Many nations around the world rely heavily on tourism, and due to the unfortunately unbalanced nature of development in Africa, tourism is one of the main sectors used to make money (as opposed to having a diversity of economic investments outside of those that strictly enrich a small ruling class that largely does not care for the welfare of her people save what is necessary to maintain staying in power, an unfortunate but consistent reality in much of sub-Saharan Africa). However, as AP News reports, COVID-19 has caused extensive damage to the African tourism sector, and it may take a very long time for economic life to recover.
Raino Bolz quickly diversified when his tourism business in South Africa’s winelands crashed to a halt in March because of the coronavirus pandemic. He sold a minibus — useless without tourists to ferry around — and bought a herd of pregnant cows.
He’ll have to wait for the cows to have calves and for the calves to be old enough to sell before he can make money from them. That probably won’t be until early next year, but it’s his insurance policy.
Bolz hopes to see a return of some tourists in November, the start of South Africa’s tourism season. If foreign visitors — 80% of his income — don’t arrive for end-of-year vacations, he’ll need the profit from his cattle to stay afloat.
Africa will lose between $53 billion and $120 billion in contributions to its GDP in 2020 because of the crash in tourism, the World Travel and Tourism Council estimates. Kenya expects at least a 60% drop in tourism revenue this year. South Africa a 75% drop. In South Africa, 1.2 million tourism-related jobs are already impacted, according to its Tourism Business Council. That’s not far off 10% of total jobs in Africa’s most developed economy and the total damage isn’t yet clear.
“Devastation,” council CEO Tshifhiwa Tshivhengwa said.
South Africa’s borders, including virtually all international flights, have been closed for nearly six months and there are no signs of them reopening.
The COVID-19 restrictions have shuttered what was once the lucrative centerpiece of African tourism, the safari.
For nearly 40 years, Desert and Delta has sold luxury safaris in the wildlife-rich Okavango Delta in northern Botswana and their clients have always been a particular kind of tourist. From North America or Western Europe, wealthy, retired and almost always over 60 years old, said James Wilson, Desert and Delta’s marketing director. His fear — it’s felt across the safari lands of southern and East Africa — is that those retirees will be the last to come back because of their age and vulnerability to COVID-19.
Jillian Blackbeard sees a silver lining. She’s the CEO of a regional tourism association that represents safari operators in Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
It’ll take southern Africa’s safari tourism three years to recover, Blackbeard said. But the virus could also kick-start a long overdue change. She said they’ve relied too much on that specific kind of client, white, elderly, North American or European. She’s pressing for the whole region to use the moment to diversify. To attract their own African tourists, who have been ignored. To look to Asia and its multi-generational travelers. And to appeal to Black Americans.
“For a long, long time, the African-American diaspora has never traveled to southern Africa,” she said. “It wasn’t that they didn’t want to come. It was because when you see a brochure it was always these white elderly people. COVID has allowed us to reach into that and say, ‘OK, how do we make our industry more resilient by diversifying our market?’”
No one is untouched. Sun International, a major player with a portfolio of casinos, resorts and high-end hotels in South Africa and several other African countries, has so far kept its 8,500 employees, although on reduced salaries. It can’t last. Sun International is now “having to consider quite severe restructures,” said Graham Wood, chief operating officer for hospitality.
One of Sun International’s landmark properties, the 5-star Table Bay Hotel on the Cape Town waterfront, has been closed for half the year in the absence of foreign visitors. Many hotels around it remain shut, too.
Wood does expect a bounce in domestic tourism at the end of the year from South Africans who aren’t going overseas. And domestic tourism got a boost last month when South Africa eased restrictions to allow interstate leisure travel for the first time since late March. But the international tourist season this year is “not going to materialize,” Wood said.
That’ll be ruinous for Bolz in nearby Stellenbosch, whose attempts to lure locals have yielded just “a drop in a bucket,” he said. “It’s not going to sustain us.” (source)
It is yet to be seen what effects this may have on migration. However, it will seriously impact local economies, and while the western governments are competing right now for Africa’s resources, it is yet to be seen what, if any, further development this will lead to.
But that said, the African continent was once upon colonized by the Europeans, who built up many great cities and infrastructure. Given how the Europeans want to revive their empires, one might see, outside of a military context, and renewed interest in Europeans once again landing in, developing, and even possibly moving settlements into Africa.
Regardless of what happens, anything in Africa that takes place will be important to follow, as the continent is a vast and poorly developed place filled with great potential just waiting for the right person to, like an artist with a marble block, cut away the excess and bring out something incredible from it.