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Tourism Minister Stuart Nash. Photo: NZ Herald
Tourism Minister Stuart Nash. Photo: NZ Herald
New Tourism Minister Stuart Nash has delivered a blunt message to tourism operators, saying there will be no return to a pre-Covid "business as usual" - and proposing a "reset" targeting wealthy tourists rather than freedom campers and backpackers.

Speaking at the Tourism Industry Association conference in Wellington, Nash said the fact the conference was able to meet in person was testament to the effectiveness and the need for a strong border policy.

He said there would be no "travel bubbles" until it was deemed safe to do so.

However, New Zealand was well-placed to capitalise on its reputation for its handling of Covid-19 once those border restrictions started easing and should take the opportunity to reset the tourism industry.

"My ambition is that once global borders open, New Zealand is considered by the world's most discerning travellers as one of the top three places in the world to visit."

Nash said it was his belief that the New Zealand tourism sector should target high-spending tourists in the future – and charge them more so local communities were not footing the bill for infrastructure and environmental impacts of tourism.

He had officials come up with some proposals to reduce the cost of tourism to the country.

"This includes ensuring visitors pay for the privilege of participating in the New Zealand experience.

"No longer will New Zealand communities tolerate the worst of our freedom camping visitors, and nor should they. Some, but not all, have abused our renowned hospitality.

"I firmly believe that the low-spending but high-cost tourist is not the future of our tourism industry."

Nash said tourism had put extra costs on small communities struggling with infrastructure, and congestion in prime sites such as national parks.

"New Zealanders should not be subsidising international visitors to the extent that we have done in the recent past."

Nash said the Government would continue to work with the tourism sector to ensure it survived the Covid-19 border restrictions.

It had already offered up a $400 million Tourism Recovery Package, and almost $2 billion of wage subsidy support had gone to tourism operators.

Those businesses had also drawn down about $285 million in interest-free loans, making up about 18 per cent of the small and medium businesses to use the loans scheme.

 

Comments

I'm surprised that Nash stated freedom campers are low spending and high cost tourists. I seem to recall a number of articles in the ODT over the past couple of years claiming that freedom campers spend more per day on average and stay longer than non-freedom campers.

I hate the idea of foreign travel becoming a luxury that only the wealthy can afford but unfortunately I see little choice. It is only right and fair that the traveler pays for the infrastructure needed to accommodate but especially for their environmental impact. Tax the hell out of them I say, especially the cruise ship passengers.

Nash must be on something. No wealthy tourist is coming to NZ when there is a chance they will quarantine for 14 days. if something happens between booking your flights and arriving here - they will not chance staying in a 3-star, dirty quarantine facility, eating food that is worse than we feed our prisoners. So what Nash is saying - let us waste a lot of taxpayers' money targeting a group of people who will never come.