoni for selected users – TNZ, TIANZ, etc • Expert • Microdata • Specialist statistics software and skills needed

  14. “Tourism data improvement programme” • Review of “enduring questions” and data needs in 2011 • “Domain plan” approved October 2011 • Key priorities: • Redevelop the International Visitors Survey • Develop regional tourism indicators • New approach to forecasts • Business scorecard • Develop a consolidated modern database • With improved dissemination • Increase statistical capability in Ministry

More Related