
Irish tourism feels the pinch of negative data
Irish tourism
began to show – at least from a statistical point of view – it looks like things are finally improving. But is more trouble afoot?
Last September, results from the
Central Statistics Office
's (CSO) Inbound Tourism series showed the number of those arriving into Ireland had dropped year on year by 0.7 per cent.
A blip? It appeared not – the same metric continued to slide, down 5.1 per cent in October and continuously over the following months, reaching a nadir of 30 per cent down last February.
If the industry was getting concerned, it was also getting confused. One only had to look at bookings on the ground, the hospitality sector began to say, to see something wasn't quite right with the CSO's numbers.
READ MORE
What followed was a sort of polite standoff between the statisticians and tourism bodies. Meetings were held, numbers were crunched, dissenting views were aired. The CSO, for its part, defended its data gathering, highlighting its characteristically robust methods and independently reviewed systems.
[
CSO meets tourism industry over 'confusing' visitor data
Opens in new window
]
But as things neared fever pitch, the fever broke.
Data for April
, published this week, showed another decline, certainly – down 4 per cent year-on-year – but also indications of recovery.
Michael Magner, president of the
Irish Hotels Federation
, said while there was still a discrepancy between the published figures and industry data, April's were 'more aligned with what businesses have been reporting on the ground'.
Hotels, he noted, saw average room occupancy rates of 77 per cent in April compared with 74.5 per cent for the same month last year, as well as a 2 per cent increase in bookings for the first four months of the year.
Tourism activity appeared to be holding up. But then another set of numbers kept the champagne corks firmly in place.
[
Irish hotels to join landmark Europe-wide legal action against booking.com
Opens in new window
]
'We are concerned about the overall drop in tourism spend which the CSO are reporting for April, down 10 per cent,' Magner said in a swift addendum to the positive observation on visitor rates.
'This would appear to be part of a wider trend so far this year, according to CSO figures. If this continues into the summer, it would pose an enormous challenge.'
Visitor spend was down 22 per cent in March, 31 per cent in February, and 28 per cent in January. In fact, one would have to go back to October to see an increase. If it's not visitors, it's how much they part with – what might May bring?
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
5 hours ago
- Irish Times
Lost and found
Sir, – Last Saturday I attended the football championship quarter-finals in Croke Park and, at some point, I lost my iPhone. I only noticed at full-time and having searched in the immediate vicinity of my seat without success, I held little hope of ever seeing it again. However, a few calls to my missing iPhone by a friend who was by now on a bus home, and I discovered that it was alive and well and in the possession of a lovely woman in Tallaght who had found it leaving the stadium and took it home with her and waited on someone to call. I then just had to get there and that was where Jimmy came in, a staunch Dublin GAA man who was now aware of my problem. He rang an Uber for me and paid for it from his own account. I refunded him with what cash I had, which didn't meet the full cost of the taxi, but that was the least of his worries – he just wanted to help. So, a trip to Tallaght and a meeting with the lovely Antoinette, who waited at home until I got there – she was heading out for the night – and I was reunited with my phone. READ MORE The relief is tremendous. There is just so much dependence on phones now, not least that the tickets for the two games on Sunday were on it as well as bank cards etc. We hear so much bad news, but I just wanted to share that there are still an awful lot of decent people around and I had the pleasure of meeting two of the very best on Saturday night. So thank you Antoinette and thank you Jimmy. Up the Dubs, Donegal for Sam; and Antoinette and Jimmy: I owe you a few drinks if you want to join me for the celebrations in Tír Conaill. – Yours, etc, Cllr JIMMY KAVANAGH, Letterkenny, Co Donegal.


Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Irish Times
Government ‘pandering to whims of employers' by choosing VAT cut over ending child poverty, Ictu conference told
A decision to cut VAT rates for the hospitality sector rather than use the money to address the issue of child poverty is the latest in a succession of major policy mistakes made by the current Government, delegates to the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (Ictu) biennial conference in Belfast heard on Tuesday. Outlining the details of ICTU's new economic policy, Dr Tom McDonnell of the union-backed Nevin Economic Research Institute said Ireland faced a looming fiscal crisis because the Government has become dependent on windfall corporate taxes receipts to fund day-to-day spending. 'If you have an economy that is in full employment, that has never performed better, you should not be running a deficit,' he said. The impact of the housing crisis on workers was repeatedly highlighted on the first day of the conference, with Mary Fogarty of the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation citing the example of one newly qualified nurse living in Dublin who is paying 77 per cent of her take-home salary on rent. READ MORE There is 'very little prospect of a significant improvement in the housing crisis in the next two years,' said Dr McDonnell. The Government's commitment to cut the VAT back to 9 per cent for the hospitality sector was criticised by a succession of speakers, some of whom pointed to the estimated €770 million cost being almost identical to the likely bill for a proposed second-tier child benefit payment. 'We could be using that money to end child poverty forever,' said Dr McDonnell, 'but we're not going to do that.' The country's largest union, Siptu , said ending 'the scourge' of low wages was key to addressing poverty among families, with the union backing a motion that called for a renewed emphasis on increases to the national minimum wage and proportionately bigger pay increases for the lowest paid employees of private sector firms. 'There is a misconception that low pay is confined to the sectors we would traditionally view to be low paid,' said the union's deputy general secretary, John King, 'but the reality is that two-thirds of low-paid workers work outside of the hospitality, contracting services and retail sectors'. He said manufacturing, transport, private healthcare and 'even the high-income sectors of finance and IT have tens of thousands of low-paid workers' and the Government's response had been to 'pander to the whims of low-paying employers'. The morning session of the conference ended early, meanwhile, after organisers were informed on Friday that Northern Ireland First Minister, Michelle O'Neill would not be attending. Organisers were under the impression Ms O'Neill had had to attend a meeting of the Northern Ireland Executive instead but there was some annoyance when it emerged that meeting had taken place on Monday.


Irish Times
11 hours ago
- Irish Times
Banks and defence sectors weigh on European shares
European shares fell on Tuesday on the back of poor performances from the banking and defence sectors, as uncertainty continues to weigh on investors. London bucked the European trend to close in the green. Dublin The Iseq All-Share index started the third quarter of the year in the red, down 87.71 points to 11,334.00. The Dublin stock exchange's losses were led by Kenmare Resources which dropped 3.61 per cent. Further developments around a possible acquisition of the firm by former boss Michael Carville emerged in recent days. In a mixed day for the banks, AIB fell 2.79 per cent to €6.79, joined by Bank of Ireland which dropped 1.66 per cent to €11.885, while Permanent TSB was steady. Defensive stock Uniphar plc, the healthcare services group, dropped 2.27 per cent to €3.665, while Ryanair dipped 0.83 per cent. READ MORE Of the big caps, Glanbia were the winners on the day, rising 2.64 per cent to €12.83 as its share price continues to recover. LONDON London's internationally oriented FTSE 100 rose 0.28 per cent, while the domestically-focused midcap index added 0.54 per cent. Midcap stocks ended June by logging their best quarter in over four years while the blue-chip index logged monthly losses. Drugmaker AstraZeneca's shares rose 2.7 per cent after multiple sources told the Times that chief executive Pascal Soriot was considering moving the company's listing to the US. Traders are currently pricing in a 78 per cent chance of a rate cut by the Bank of England in August. Precious metal mining stocks led sectoral gains, rising 2.4 per cent as safe-haven gold jumped over 1 per cent on the weaker dollar and US tariff uncertainty. Endeavour Mining and Fresnillo added 2.8 per cent and 1 per cent, respectively. Hochschild Mining gained 5.3 per cent. Losses were led by aerospace and defence index, which declined 2.2 per cent. Rolls-Royce fell 2.9 per cent and Babcock lost 2.5 per cent. Food retailer Sainsbury's shares slid 1.1 per cent despite reporting a higher-than-expected rise in quarterly sales. Standard Chartered Bank shares fell 2 per cent after liquidators for Malaysia's sovereign wealth fund 1MDB sued the bank in Singapore alleging fraud that led to more than $2.7 billion (€2.29) in losses more than 10 years ago. In other news, Britain's competition watchdog cleared Aviva's £3.7 billion ($5.08 billion) takeover of smaller rival Direct Line that will create the UK's largest home and motor insurer. Shares of Aviva were up 0.8 per cent, while those of Direct Line rose 0.5 per cent Europe European shares ended slightly lower on Tuesday, with industrials and banks the biggest drags as investors weighed uncertainty over US trade deals with the July tariff deadline fast approaching and discussions on a US tax bill. The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.2 per cent lower, coming off a more than 1 per cent fall for the month of June. Most regional bourses clocked declines, though UK's blue-chip FTSE 100 was an outlier with a 0.3 per cent rise. Industrials led losses among the major STOXX subsectors with a 1.7 per cent fall. Defence-related companies including Germany's Rheinmetall, Sweden's Saab and Italy's Leonardo all fell more than 5 per cent each. Banks also slid 1.3 per cent, with Germany's Deutsche Bank down the most with a 3.6 per cent decline. New York The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq fell from record highs in midafternoon trading on Tuesday, as Tesla shares were hit by a renewed spat between chief executive Elon Musk and US President Donald Trump, while better-than-expected economic data backed the US central bank's patient stance on rate cuts. Tesla dropped after Mr Trump threatened to cut off the billions of dollars in subsidies that Mr Musk's companies get from the federal government, after Mr Musk revived his criticism of Mr Trump's wide-ranging tax-cut and spending bill. The major indexes were mixed, but technology stocks led the decline among the major S&P sectors, while material stocks and the healthcare sector climbed. Shares of US-based casino operators rose after Macau reported a rise in June gambling revenue. Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands, as well as MGM Resorts International climbed. – Additional reporting, Reuters, PA.