The bar chart indicates the quantity of foreign tourists visiting country X from various parts of the world and the table illustrates the income of different businesses in the nation in 2007 and 2008.
Overall, tourism from all regions of the world experienced downward trends after the period. [tourism from all regions of the world declined, though less noticeably when coming from the main sources of tourists: China, Japan, Australia]. All forms of revenue also fell, with shops and tour services accounting for the majority of revenue by 2008.
In 2007, there were over 200,000 tourists from Europe and the US and Canada, with the North American nations slightly higher. By 2008, both figures had dropped dramatically to 100,000 for the former and approximately 250,000 for the latter. In contrast, the data points for China and Japan and Australia experienced downward trends. China and Japan ranked first in 2007, with nearly 300,000 tourists, though it fell remarkably to 190,000 tourists in the next year. Similarly, the number of tourists visited to Australia decreased slightly by 20,000 people in 2008.
In terms of income in Country X, in 2019, the figure for hotels and resorts held the highest rank, with 3.5 million dollars, followed by that of tour guides, small vendors, and other services which constituted 2,4 million dollars. However, in 2020, hotels and resorts plummeted to just 0.5 million dollars. Restaurants, bars and souvenir shops halved to 1.2 million dollars. There was no considerable difference between transportation and travel agents and tour guides, small vendors, and other services, with 1.3 million dollars for the former and 1.4 million dollars for the latter in 2019. In the next year, the figure for transportation reduced to just 0.4 million dollars. The most marginal decline was for tour services ($1.1 million).
