Monday, 8 April 2019

Uganda tour rerouted following kidnapping, ensuing traveler safety concerns




After the rescue of American Kimberly Sue Endicott and her tour guide, who were ambushed and kidnapped Tuesday in Uganda, tourists may be asking themselves: Is it safe to travel there?
For at least one travel agency, they're not willing to take the risk where the kidnapping took place.
"Following the abduction and rescue of an American tourist and local guide in Uganda’s Queen Elizabeth National Park on April 2, G Adventures has proactively taken the precaution of rerouting a scheduled tour in April to avoid the area," according to adventure travel company G Adventures. "Instead of exploring the park, guests will enjoy a guided lake cruise and safari drive in the Lake Mburo region, followed by a visit to the Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria."
The U.S. Department of State has Uganda at a level 2 travel advisory − last updated Dec. 17, 2018 − meaning travelers should "exercise increased caution."
"To give perspective to this rating, most European countries are only a level 2 as well," explained Kim Steiger, a certified travel specialist with Travel Leaders.  
The Department of State's highest travel warning is a level 4, or "do not travel."
The advisory for Uganda cautions travelers: "Violent crime, such as armed robbery, home invasion and sexual assault, is common, especially in larger cities including Kampala and Entebbe. Local police lack the resources to respond effectively to serious crime."
Rescue or ransom? American kidnapped in Uganda will meet U.S. ambassador Monday
The Minister of Tourism, Wildlife & Antiquities Prof. Ephraim Kamuntu told USA TODAY: "This incident, regrettable as it is, is an isolated incident. The country has been secure for the last three decades. An incident of this kind, we have not experienced in recent times."
The U.S. government offers several tips for safe travel in Uganda.
  • Keep your group of friends close in public
  • Have a copy of your passport and visa on hand
  • Don't leave food and drinks unattended (in particular at local clubs)
"I have clients that have, and continue to travel, to this part of the world without incident. It is important to always stay alert to your surroundings and to use reputable providers within the country," Steiger told USA TODAY.

Wednesday, 20 March 2019

These are the 10 most expensive U.S. tourist destinations




If you’re planning a trip on a budget, be warned: Visiting these U.S. destinations will likely cost you more.
Personal finance website GOBankingRates recently evaluated top vacation spots by the costs associated with visiting them, including airfare and hotel, as well as other expenses, such as food and beverages. Airfares are based on average flight prices from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
The following cities and destinations came up as the most expensive, based on two adults staying for three nights in October 2018.
10. Charleston, South CarolinaTotal cost: $1,680.82
Hotel (3 nights): $534
Airfare (for two): $757

Premium: Charleston South Carolina Battery seawall
Charleston, South Carolina
Stephen Saks | Lonely Planet Images | Getty Images
9. Philadelphia Total cost: $1,697.56
Hotel (3 nights): $528
Airfare (for two): $757.24
GP: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Philadelphia
Sean Pavone | iStock | Getty Images
8. San Francisco Total cost: $1,705.52 Hotel (3 nights): $463 Airfare (for two): $730
GP: Top States 2018: Most Expensive States: San Francisco California Painted Ladies Victorian home
San Francisco’s Painted Ladies Victorian homes. 
Education Images | Universal Images Group | Getty Images
7. Nashville Total cost: $1,728.22 Hotel (3 nights): $628 Airfare (for two): $703.62
Premium: Nashville skyline
Nashville, Tennessee
Davel5957 | Getty Images
6. Boston Total cost: $1,730.02 Hotel (3 nights): $634
Airfare (for two): $646.62
Premium: Boston skyline at dusk
Boston
David Joyner | Vetta | Getty Images
5. Austin Total cost: $1,735.94
Hotel (3 nights): $626
Airfare (for two): $697.44
Premium: Austin Texas skyline
Austin, Texas
Peter Tsai Photography | Flickr | Getty Images
4. Washington, D.C.Total cost: $1,881.48
Hotel (3 nights): $558
Airfare (for two): $855.60
Premium: Washington D.C. Capitol Building fireworks
Fireworks explode over Washington, DC. 
Paul J. Richards | AFP | Getty Images
3. Asheville, North CarolinaTotal cost: $1,921.82 Hotel (3 nights): $689
Airfare (for two): $858.06
Handout: Ashville skyline  -Where to go in 2017
Asheville skyline
Lonely Planet
2. Maui Total cost: $1,924.04 Hotel (3 nights): $751 Airfare (for two): $705.04
Premium: Top States Most Expensive States: Hawaii Maui home
Maui, Hawaii
Jay Spooner | Getty Images
1. New York Total cost: $2,070.36 Hotel (3 nights): $773 Airfare (for two): $749.92
GP: New York City skyline bike
New York City skyline

USA is Among World's Top Three Tourism Powerhouses


China, the United States and India are the world’s top three tourism powerhouses, generating more tourism industry growth over the past seven years than nearly 200 other countries.

The achievement of the three countries was identified in a new Travel & Tourism Power Performance Report report issued by the World Travel & Tourism Counciljust ahead of the annual World Tourism Day celebrations.

The report's ranking is based on growth over the past seven years in four areas: tourism’s contribution to a country's GDP, international visitor spend in that country, domestic tourism spend and capital investment.

“World Tourism Day is the global celebration of a sector that contributes 10.4 percent of the world’s GDP and generates 313 million jobs,” WTTC President and CEO Gloria Guevara said in a statement. “WTTC’s new report outlines power and performance rankings, which showcase countries that have been most successful in growing their tourism sectors across the board.”

The new report ranks the performance of a total of 185 countries over the last seven-year period.

The inclusion of domestic spend and investment in the report’s metrics this year allows for a more rounded measure of performance and prioritization than the usual measures of GDP contribution and international spend, the WTTC said.

The new report includes two distinct rankings. The "Power" ranking focuses on countries whose travel and tourism has grown most in absolute terms over the past seven years. The top ten countries on this list are: China; USA; India; Mexico; United Kingdom; Spain; Turkey; Canada; and Indonesia. Australia and the United Arab Emirates tied for the tenth slot.

Meanwhile, the new report’s "Performance" ranking looks at those countries whose travel and tourism has grown most quickly in percentage terms over the past seven years. The countries on this particular list are maximizing the opportunity of tourism to drive economic development, according to WTTC. The top ten countries on the Performance ranking are: Myanmar; Iraq; Georgia; Rwanda; Iceland; Nicaragua; Qatar; Congo; Armenia and Ivory Coast.

“Notably, G20 countries dominate the league, representing 12 of the top 20 countries, displaying once again the importance of travel and tourism both to mature markets and the global economy,” added Guevara. “Then, the emergence of up-and-coming countries highlights the central role that tourism can play within developing economies.”

For its part, the WTTC advocates that such growth be driven by strong travel facilitation policies, sustainable and proactive planning, and robust infrastructures that can withstand crises, said Guevara.

The organization believes that under such management, travel and tourism can thrive, as it is in Indonesia where radical visa reform has been matched by a rapid growth in international tourist arrivals in the last seven years.

Tuesday, 5 March 2019

Kerala Tourism holds trade meets in USA to woo tourists

In an effort to woo more travellers from America,Kerala Tourism showcased its signature assets before leading stakeholders of the travel and tourism industry and held trade meets in major cities of the USA.
New Jersey, Chicago, Houston and Los Angeles were the four American cities where Kerala Tourism held trade meets during February, a Kerala Tourism press release said.
"USA is the second largest market for Kerala Tourismafter Europe. The four trade meets conducted there were part of a concerted campaign to tap the full potential of the American travel market.

Friday, 1 March 2019

USA retains top position as global tourism continues to grow

USA retains top position as global tourism continues to grow


The global tourism sector grew at 3.9 per cent last year, to contribute a record $8.8 trillion and 319 million jobs to the world economy, according to figures from the World Travel & Tourism Organisation.
For the eighth consecutive year, this was above the growth rate of world GDP.
The research conducted over the last 25 years by WTTC, which represents the global private sector of tourism, shows that tourism generated 10.4 per cent of all global economic activity last year.
At the same time, the sector is responsible for one in five of all new jobs created in the world over the last five years.
Gloria Guevara, WTTC president, said: “Last year was another year of strong growth for the global tourism sector reinforcing its role as a driver of economic growth and job creation.
“For the eighth consecutive year, our sector outpaced growth in the wider global economy and we recorded the second-highest growth of any major sector in the world.”
She added: “Yet again, this proves the power of tourism as a tool for governments to generate prosperity while creating jobs which particularly support women, youth and other, often marginalised groups of society.
“In fact, tourism now accounts for one in five of all new jobs created worldwide and is forecast to contribute 100 million new jobs globally over the next ten years, accounting for 421 million jobs by 2029.”
United States
The United States retained its status as the world’s largest tourism economy last year, despite a standstill in international visitors from China, according the research.
Figures show that the United States remained the biggest tourism market in the world in 2018, with the sector contributing almost $1.6tn to GDP.
This translates to 7.8 per cent of US GDP with the sector growing by 2.2 per cent (accounting for inflation) last year.
After registering average annual growth of 23 per cent over the previous decade, Chinese travel to the US was flat last year partly due to trade tensions between the two countries.
International visitors from China account for four per cent of total US visitors but 11 per cent of all spending, demonstrating their economic importance to the country.
Guevara added: “ After recording ten years of stellar growth, international visitor numbers from China were flat year on year, caused in part by the deteriorating trade relations between the two countries.
“Given the economic importance of Chinese visitors, any thawing in the trade relations between the two countries would have a positive effect for the wider US economy.”

Sunday, 24 February 2019

U.S. fails to keep pace with global tourism boom



BERLIN (Reuters) - The United States is missing out on a global boom for tourism, hurt by a so-called Trump slump and currency exchange rates, travel industry experts said at a gathering in Berlin this week.


While U.S. President Donald Trump maintains that the travel ban blocking visitors from nations including Iran, Libya and Syria is needed to protect the United States from Islamic militants, the bans have raised concerns over America’s image as a welcoming country, with data showing a decline in tourist numbers last year.

International arrivals to the United States were down 4 percent in the first three quarters of 2017, Trump’s first year in office, according to the most recent data available from the United States.

By comparison, international tourism arrivals worldwide in 2017 were up 7 percent, representing the strongest result in seven years, figures from the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) show.

“Politics is not helping us,” said Tilo Krause-Duenow, owner of German tour operator CANUSA, which specializes in trips to North America.

“The potential for the U.S. could be much bigger. Prices have come down due to the currency weakening and we should have seen a much bigger increase in demand,” he told Reuters at the ITB travel fair in Berlin.

German market researcher Gfk says that bookings from Germany to the United States are down 20 percent for the 2018 summer season, though it said this could be down to factors such as last year’s hurricane season and foreign exchange rates as well as the Trump effect.

Flight bookings to the United States fell 2 percent in 2017 and were flat in the first two months of 2018, a report by travel analysis company ForwardKeys showed this week. The report cited a weaker British pound, which makes it more expensive for Britons to travel abroad, and Trump’s travel ban.

America’s hopes of improving its reputation as a foreigner-friendly destination look to have been dented further this week, with Trump’s imposition of steel and aluminum tariffs on Thursday raising fears of an international trade war.

New York had initially predicted a decline in international visitors by 300,000 for 2017 after Trump took office but now expects a smaller decline of about 100,000 to roughly 12.6 million.

“We’re still concerned because it takes the spending power of four domestic travelers to equal the spending power of one international traveler,” said Christopher Heywood, spokesman for New York City’s official tourism organization NYC & Company.

One area of optimism is ForwardKeys data showing that international forward bookings to the United States from within the Americas over the next six months are up 7 percent, but bookings from elsewhere have crept up by only 0.5 percent.

Some travel operators, however, say the concerns are overblown.

Arnaud Devanlay, of Evaneos, a website that offers tailor-made tours, said people had been concerned in the early part of last year but then decided to travel anyway.

“They’re visiting a country, not a government,” he said.

Delta Air Lines’ (DAL.N) sales director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, meanwhile, says that recent weakness in the dollar will help to lift demand.

“People want to go where they get the most for their money, where they feel safe and there’s exciting things to see,” Delta’s Bob Hannah said.

“And Trump’s not going to stop that.”

Saturday, 23 February 2019

Are more or fewer tourists coming to the U.S.? Depends which federal agency you ask

WASHINGTON – A branch of the Commerce Department has suspended publication of figures about foreign tourism because of "technical issues with a significant number of records" the agency receives from Customs and Border Protection.
The figures tracking the number of foreign visitors are key to the tourism industry making decisions about marketing and employment. Travel and tourism gave the U.S. an $83.9 billion trade surplus in 2016, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
But uncertainty about the number of foreign tourists has roiled the industry for months.
Depending on which agency is counting, the number of foreign arrivals has either been rising – according to CBP – or falling during the last two years – according to the Commerce Department’s National Travel and Tourism Office.
The tourism office said Friday it would suspend data reports after March 7 "until the records are properly identified, categorized and counted."
"The National Travel and Tourism Office is committed to providing accurate statistics on international travelers to the United States as defined by international standards for the travel and tourism sector," said Isabel Hill, the office director.
Commerce: International tourism to U.S. dips by 700,000
Part of the difference is in definitions. CBP counts everyone who arrives during fiscal years that start Oct. 1.
The tourism office focuses on travelers staying at least one night on visas or from visa-waiver countries such as most of Europe who fill out an I-94 form upon arrival. Visa holders could be visiting for either business or pleasure, as treaty traders or investors, or as students or their families. But the tourism figures don't include legal permanent residents of the U.S.
Even accounting for different definitions and time frames, the numbers haven't matched up. CBP reported in February that 124.2 million people arrived at airports in the last fiscal year, marking a 4% rise in non-citizens. Arrivals have grown each of the last eight years, according to CBP.
But the tourism office has charted a decline in overseas visitors during a similar time frame. The number of non-resident arrivals to the U.S. dropped 2.4% during 2016 and another 3.8% last year through September, according to the latest figures available from the tourism office.
CBP Commissioner Kevin McAleenan voiced confidence in the rising numbers while releasing his agency’s annual report in February.
“Our data is pretty solid because we confirmed an arrival, either biometrically or with a passport or both,” McAleenan told USA TODAY. “We had increases month over month from the previous fiscal year every single month of the year. The second half of the year was higher than the first half.”
The tourism office announced Friday that it had discovered a "meaningful and increasing number" of foreign nationals traveling on visas who had been categorized as U.S. residents. If confirmed, the office’s review could likely increase the number of 2017 visitors.
"NTTO is working with CBP and the Department of Homeland Security to resolve these issues," Hill said.
Adam Sacks, president of Tourism Economics, a Pennsylvania company that analyzes the federal numbers for industry clients, has been studying the discrepancies for months. International travel to the U.S. increased 2% last year, based on data from five sources other than the tourism office: CBP, the Advanced Passenger Information System created by CBP and three private organizations that track data from where travelers begin their trips, he said.
“What that implies is that the data that has been published by NTTO has been significantly undercounted,” Sacks told USA TODAY. “The reason for that is no fault of NTTO. It’s based on the flawed data records received from CBP.”
McAleenan said CBP had noticed the difference in the results, and will work with the Commerce Department to resolve questions about the data.
“There are different ways to slice and dice the data," McAleenan said. “We’re going to be working to align our data with Commerce for the next year’s report."
Defining whether tourism is up or down is important politically and financially, with the tourism industry raising alarms about losing billions of dollars from declining visitors during the last two years, based on tourism office figures. Overseas visitors spend an average $4,360 during average 18-night stays, according to the U.S. Travel Association.
During the last year, President Trump ordered a halt to arrivals from a half-dozen countries and tightened vetting for international arrivals, which led to concerns in the tourism industry about a slump in visitors.
The Pew Research Center found that among 10 countries surveyed, a favorable view of the U.S. increased in only one during the Trump administration: Russia. Visits from Mexico and the Middle East each declined last year, Sacks said.
An expanding global economy, a weaker dollar and destination marketing by Brand USA and local tourism boards helped attract more visitors to the U.S. last year, Sacks said. But cross-border travel increased 7% around the rest of world, compared to 2% in the U.S., he said.
“There’s a lot of good market fundamentals, but the U.S. lost market share,” Sacks said. “The concept of a ‘Trump slump’ in travel to the U.S. remains a concern as we observe these losses in market share as well as sharp declines in travel to the US from Mexico and the Middle East last year.”
The U.S. Travel Association praised the Commerce Department's efforts to getting the numbers right.
"With international inbound travel being such a critical component of the U.S. trade balance and jobs base, the stakes are very high to have an accurate picture of overseas visitors to our country," said Tori Barnes, the association's senior vice president for government relations.
Christopher Heywood, senior vice president for global communications at NYC & Company, a tourism and marketing group for the city, said his group relies on a variety of sources rather than the I-94 form that the tourism office relies upon.
For example, New York's analysis found that visitors from the United Kingdom are down, while China, Brazil and Australia appear to be up, Heywood said. But the Commerce figures suggest arrivals from all four countries were down last year through August.
"My understanding is that there are a variety of data sources that are used to track international visitor volume," Heywood said. "We don’t only rely on the I-94 form."
More about tourism figures and concerns about a 'Trump slump':