The "National Travel and Tourism Strategy" sets a goal of 90
million international visitors by 2027 who will spend an
estimated $279 billion annually, topping pre-pandemic levels,
the department told Reuters.
"There are a lot of industries that are well past COVID - travel
and tourism is not," U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said
in an interview.
The federal government must do more to support the resurgence of
travel and tourism to ensure the industry rebuilds to be "more
resilient, sustainable and equitable," according to the draft
strategy document seen by Reuters.
In 2019, the United States had 79.4 million international
visitors, a figure that plummeted to 19.2 million in 2020 as the
pandemic hit and rose to just 22.1 million in 2021.
International visitors spent $239.4 billion in 2019, but just
$81 billion in 2019, the Commerce Department said.
Before COVID, tourism supported 9.5 million U.S. jobs and
generated $1.9 trillion in economic output.
One of the strategy's goals is to modernize entry procedures for
visitors to enter and travel within the United States.
"We need to streamline the entry process," Raimondo said. "It's
cumbersome and very paper-based and we want to move to a more
digital process."
Other goals include promoting more diverse U.S. tourism
experiences beyond coastal states, reducing tourism's
contributions to climate change and building a sector that is
resilient to natural disasters, public health threats and the
impacts of climate change.
One reason tourism fell so sharply was the United States lagged
many other countries in lifting COVID border restrictions that
barred much of the world from entering. The U.S. rules were not
eased until November 2021.
The United States still requires foreign nationals to be
vaccinated against COVID and nearly all international air
passengers to test negative before travel. U.S. airlines say
nearly all other countries they serve are not requiring testing.
Raimondo acknowledged testing is a "barrier" to tourism and that
the United States is an "outlier" but did not forecast when
those rules might be relaxed.
"I hear a lot about it from industry and I have been expressing
that to the administration," Raimondo said.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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