US travel industry unites to fight decline in foreign tourism

epa06225289 (FILE) - Travelers queue up for taxis at International Terminal Four at John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens, New York, USA, 30 June 2017 (reissued 24 September 2017). US President Donald J. Trump signed on 24 September 2017, a proclamation restricting entry to the US from eight countries as his existing ban on six Muslim-majority countries signed in March was set to expire. According to a statement released by The White House, the proclamation poses certain conditional restrictions and travel limitations on nationals from Chad, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, and Yemen.  EPA-EFE/PETER FOLEY

Bloomberg

As more international travellers decide to skip America, ten business associations including the US Chamber of Commerce and the National Restaurant Association have created a travel industry group aimed at reversing the growing unpopularity of the US as a vacation destination.
Historically, America only had to sit back and let foreign tourists and their money roll in. Over the past few years, though, that gravy train has begun to dry up, a trend that accelerated as President Donald Trump began to make good on campaign promises to restrict immigration. As a result, businesses that make up the multibillion-dollar industry that relies on that revenue have grown increasingly nervous.
Some of its biggest players unveiled the “Visit US Coalition” to spur the Trump administration into enacting friendlier visa and border-security policies at a time when federal agencies are doing the opposite.
Since 2015, the US and Turkey have
been the only places among the top dozen global travel destinations to see a decline in inbound visitors, at a time when
other nations such as Australia, Canada, China and the United Kingdom have marked sizable gains.
The Commerce Department reported a 3.3 percent drop in traveller spending for 2017, through November, the equivalent of $4.6 billion in losses and 40,000 jobs.
The US share of international long-haul travel fell to 11.9 percent in 2017 from 13.6 percent in 2015, according to the US Travel Association, a slippage the group said equates to 7.4 million visitors and $32.2 billion in spending.
“America isn’t winning when we’re falling behind our global competitors,” Roger Dow, US Travel’s president, said on a conference call to announce the new organisation. He added that the group sees its initiative as complementary to increased border and travel security. “Our goal is to make America the most secure and the most visited country on earth—and we can do both.”
Industry groups weren’t silent as America’s desirability among travelers began to decline, but the coalition represents a new determination to reverse the trend. The inclusion of broader business lobbies is “an attempt to graduate to a new level of urgency” for policymakers to arrest the problem, said Jonathan Grella, a US Travel vice president. The coalition plans to present specific policy changes to the administration, including efforts to speed visa processing times, that it expects will help boost tourism. Representatives of the State Department’s Consular Affairs Bureau and the Commerce Department didn’t immediately return requests for comment made after normal business hours.
Coalition organisers said America remains a vital draw for foreign travelers and that only modest policy changes would be required. As an example, they noted how the US successfully corrected a steep decline of inbound travel in the decade following the 2001 terrorist attacks.
But in the past year, the US travel industry has grappled with an administration that made border security and tougher immigration laws its signature policies.
The 10 groups in the Visit US Coalition are: American Gaming Association, American Hotel & Lodging Association; American Society of Association Executives; Asian American Hotel Owners Association; International Association of Exhibitions and Events; National Restaurant Association; National Retail Federation; Society of Independent Show Organizers; US Chamber of Commerce; and US Travel Association.
Last week, the coalition’s mission was made significantly harder. Trump’s comments on what he reportedly called “shithole countries” earned him international condemnation.
“It isn’t so much about the offending comment as the distraction that the incident creates,” Grella said of the continuing fallout. “Every minute we’ve spent talking about the shithole comment is time we’re not talking about visa policy.”

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