Economy Tanks & Tourism plummets in Portugal
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News

Portugal’s tourism-dependent economy reversed its growth path to decline a steep 3.9% in the first quarter from the preceding three months as the effects of the coronavirus epidemic started taking their toll, data showed on last week.
The National Statistics Institute (INE) also said in its flash estimate that gross domestic product shrank 2.4% compared to the same period a year earlier.
A separate INE release showed that the tourism sector, one of the hardest hit by the crisis, registered a 62% slump in the number of people staying in holiday accommodation in March from a year ago, with both foreign and local visitors equally affected. Total hotel revenues fell by over 57%.
The figures come as a blow to a country that posted 2.2% growth year-on-year and 0.7% quarter-on-quarter in the last three months of 2019, the year it achieved its first budget surplus in 45 years of its democratic history.
“Even before (restrictive measures), there were disturbances to the normal functioning of some activities and demand, namely in restaurants and hotels, affecting economic activity since practically the beginning of March,” the INE said. Portugal has reported a relatively low coronavirus toll of 28,583 confirmed cases and 1,190 deaths, especially when compared to neighboring Spain with more than 27,000 fatalities, but its export-oriented economy, reliant on tourism for nearly 15% of GDP, has already suffered heavy losses.
The number of visitors from China and Italy fell by 30% in the first quarter of the year, INE’s hotel data showed, while the number of visitors from Spain fell by a more modest 12.7%.
The country enacted a state of emergency on March 18 when its death toll was still in single digits, closing non-essential services and restricting movement of people.
On May 3, the government lifted restrictions to launch a sector-by-sector plan to reopen the economy. The second phase, opening restaurants, larger shops, creches and schools for some year groups, will launch on Monday.
The contribution of internal demand to GDP was a negative one percentage point, turning negative for the first time since 2013 as private investment and consumption collapsed.
Exports slumped by 7.3% compared to the previous quarter, INE’s flash estimate showed, largely attributed to a drastic drop in tourism, the industry credited with lifting Portugal out of the last crisis in 2011-2014. Imports fell 2.9%.
The International Monetary Fund predicted Portugal’s economy would contract by 8% this year, while the European Commission estimated 6.8%.
More than 110,000 people have registered as unemployed since the beginning of Portugal’s lockdown on March 18, official figures showed.
Reported by Victoria Waldersee
Sourced Reuters
For more Daily news follow The European Magazine
TOP STORIES
-
Stanley Johnson: Labour must ‘follow Ukraine back into Europe’s green network’ -
Ukraine joins European environment network in major conservation step after war damage to land and wildlife -
Titan firm never proved doomed hull was safe, damning report finds -
Europe’s €4bn Frankfurt terminal named among world’s most beautiful airports -
The fist-bumping, selfie-taking humanoid guide that could usher sightseeing tours into the AI age -
EU says ‘time for change’ on child social media safety after survey links platforms to youth distress -
China offers UK coastal rescue lessons as Yancheng wetlands hailed by conservation figures -
UK’s under-16s social media ban risks giving parents false comfort, experts warn -
What Elon Musk’s US$1,100,000,000,000 fortune could buy -
NYC woman who held funeral for ChatGPT 'lover' calls for safeguards over AI companionship -
‘Sleeper-cell’ hackers are stealing company data now for future attacks, warns ISF chief -
Juncker and Keller-Sutter to address Zurich finance summit as banks face AI and regulation shake-up -
Liechtenstein keeps Triple-A rating as S&P points to low debt and deep reserves -
UK hedgehog charity backs bid to put endangered mammal on new banknotes -
Nature loss could trigger ‘grim’ debt crisis for governments, economists warn -
Lisbon named ‘world’s most liveable city’ for expats -
Could these animals replace Churchill, Austen, Turner and Turing on Britain’s banknotes? -
Universal’s £5bn Bedfordshire theme park will become 'UK's most popular tourist attraction' -
Holiday hotspots fight back as tourist numbers surge -
Costa Rica’s US$10bn medtech boom defies global investment chill -
Could this mile-long floating city become the world’s most extreme property market? -
WATCH: this tiny plane could let passengers fly from rooftops instead of airports -
‘Shadow AI’ poses growing boardroom cyber risk as staff feed company data into chatbots -
UK net zero economy worth £105bn and supports 1.1m jobs -
BOC Macau strengthens role as China finance bridge after six award wins


























