As more international travellers decide to skip America, 10 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, writes Justin Bachman for the Washington Post.
Historically, America had only 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.
So some of its biggest players unveiled the "Visit US Coalition"on Tuesday 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.
Last week, the Commerce Department reported a 3.3 percent drop in traveller spending for last year, 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 last year 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. (The average "long-haul" visitor to the states spends 18 nights and $4,400, according to US Travel.)