Driving Transactions
Saturday, April 20, 2024

It’s no surprise that the leisure and hospitality sector of the economy, which includes tourism and transportation, has been impacted the hardest during this pandemic. Travel was among the first to be impacted and will see a slower recovery across the board.

US Travel Association

U.S. Travel Association is among several organizations renewing its pleas for leaders in Washington to return to the negotiating table and finalize another coronavirus-related relief package—which has been stalled for weeks now as COVID-19 cases continue to tick upward.

Roger Dow US Travel Association U.S. Travel Association President and CEO Roger Dow

A report prepared for the U.S. Travel Association by Tourism Economics finds a bevy of chilling jobs figures—and underscores the fact that an overall U.S. employment recovery will not be successful unless the hard-hit travel and tourism industry can be safely restarted:

  • 40 percent of excess U.S. unemployment is in the Leisure and Hospitality (L&H) sector, despite that sector accounting for 11 percent of all pre-pandemic employment in the U.S.
  • Despite some jobs being slowly restored with the onset of the spring and summer travel seasons, more than a quarter of all L&H workers remain unemployed—double the next hardest hit industry (mining).
  • Nearly half of the 16.9 million jobs in the L&H sector were wiped out in March and April.
  • If every industry recovered to its pre-pandemic employment level except for L&H, the overall employment rate would fall from 10.2 percent to 6.2 percent—still 2.7 percent higher than pre-pandemic levels.

“If the primary point of aid from Washington is to help U.S. employers and working Americans, then by every objective measure the American travel and tourism industry ought to be right at the top of the priority list,” said U.S. Travel Association President and CEO Roger Dow. “Substantial portions of the travel sector missed out on earlier rounds of relief, and if the next deal doesn’t get done, the acute pain being felt by travel workers is going to extend through and well after the election. We are pleading with congressional and administration leaders to return to the negotiating table and pass the relief enhancements that are going to help protect millions of jobs in each and every state and congressional district in every corner of the country.”

The travel industry has called for a series of legislative priorities that should be included in a final relief deal—particularly enhancement and expansion of the Paycheck Protection Program to provide aid to travel organizations that have yet to be able to access the program.

The full report can be read here.

Visit ustravel.org for more information.

[08.14.20]