Mary Dolheimer and David Smith reached a compromise last month that may help the US economy: they decided to take their first family vacation in two years.
The Abbottstown, Pennsylvania, couple plan to spend US$2,000 for a week on North Carolina's Outer Banks with their six children. It took some coaxing, said Dolheimer, 36, who found the rental property by shopping on the Internet.
Although Smith, 48, a construction foreman, wanted to reduce the family's debt, "the kids and I just wore him down," said Dolheimer, in charge of media relations at Gettysburg College. By sharing the rental cost with friends, the couple will have some of their US$3,000 tax refund left over to pay off credit cards.
The family's determination to travel helps explain why the number of US consumers planning vacations may be rebounding from recession and the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11. Online travel services such as Expedia Inc. report a surge in traffic, Walt Disney Co is reopening hotels, and low fares have boosted sales at Carnival Corp. and other cruise lines.
"What we have here are some extraordinarily attractive travel bargains and packages, and people are taking advantage of them," said William Sullivan, senior economist at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co in Jersey City, New Jersey. "That's a welcome development for the US economic outlook."
Spending on travel and tourism accounted for about 4.5 percent of US gross domestic product from 1997 though 2000, the World Travel & Tourism Council says. That dropped to 4.38 percent last year. While spending on leisure travel is likely to rise this year, business travel will probably fall, limiting the contribution to 4.34 percent.
Discounts may spur individual travel. Holiday Inn, operated by Six Continents Plc, is offering US$10 vouchers for gasoline and 50 percent off a second night's lodging. Carnival, the largest cruise line, reduced prices to attract vacationers and boost profits in the first quarter.
More than 44 percent of US households said in February they planned to take a vacation in the next six months, according to the Conference Board, a New York-based research group. That compares with 43.1 percent, a two-decade low, in February 2001, just before the recession began.
The number of leisure trips will grow 6 percent after declining 5 percent in 2001, according to an industry survey sponsored by Orbitz LLC, an online travel site, other travel companies and USA Today. First-quarter bookings through Expedia, a unit of USA Networks Inc, rose 64 percent to US$1.1 billion from a year earlier, the company said.
While the terrorist attacks with hijacked passenger jets dealt a blow to travel for many American consumers and businesses, the tragedy had the opposite effect on some families.
Arlin and Stephanie Schmidt, back in New York from a week's vacation in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, say they'll spend about US$25,000 on vacations this year, up from about US$20,000 last year.
Sept. 11 "encouraged us to not hold back too much," said Arlin, a 45-year-old vice president for Career Education Corp., which owns technical and cooking schools. The couple plan a golfing trip in June to Colorado Springs, staying at the Broadmoor Hotel & Resort, where rooms start at US$450 a night.
Cruise lines expect travel to improve. The number of North Americans taking cruises rose 0.4 percent last year, the worst since 1995, after a 17 percent gain in 2000, according to the Cruise Lines International Association. The group expects the number to grow about 7 percent this year.
Tom and Linda Moleski plan to spend about US$5,000 on a summer cruise and a Thanksgiving trip on Carnival's Holland America Cruise Lines.
"Traveling is our opium," said Tom, a 54-year-old optometrist in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Walt Disney will reopen its 1,008-room French Quarter hotel in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, on May 31 after a six-month closure.
The media and entertainment company already has done so with its 2,048-room Riverside Hotel, also part of Walt Disney World.
Additionally, Disney has hired more than 200 reservation agents in the last two months to handle calls to its theme parks and resorts, said spokeswoman Rena Callahan.
"We are seeing excellent signs," Callahan said.
NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT: An official said that Guan Guan’s comments had gone beyond the threshold of free speech, as she advocated for the destruction of the ROC China-born media influencer Guan Guan’s (關關) residency permit has been revoked for repeatedly posting pro-China content that threatens national security, the National Immigration Agency said yesterday. Guan Guan has said many controversial things in her videos posted to Douyin (抖音), including “the red flag will soon be painted all over Taiwan” and “Taiwan is an inseparable part of China,” while expressing hope for expedited “reunification.” The agency received multiple reports alleging that Guan Guan had advocated for armed reunification last year. After investigating, the agency last month issued a notice requiring her to appear and account for her actions. Guan Guan appeared as required,
A strong cold air mass is expected to arrive tonight, bringing a change in weather and a drop in temperature, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. The coldest time would be early on Thursday morning, with temperatures in some areas dipping as low as 8°C, it said. Daytime highs yesterday were 22°C to 24°C in northern and eastern Taiwan, and about 25°C to 28°C in the central and southern regions, it said. However, nighttime lows would dip to about 15°C to 16°C in central and northern Taiwan as well as the northeast, and 17°C to 19°C elsewhere, it said. Tropical Storm Nokaen, currently
PAPERS, PLEASE: The gang exploited the high value of the passports, selling them at inflated prices to Chinese buyers, who would treat them as ‘invisibility cloaks’ The Yilan District Court has handed four members of a syndicate prison terms ranging from one year and two months to two years and two months for their involvement in a scheme to purchase Taiwanese passports and resell them abroad at a massive markup. A Chinese human smuggling syndicate purchased Taiwanese passports through local criminal networks, exploiting the passports’ visa-free travel privileges to turn a profit of more than 20 times the original price, the court said. Such criminal organizations enable people to impersonate Taiwanese when entering and exiting Taiwan and other countries, undermining social order and the credibility of the nation’s
‘SALAMI-SLICING’: Beijing’s ‘gray zone’ tactics around the Pratas Islands have been slowly intensifying, with the PLA testing Taiwan’s responses and limits, an expert said The Ministry of National Defense yesterday condemned an intrusion by a Chinese drone into the airspace of the Pratas Islands (Dongsha Islands, 東沙群島) as a serious disruption of regional peace. The ministry said it detected the Chinese surveillance and reconnaissance drone entering the southwestern parts of Taiwan’s air defense identification zone early yesterday, and it approached the Pratas Islands at 5:41am. The ministry said it immediately notified the garrison stationed in the area to enhance aerial surveillance and alert levels, and the drone was detected in the islands’ territorial airspace at 5:44am, maintaining an altitude outside the effective range of air-defense weaponry. Following