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2025-07-15 15:07:28

Which nations can be called the most traveling?

Which nations can be called the most traveling?

It's no secret that the tendency to change places in some people is manifested to a greater extent than in others. The International Air Transport Association has calculated which countries move around the world most often.

Finland

On the first line unpredictably were the Finns; on average, they travel 7 and a half times a year. In the case of this hospitable, warm and cultured, calm people, we are most often talking about short visits to neighboring countries - Russia, Estonia, Sweden, Latvia; or a little more distant, but not ceasing to be interesting Denmark and Germany. They usually get there by plane or ferry: sea navigation in Finnish ports is very intense, in Helsinki alone more than a hundred passenger and fifteen hundred cargo-passenger ferries are assigned, and the route grid has fifty destinations.

UNITED STATES

The line below is the Americans; they account for 6.71 trips per year per person. Most often, the inhabitants of the country of great opportunities travel on business; at the same time, 30% of the inhabitants of America - mainly residents of the southern and central states, the so-called "rust belt" - have never left the state, and 11% - even outside their hometown. The lion's share - more than half of the trips - falls on the inhabitants of large post-industrial cities: they work hard, earn well, and then go on vacation - to Europe, Asia or the Caribbean islands. Regular trips are also broken by Mexico (people go here for exotics, adventures and tequila) and Canada (here residents of all states north of Missouri buy electronics, clothes and medicines).

Sweden

Another line below is the Swedes, and very close are the Danes and Norwegians; if the first for the year are elected abroad on average 6 times, then residents of Denmark and Norway - 5.3 and 5.2 times, respectively.

These countries are a damn good place to live. Good prospects here are opening up for domestic tourism. But Norway's economy is very tied to britain's, and Swedes and Danes have no more popular way to spend a weekend than through a complex system of bridges and tunnels to go to a neighboring country (ferries are also popular).

Scandinavians by the standards of the world are very rich, and by European they can undoubtedly be called quite wealthy people who can afford to look at the world. Many of them have real estate abroad (for example, the Swedes have a tradition of having a Finnish dacha, and the Danes like to relax in Bornholm or in German Pomerania). At the same time, unemployment in the country is low, and almost all residents of these small and well-fed social democracies with experience can afford foreign trips.

Still lower are the Chinese. Well, how are the Chinese? Hong Kong has always been China , but after a hundred-year hiatus, it became part of it again in 1997. Since then, this small enclave on the island has played the role of the main gate of the People's Republic of China. Here, within the framework of the concept of "one country – two systems", capitalist China is being built: the world financial and economic center. Trips to the mainland are not considered foreign, otherwise the special administrative region would take first place. But Hongkongers often travel from their islet to Taiwan (via Japan or Korea), as well as to other countries in Southeast Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands.

Slightly lower in the ranking are New Zealanders, inhabitants of Australia, Canada and France.

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