Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tourism: An Increasingly Important Source Of Revenue For Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tourism: An Increasingly Important Source Of Revenue For Armenia

    TOURISM: AN INCREASINGLY IMPORTANT SOURCE OF REVENUE FOR ARMENIA
    Emil Danielyan

    EurasiaNet, NY
    9/14/06

    Officials in Yerevan say Armenia will welcome a record-high number
    of travelers to the small South Caucasus nation this year, with
    ethnic Armenians from Europe and the United States accounting for
    the majority of visitors.

    The sector, increasingly important for the Armenian economy, expanded
    considerably in recent years after being declared a top economic
    priority by the Armenian government. Officials estimate that it now
    generates about 7 percent of Gross Domestic Product.

    According to Mekhak Apresian, head of the tourism department at the
    Armenian Ministry of Trade and Economic Development, the number of
    tourists is on course to reach more than 350,000 in 2006, or nearly
    twice the figure reported in 2003. "I think we will approach the
    400,000 mark this year," Apresian told EurasiaNet. The authorities'
    target of attracting half a million visitors in 2010, set by President
    Robert Kocharian in July, is therefore "realistic," he said.

    There is strong factual and anecdotal evidence in support of this
    data. Flights to and from Yerevan and local hotels are almost fully
    booked now, despite the increased cost of travel to Armenia. "There
    has definitely been growth in this area," said Ani Aslanian, a young
    and soft-spoken sales manager at Armenia Marriott Hotel, the largest
    in the country.

    "There are a lot more people visiting Armenia nowadays."

    Aslanian expects to be busy not only in September, the traditional
    peak period for tourism in Armenia, but also in the coming
    months. Off-season occupancy rates at the four-star hotel, she
    explained, are now much higher than they were in the past, with far
    more people staying there in winter and early spring.

    This is certainly good news for the growing number of local travel
    firms and retailers that cater to foreigners. Travel agents and
    government officials believe that much of the anticipated growth
    in tourism will come from those Westerners that have no Armenian
    roots. "The growth in the number of non-Armenian tourists is faster
    than that of Diaspora Armenian ones," said Apresian. He added that
    although the latter still make up about two-thirds of the visitors,
    their share in the overall influx is slowly but steadily falling.

    Spending a holiday in Armenia is becoming increasingly popular
    among the Diasporans (and Armenian Americans in particular), who
    are keen to rediscover their ethnic identity. What brings other
    foreigners, typically aged above 40, is less certain. The landlocked
    mountainous country has no world-famous beaches, medieval towns or
    other conventional tourist spots. What Armenia can offer instead are
    ancient monasteries, underlining its status as the first nation that
    had adopted Christianity as a state religion in 301 AD.

    Marriott's Aslanian regularly deals with groups of mostly middle-aged
    Americans and Europeans who want to learn more about eastern Christian
    civilizations, and Armenian history and culture in particular. "These
    are people who have been to many popular tourist destinations and
    want to discover something new, something unusual," she said.

    This cultural, historical and religious aspect is the main emphasis
    of tourism development programs approved by the Armenian government
    each year. One such program adopted in December 2004 called for an
    "aggressive" promotion of Armenia's image abroad. This approach is
    reflected in an upcoming visit to Yerevan by a delegation of as many
    as 160 French travel agents and journalists. The delegation's visit,
    organized within the context of The Year of Armenia in France,
    is considered so important that it was an agenda topic during a
    government cabinet meeting on September 7.

    Armenian officials will soon launch an advertising campaign on the
    US-based cable news outlet, CNN International, to promote Armenia as
    a travel destination. Apresian, the tourism department chief, insisted
    that the undisclosed lump sum paid to CNN for the four-month deal will
    be worth it. "The idea is to present Armenia as a peaceful and secure
    country which has a rich heritage and is home to hospitable people,"
    he said. "Armenia's [post-Soviet] image abroad has been one of a hot
    spot, a conflict zone. We have to change it."

    But industry executives say promotional campaigns like this will
    not have desired effects unless the government does more do address
    weaknesses hampering the sector's development. One of them is a
    continuing lack of inexpensive lodging, which allows the existing
    hotels to set prices that are widely seen as disproportionately high
    for a country like Armenia.

    Air travel to Armenia is similarly pricey, despite more frequent
    flight services between Yerevan and major European capitals. The high
    costs of visiting are hardly an enticement for budget travelers,
    and luring them in large numbers, analysts say, is vital for the
    long-term development of the Armenian tourism industry.

    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
Working...
X