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International visitor spending down 20%, misses $10bn mark

The price paid to travel – called "passenger fare receipts" – plunged 26% from July 2008 to July 2009, with only $2.1 billion spent to get from Point A to Point B and back. This is the lowest level reached for passenger fare receipts in two years. Travel receipts – i.e. the purchase of travel-related goods and services – amounted to $7.5 billion for the month. This is the cash spent on food, lodging, entertainment gifts, and it's down 23% year-over-year.
The fact that July was the ninth month in which international tourist spending fell masks an even greater problem: this trend has been gaining momentum. In November 2008, foreign visitor spending was off 4% from November 2007. By January 2009, the year-over-year change fell to -6% and -10% in February. May, June and July all posted travel export declines of worse than 20%.
For the year so far, travel exports (same thing as spending by foreign visitors) has reached $69.2 billion – a decline of 17% relative to the same period last year. What's this mean? People visiting the United States have spent $13.9 billion less than they did last year.
But, in the spirit of fairness, we're spending less when we leave the United States. American travel imports are down almost 13%. We've spent $8.3 billion less than we did last year. But, we still shelled out a total of $57.5 billion in "support" for the local economies we've visited in 2009. The United States is still sitting on an $11.7 billion trade surplus in the travel space – but the balance is $5.7 billion less favorable than it was last year.
Filed under: Business, North America, United States







