By
CBC News Online
OTTAWA
- A rebound in fourth quarter spending by tourists
in Canada was not enough to lift the sector, as
overall spending dropped in 2003 for a third straight
year, Statistics Canada reported Tuesday.
The
war in Iraq, the outbreak of SARS, the power outage
in Ontario and forest fires in the interior of British
Columbia all combined to shake tourism throughout
the year.
"International
visitors stayed away, and their spending in Canada
fell 12 percent," Statistics Canada said. "A
1.9 percent increase in domestic tourism spending,
as well as a return of international visitors during
the second-half of the year were among the few encouraging
signs."
The
drop translated into a big drop in jobs in the sector,
as tourism employment fell 1.2 per cent in 2003.
Much of the loss occurred in the second quarter,
when the Iraq war and the SARS outbreak occurred,
although most of these jobs reappeared in the second
half of the year.
The
accommodation industry was one of the hardest hit
in the year, recording a 3.3 percent decline in
jobs, Statistics Canada said.
The
final three months of 2003 was brighter, as tourism
spending advanced 3.2 percent. Spending got a boost
from a 9 percent increase in the number of international
visitors to the country in the final quarter of
the year.
top