Among the countries that still have travel restrictions is China, a major influencer of recovery in the region that some markets are crucially dependent on.
China last month relaxed rules surrounding travel, including shortening the quarantine period for inbound travellers and requiring one negative test within 48 hours before boarding instead of two.
On Wednesday, the country announced a further loosening of restrictions, scaling down mandatory PCR testing requirements and allowing some positive cases to quarantine at home.
SOME POSITIVE SIGNALS FROM CHINA
While there are “some positive signals” coming out of China, IATA does not expect any significant change within the first half of next year, Mr Walsh said.
“We’re hopeful In the second half of next year, we will see traffic starting to return to more normal levels,” he said.
China is a very important market for Singapore, with Singapore Airlines offering several flights to different parts of China pre-pandemic, Mr Walsh noted.
“There’s great interest in seeing China reopen from a Singapore point of view,” he said.
Even without China, however, Singapore has “clearly benefited” most in the region from the recovery in the global aviation industry, Mr Walsh said.
LONGER-TERM PROSPECTS IN CHINA
Nevertheless, Mr Walish noted that the Chinese domestic market represented almost 10 per cent of all commercial travel in 2019.
“I think there’s still reason to be optimistic about growth out of China,” he said.
Most airlines saw China as a strategic market for long-term investment, accounting for profitability in the future rather than immediately, he said.
“It is clearly an exciting market from a growth point of view,” he said.
China is a very important market of the global industry and IATA expects that to continue going forward, he said.
POSITIVE OUTLOOK IN 2023
Despite global uncertainties in the business and consumer climate, the outlook for the aviation industry in 2023 remains positive, Mr Walsh said.
While some countries might experience recession next year, “we don’t see a recession in 2023 at a global level”, he added.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by PostX News and is published from a syndicated feed.)