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This is what the skies looked like in March
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And this was one month later
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When passenger numbers were a staggering...
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...94% lower than the previous year...
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...thanks to the covid-19 pandemic
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Business is now starting to pick up
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But travel is becoming increasingly localised and complicated
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This world of quite easy travel and relatively free movement...
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...has evaporated almost overnight
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This will have consequences far beyond cancelled holiday bookings
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It could exacerbate existing inequalities...
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...create economic hardship...
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...and disrupt the workings of the globalised world
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The tourism industry is enormous
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Every year, international holiday-makers spend $1.6trn
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That's more than Spain's GDP
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Or at least they did, before the coronavirus pandemic
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The CDC just told everyone...
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...do not travel
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Postpone or cancel all non-essential travel
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In April 2020 planes carried just 31m passengers around the world
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The sort of passenger levels last seen in the late 1970s
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In April this year, 200,000 passengers...
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...went through Heathrow Airport in London...
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...which is fewer than would go through on any single day in a normal month
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IATA, the airline trade body...
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...has said flights will not return to pre-pandemic levels for several years
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In China, flights are now just 21% below normal levels...
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...while in America, air traffic began to pick up in May...
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...but remains 57% below normal
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And in much of Europe, flight numbers are still around 75% lower...
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...than the same time last year
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And while passenger numbers are creeping up...
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...some areas, like business travel, may never recover
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After the last financial crisis the number of overseas business trips...
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...taken per person in the UK fell by a third and never picked up
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Whereas leisure travel did, eventually, climb back to pre-crisis levels
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Were the same thing to happen again...
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...it could have a significant impact on airline profits
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Business travellers actually subsidise leisure travellers
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Your £250 transatlantic fare in the back of the plane...
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...is possible because somebody at the front of the plane...
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...is paying £800 or £1,500
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Airlines are already struggling
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Virgin Atlantic has annouced plans to cut more than 3,000 jobs in the UK
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Air Canada lost more than $1bn in the first quarter
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In March IATA warned that without government aid...
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...just 30 of the world's 700 or so airlines would make it through the pandemic
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The airlines that survive...
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...will determine the competition and prices on certain routes
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Some airlines are in pretty good financial shape
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Within Europe there remains a lot of competition
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Transatlantic flights, there is still plenty of competition
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But on routes where there is much thinner competition, prices will go up
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There's no doubt about that
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For the well-off, the price increases may be an annoyance
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But they could also have a significant impact on global mobility
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As lower-income travellers may find themselves priced out of the skies
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What happens with airfares and with the prices of flights...
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...affects not just summer holidays
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Migrants have parents or spouses in one country and work in another
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And for all of these people, it is quite important that...
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...they continue to be able to go home
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In June, 189 countries had imposed some form of travel restriction
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Ranging from measures like quarantine, to border closures
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And governments are desperate to open up travel as quickly as possible
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The government is to make it easier for British holiday-makers...
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...to travel to much of Europe this summer
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Though these arrangements may help tourists...
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...they could also create an increasingly inequitable system
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The British government is working to allow Brits to go off on holiday...
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...to, say, Spain or France and come back without the need for quarantine
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But that doesn't take into account the fact that...
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...someone may have a partner in America...
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...parents in Nigeria or siblings in Pakistan
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And they won't be able to go see people who are very, very important to them
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The risk is that we end up with a very uneven and possibly unfair system
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The relatively free movement enjoyed by many tourists...
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...is a modern phenomenon...
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...that has played an increasingly important role in globalisation...
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...and domestic economies
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Take China
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For around 30 years until the end of the 1970s...
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...travel to and from China was heavily restricted
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But today China sends more tourists abroad than any other country
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And they spend more money
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In 2018 Chinese tourists spent over $270bn overseas
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Almost double that spent by Americans
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And the limitations on travel caused by the pandemic...
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...could have a knock-on effect on global co-operation and economic growth
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The worry is that these restrictions persist in the long-term...
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...and then become entangled in all sorts of other things...
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...such as reciprocity, trade negotiations...
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...any sort of geopolitical dispute between countries
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And so we return to a sort of mid-20th century world...
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...of closed borders, lots of restrictions and paperwork...
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...and just less interchange between countries
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Faced with an ever-changing array of travel restrictions...
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...many travellers are looking closer to home for their holidays
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In May, 80% of total reservations on Airbnb were made domestically
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And between January and April...
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...foreign searches for summer holiday accommodation in Spain...
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...fell by as much as 94%
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The rise in localised travel could be good news...
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...for the environment
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In 2018 carbon-dioxide emissions from commercial flights...
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...accounted for 2.4% of global fossil-fuel emissions
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The answer to this quandary is not to stop people from flying
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Rather, it's to make planes more efficient and...
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...to focus on innovation in the industry
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The pandemic has accelerated the shift towards efficiency
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So, some older planes are being taken out of the sky
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The covid-19 pandemic will dramatically affect...
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...the way in which people move around the world
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But rather than driving economic growth...
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...as the travel industry has in the past...
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...new restrictions could affect globalisation...
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...sowing division and increasing inequality
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My name is Leo Mirani
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I'm a correspondent on the Britain desk at The Economist
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And if you'd like to read more about the impact that covid-19...
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...is having on international travel, click the link opposite