LONDON: The British travel sector strengthens new waves of work cutting, with the body of the industrial trade saying that more than two-thirds of its members plan to make redundancy immediately because of the rules of holidays that limit the government.
Airlines and travel companies have slammed the rules of English travel very expensive and complicated, and blamed them during the summer of the second vacation lost in 2021.
ABTA travel industry agencies, representing 4,300 travel brands, said that new bookings were 83% lower in the season hot.
2021 compared to their pre-pandemic level, and as a result, most of its members planned more work cutting at the end of this month when the leave scheme ended.
“Government travel requirements have choked on travel trade work this summer, business, and risky English connectivity,” said Chief Executive Abta Mark Tanzer in a statement.
It is estimated that new redudans will bring the total amount of work lost during Covid-19 to nearly 100,000 in the travel sector out, Abta said, the number that rose to 226,000 was the impact on the supply chain included.
ABTA echoed calls from airlines and airports for the government to memo drinkers for tourists who were fully vaccinated who returned to England to take expensive PCR tests.
It is also said that the government must provide financial support adjusted to the travel industry which continues to experience financial difficulties while the domestic economy can recover.