Morocco’s Tourism Revenues Drop 69% in Q1 2021

Moroccan tourism sector lost 78% of the number of tourists and 69% of its quarterly revenue due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Reuters)
Moroccan tourism sector lost 78% of the number of tourists and 69% of its quarterly revenue due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Reuters)
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Morocco’s Tourism Revenues Drop 69% in Q1 2021

Moroccan tourism sector lost 78% of the number of tourists and 69% of its quarterly revenue due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Reuters)
Moroccan tourism sector lost 78% of the number of tourists and 69% of its quarterly revenue due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Reuters)

Morocco’s tourism sector has been “gravely affected” by the coronavirus pandemic, said Minister of Tourism Nadia Fettah Alaoui during a session at the parliament.

Almost 430,000 tourists visited the kingdom by late March, she explained, a 78 percent drop compared to the same period in 2020.

Minister of Solidarity and Social Development Jamila El Moussali said tourism revenues did not exceed 5.3 billion dirhams ($530 million) in Q1 2021, a 69 percent drop from the same period last year.

Air traffic in all Moroccan airports was also affected, recording a 70.16 percent drop compared to 2020 and a 73.9 percent decline compared to 2019.

She expected a similar scenario until 2023, with full recovery anticipated the year after.

As for the national air carrier, Royal Air Maroc (RAM), Alaoui said most of its flights have been suspended.

Alaoui pointed to a stimulus package of up to 2,000 dirhams ($227) to tourism companies, tour guides, and restaurants registered in the National Social Security Fund (CNSS).

She stated that 5,518 companies submitted requests by late April to benefit from the program and pay the salaries of more than 79,000 employees.

The government had earlier approved a 2020/2022 program, which according to Alaoui, aims to preserve jobs and improve the tourism sector.

While the government is preparing to lift health restrictions, the minister said a program has been set to support small and medium tourism enterprises and to encourage domestic tourism.

The ministry is currently working on in-depth studies on foreign and domestic markets, as well as promotional campaigns, in preparation for the revival of the tourism season, Alaoui explained.



China’s Economy Set to Slow in Q2 as Pressure from US Tariffs Mounts

 A laborer works on the glass wall of a building near a luxury brand logo in Beijing, China, Friday, July 11, 2025. (AP)
A laborer works on the glass wall of a building near a luxury brand logo in Beijing, China, Friday, July 11, 2025. (AP)
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China’s Economy Set to Slow in Q2 as Pressure from US Tariffs Mounts

 A laborer works on the glass wall of a building near a luxury brand logo in Beijing, China, Friday, July 11, 2025. (AP)
A laborer works on the glass wall of a building near a luxury brand logo in Beijing, China, Friday, July 11, 2025. (AP)

China's economy is likely to have cooled in the second quarter after a solid start to the year, as trade tensions and a prolonged property downturn drag on demand, raising pressure on policymakers to roll out additional stimulus to underpin growth.

The world's No. 2 economy has so far avoided a sharp slowdown in part due to a fragile US-China trade truce and policy support, but markets are bracing for a weaker second half as exports lose momentum, prices continue to fall, and consumer confidence remains low.

Data due Tuesday is expected to show gross domestic product (GDP) grew 5.1% year-on-year in April-June, slowing from 5.4% in the first quarter, according to a Reuters poll. The projected pace would still exceed the 4.7% forecast in a Reuters poll in April and remains broadly in line with the official full-year target of around 5%.

"While growth has been resilient year-to-date, we still expect it to soften in the second half of the year, due to the payback of front-loaded exports, ongoing negative deflationary feedback loop, and the impact of tariffs on direct exports to the US and the global trade cycle," analysts at Morgan Stanley said in a note.

"The third-quarter growth could slow to 4.5% or lower, while Q4 faces unfavorable base effect, putting the annual growth target at risk," the analysts said. They expect Beijing to introduce a 0.5-1 trillion yuan ($69.7 billion-$139.5 billion) supplementary budget from late in the third quarter.

China's exports regained some momentum in June while imports rebounded, as factories rushed out shipments to capitalize on a fragile tariff truce between Beijing and Washington ahead of a looming August deadline.

GDP data is due on Tuesday at 0200 GMT. Separate data on June activity is expected to show both industrial output and retail sales slowing.

On a quarterly basis, the economy is forecast to have expanded 0.9% in the second quarter, slowing from 1.2% in January-March, the poll showed.

China's 2025 GDP growth is forecast to cool to 4.6% - falling short of the official goal - from last year's 5.0% and ease even further to 4.2% in 2026, according to the poll.

BALANCING ACT

Investors are closely watching for signs of fresh stimulus at the upcoming Politburo meeting due in late July, which is likely to shape economic policy for the remainder of the year.

Analysts polled by Reuters expect a 10-basis point cut in the seven-day reverse repo rate - the central bank's key policy rate - in the fourth quarter, along with a similar cut to the benchmark loan prime rate (LPR).

Beijing has ramped up infrastructure spending and consumer subsidies, alongside steady monetary easing. In May, the central bank cut interest rates and injected liquidity as part of broader efforts to cushion the economy from US President Donald Trump's trade tariffs.

But China observers and analysts say stimulus alone may not be enough to tackle entrenched deflationary pressures, with producer prices in June falling at their fastest pace in nearly two years.

Expectations are growing that China could accelerate supply-side reforms to curb excess industrial capacity and find new ways to boost domestic demand.

It's a stiff challenge, analysts say, as Chinese leaders face a delicate balancing act in their quest to cut production while maintaining employment stability in the face of a worsening labor market outlook.