Under a best-case scenario with the ongoing pandemic, Egypt’s tourism industry is expected to lose out on c.73% of its revenue in 2020, according to a report (pdf) from the National Planning Institute. The best-case scenario would entail a recovery beginning in 3Q2020 with flights resuming by mid-June or early July. The persistence of the pandemic would still put a damper on leisure travel, however, and would result in the country’s tourism industry closing out the year with USD 3.45 bn in revenues. Under a less optimistic scenario, normal life and travel would fully resume by 4Q2020, which would give Egypt 25% of its regular tourist arrival and income. This scenario assumes a total of 750k tourist arrivals and USD 3.1 bn in revenues throughout the year. The final (and worst-case) scenario, which assumes the virus continues to spread aggressively until December and travel restrictions remain in place until the end of the year, would result in a 100% y-o-y drop in Egypt’s tourist arrival figures from April until December.
More from Enterprise
Israel’s Arkia Airlines moves flights to Egypt’s Taba to bypass wartime airspace restrictions
Israel’s Arkia shifts some flights to Egypt as airspace tightens…
Miga guarantee unlocks USD 313 mn for National Bank of Egypt trade finance
Plus: Incolease taps securitization market with debut EGP 2 bn…
Private capital hasn’t frozen in MENA — but the exit playbook could change if the war drags on
PE and VC-backed companies were already pivoting to local exchanges…
Telda moves into investing with zero-fee stock trading
Telda claims users can sell a position and immediately spend…