Italy takes “hit and run” holiday as economy slows

533 views
2 mins read

Headed for teh beach on Ferragosto August 15 holiday

STEPHEN BROWN

ROME (Reuters) – Italians like their comforts at the beach but the days of renting a parasol and sunbed for a few weeks at a favourite seaside "stabilimento" may be over, as a looming recession forces holidaymakers to tighten their budgets.
They will still head to the beach en masse at the end of the week for "Ferragosto" — the Aug. 15 public holiday when Italy grinds to a halt, hardly a loaf of bread or carton of milk can be bought and the city streets fall eerily silent.
But, with data ringing in their ears showing they are heading for a third recession this decade, Italians are taking shorter holidays and spending less. They're even spurning the ranks of striped "ombrelloni" (parasols) on private stretches of beach costing as much as 20 euros a day for the anarchy of the "free beach".
"If a tourist arrives and says he wants a parasol for 10 days we look at him in amazement and build a statue in his honour," said Giancarlo Cappelli. He represents owners of beach "stabilimenti" ("establishments" providing parasols, sunbeds, food and drink, changing rooms and fresh water showers) in Emilia-Romagna, the region including resorts such as Rimini.
The media are calling it the "summer of the closed parasols" and the "holidays of poverty" as the travel industry laments its fortunes and urges government investment to help Italy compete with cheaper destinations in Eastern Europe and North Africa.

NOT HAPPY CAMPERS

SIB, the national association of "stabilimento" owners, says the crisis is such that a million fewer people have visited them in June and July than at the same time last year. August is the peak month but will not be able to make up for such a dreadful season, they say.
"What worries us most is the phenomenon of 'hit and run' tourists," said Riccardo Borgo, national president of SIB, referring to tourists making shorter visits to the beach.
He said Italian families' purchasing power has shrunk in the past five years, forcing them to scale down holiday plans.
The Italian hoteliers' association also says the average length of holiday has shrunk to 12 days from 15 days and that nearly 23 mln Italians will not go on holiday at all this year, nearly half of them citing the economic downturn.
Campsite operators also say visitors are down 10%. Campers now "spend less, eat less in the restaurants, watch their shopping in the camp shop, and at the cafe and on the beach they are just buying drinks and ice-creams for the children (rather than meals)", the industry group Assocamping said in a statement.
Perhaps embittered by their own enforced austerity, some holidaymakers have taken to reacting angrily to shows of opulence which might once have won their admiration.
When Formula One boss Flavio Briatore and some yacht guests landed noisily on a Sardinian beach last week, making waves and scaring children, bathers threw sand and shouted "Shame!" as the VIPs ran for cover at Briatore's new beachside restaurant.
Briatore, who owns a disco called Billionaire, responded by saying that because of the crisis and "to show that my place is not just for the rich, we've decided to have a special tourist menu for 200 euros", reported La Stampa newspaper.
Silvio Berlusconi, the billionaire prime minister whose own Sardinian beach villa has hosted fabled hedonism in the past — such as an artificial volcano to titillate guests — set a more sober tone for this year's summer break.
Ending the political "term" last week, he wished Italians a good holiday — but urged them to "work a little harder" once they return, for the good of the economy.