According to a recent CNN online article, the travel industry lost an estimated $18.1 billion (yes, billion, with a b) in the last year. The driver of this loss was, oddly enough, average travelers - who took an estimated 41 million fewer trips (29 million leisure and 12 million business) in the last 12 months than in the previous year. The airlines carried fewer passengers, hotels had fewer guests, holiday destinations saw fewer visitors, and local municipalities lost an estimated $4.2 billion in income that would otherwise have been realized through taxes on hotels, restaurants, and other tourist-fueled businesses.
I guess anyone who didn't see this coming is deeply into Mexican Happy Grass. Airline ticket prices and miscellaneous fees are going up faster than a nun's eyebrows at a nude beach, and the price of gasoline long ago lost any contact with reality. The new word I've seen used often is staycation, meaning a vacation spent at home or at destinations in one's local area to minimize cost.
There was a time not so long ago when travel was fun. It was relatively expensive, but not beyond the means of average working-class people who planned carefully. Now, thanks to the greed of the oil industry and the utter lack of focus on airline customer service, the travel industry is in the toilet because people just aren't willing any more to pay outrageous prices for the privilege of being treated like cattle.
From a business perspective, I know that we travel much less than we used to. Many meetings we used to hold in person are now done via video conferencing...not as good as sitting around a table and looking each other in the eye, but a lot less expensive. The cost of the air travel is bad enough, but you also have to allow so much extra travel time in case of enroute delays or unexpected flight cancellations that you end up spending unnecessarily large amounts on per diem for travelers. I used to fly somewhere on business about once a month...this year, I expect to travel only twice all year. Agnes and I are hoping for a vacation later in the year, but we'll just have to see how the prices look between now and then.
Oh, well...at least we have an enormous personal library, a very good public library system, a large music collection, a few hundred tapes and DVDs, and a nice deck out back to enjoy them all on. My garden is booming. We don't need to leave home at all.
Too bad I may not be able to see too many more of those 1000 Places to See Before You Die.
Have a good day. At home. More thoughts tomorrow.
Bilbo
7 comments:
It is now so expensive and such a hassle to travel by air, I'm driving from Ohio to Maryland for a business trip next week. I figured the hours are about the same when you consider door-to-door time (and that's assuming no flight delay, which is almost a given these days) and it's cheaper even with the outrageous fuel prices. I'd even rather have to drive over the cattle treatment from TSA and the airlines.
I kinda see a national airline looming...and service will, of course, suck. No Quantas for us--it will be the worst of the worst.
Enjoy the yard.
It's so expensive to do any traveling, I'm trying to figure out how I can make extra trips to the city. I'm about 30 miles southwest of Pittsburgh and 50 miles from Wheeling.
Driving to Lancaster this year seems impossible as does Erie. Even going to the amusement park...
~sigh~
Your home does sound like a wonderful place for a staycation.
I'm so grateful for AirAsia connecting Palembang to Kuala Lumpur. Even if they are starting to charge for the little extras, its still affordable.
No,no,no! We thrive on other's misfortune! As airlines/resorts fail to get bookings they provide better deals, especially last minute stuff. So have your bags packed and ready and check out those handy consolidators!
Remember, if we don't belly up to the buffet and swim up bar, the terrorists win.
It's so true about fewer travellers.
I did laugh at your 'nun's eyebrows' comment!
One for the Quality Posts!shx
Katherine: I feel so much better after reading your last two lines...
lacochran: you're so right. Whatever was I thinking???
Thanks, Jean-Luc! I was wondering how long it would take to get someone to notice that line!
Your best line in the whole post: "faster than a nun's eyebrows at a nude beach."
You never fail to make me laugh and put me in a good mood. Thanks for that...
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