Tourism to the US is cratering

#11
#11
We have many posters who suffer from TDS
TDS just means “how dare you criticize Trump” lmao. Don’t even try to compare these two things.
lol. You’ve been over the edge for a while now. Who gives a f*** about international tourism? What business is hanging their hat on that?
do you think every tourist to our country is from America or something
 
#16
#16
January and February are typically slow months for air travel. A little pickup in March with spring break.
Icelandair and Aer Lingus both just started at BNA this week.


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#19
#19
Those in the tourism and restaurant industry
So just so we're clear your argument is that there are a bunch of businesses in this country that survive/fail based on French/German/British/etc tourism?

See, if I wanted to go to X restaurant and couldn't get a table because German was there that's no loss to to the restaurant if the German wasn't there because I would be. If a business in a country of 340 million needs people crossing oceans to stay in business I have to wonder about their business model.
 
#20
#20
So just so we're clear your argument is that there are a bunch of businesses in this country that survive/fail based on French/German/British/etc tourism?

See, if I wanted to go to X restaurant and couldn't get a table because German was there that's no loss to to the restaurant if the German wasn't there because I would be. If a business in a country of 340 million needs people crossing oceans to stay in business I have to wonder about their business model.

I have to wonder about your business acumen if you question the entire model of the tourism and hospitality industry.
 
#21
#21
So just so we're clear your argument is that there are a bunch of businesses in this country that survive/fail based on French/German/British/etc tourism?

See, if I wanted to go to X restaurant and couldn't get a table because German was there that's no loss to to the restaurant if the German wasn't there because I would be. If a business in a country of 340 million needs people crossing oceans to stay in business I have to wonder about their business model.
International visitors spent nearly $213.1 billion on U.S. travel and tourism-related goods and services year last year (January through December 2023), an increase of nearly 29 percent when compared to 2022; international visitors injected, on average, nearly $584 million a day into the U.S. economy during 2023.

That's higher than the gdp of several of your goober states.
 
#23
#23
International visitors spent nearly $213.1 billion on U.S. travel and tourism-related goods and services year last year (January through December 2023), an increase of nearly 29 percent when compared to 2022; international visitors injected, on average, nearly $584 million a day into the U.S. economy during 2023.

That's higher than the gdp of several of your goober states.
This is basically a problem for new York, California, and Florida. Nobody else feels anything. And the current dip represents less than .01% of their projected revenue
 
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#25
#25
This is basically a problem for new York, California, and Florida. Nobody else feels anything. And the current dip represents less than .01% of their projected revenue
Chump change, right?

 

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