Washington Post: Demand for flights to the United States has fallen in nearly every
country since January, according to Hopper, a travel-booking app that
analyzes more than 10 billion daily airfare price quotes to derive its
data. Searches for U.S. flights from China and Iraq have dropped 40
percent since Trump’s inauguration, while demand in Ireland and New
Zealand is down about 35 percent. (One exception: Russia, where searches
for flights to the United States have surged 60 percent since
January.)
“The result could be an estimated 4.3 million fewer people coming to the United States this year, resulting in $7.4 billion in lost revenue… Next year, the fallout is expected to be even larger, with 6.3 million fewer tourists and $10.8 billion in losses. Miami is expected to be hit hardest, followed by San Francisco and New York.”
“The result could be an estimated 4.3 million fewer people coming to the United States this year, resulting in $7.4 billion in lost revenue… Next year, the fallout is expected to be even larger, with 6.3 million fewer tourists and $10.8 billion in losses. Miami is expected to be hit hardest, followed by San Francisco and New York.”
2 comments:
Making 'Murrica great again.
hopefully less tourists means less people going to Trump Hotels. Will affect him financially at least.
Post a Comment