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How to win over… evolving post-pandemic travel retail shoppers

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According to the World Economic Forum (WEF), 2024 marks the year travel and tourism returns to form, with its contribution to global GDP expected to reach pre-pandemic levels this year.

The Mastercard Economics Institute (MEI) paints a similarly rosy outlook on travel, predicting that as consumers continue to prioritise meaningful experiences, they are expected to allocate more of their budget to travel.

Amidst the positive expectations, in reality, the numbers have been more varied across Asia Pacific, signalling that each market was recovering at its own pace.

In 2023, Hong Kong International Airport and Macau International Airport saw passenger recovery at 55% of 2019 levels. In South East Asia, Singapore’s Changi airport saw its passenger levels recover up to 86% while Malaysia’s airport data reported recovery at 78%.

As we approach the halfway mark of 2024, we have seen some record-breaking travel, such as in Japan, which welcomed over three million passenger arrivals in March alone, spurred on by the advantages of the weakened yen.

The market has also seen a growing number of Indian travellers as travel becomes more democratised. The number of Indians travelling abroad surging with arrivals to Japan and the US were 53% and 59% above 2019 levels in March.

Against this backdrop, Erik Juul-Mortensen, president of the Tax Free World Association (TFWA), emphasised the pressure that the travel retail market was facing in APAC.

“APAC has powered duty-free and travel retail’s growth over the last three decades and is rapidly regaining momentum following the difficult COVID years. While this region’s dynamic potential is undoubted, the current market presents a more nuanced picture. The rate of post-pandemic recovery varies widely across APAC,”​ he said during this year’s TFWA APAC exhibition.

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