Dynamic Business Logo
Home Button
Bookmark Button

No Leave, No Life program ‘no good’: Ciobo

No Leave, No Life program ‘no good’: Ciobo
The Federal Government’s ‘No Leave, No Life’ tourism campaign has failed monumentally and is “no good”, according to Shadow Tourism Minister Steven Ciobo.
The campaign, designed to encourage Australians to holiday at home to support domestic tourism, has not had the desired effect, with National Visitor Survey data for the June 09 quarter revealing domestic visitor nights slumped by 10 percent in the first half of 2009, while overall tourism spending fell 5.6 percent in the same period.
Visitor numbers in Queensland – Australia’s most popular tourist destination – were also low, falling 12.8 percent in the first half of 2009 compared to the same period last year.
Commenting on the figures Ciobo said: “These figures are of great concern and are evidence the No Leave No Life campaign hatched on Tourism Minister Martin Ferguson’s watch has failed the industry.”
However, Rowan Barker, from the Transport and Tourism Forum, said it was always expected that people would take shorter holidays during the economic downturn.
“You’re talking about competing with destinations like Fiji, or Vanuatu, or Bali, or something like that, and the packages available for those sorts of destinations are extraordinary,” he said.

The Federal Government’s ‘No Leave, No Life’ tourism campaign has failed monumentally and is “no good”, according to Shadow Tourism Minister Steven Ciobo.

The campaign, designed to encourage Australians to holiday at home to support domestic tourism, has not had the desired effect, with National Visitor Survey data for the June 09 quarter revealing domestic visitor nights slumped by eight percent in the year ending June 30 2009 on the previous year, while overall tourism spending fell 5.6 percent in the same period.

Visitor numbers in Queensland – Australia’s most popular tourist destination – in the 12 months to June fell six percent on the previous year.

Commenting on the figures Ciobo said: “These figures are of great concern and are evidence the ‘No Leave,No Life’ campaign hatched on Tourism Minister Martin Ferguson’s watch has failed the industry.”

However, Rowan Barker, from the Transport and Tourism Forum, said it was always expected that people would take shorter holidays during the economic downturn.

“You’re talking about competing with destinations like Fiji, or Vanuatu, or Bali, or something like that, and the packages available for those sorts of destinations are extraordinary,” he said.

People who read this, also liked:
Work/life conflict impacts employee productivity

What do you think?

    Be the first to comment

Add a new comment

Jessica Stanic

Jessica Stanic

Jessica has a background in both marketing and journalism and is dedicated to making the website the leading online resource for small to medium businesses with ambitions to grow.

View all posts