Los Angeles Times

Internatio­nal visitor data are revised upward

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com

Federal officials released revised data Wednesday that found the number of internatio­nal travelers to the U.S. grew by 0.7% in 2017 over the previous year, despite steep drops from Mexico and the Middle East.

The 77 million internatio­nal visitors spent a record $251.4 billion on hotels, travel, food and souvenirs, a 2% increase over 2016, according to the National Travel and Tourism Office.

The small increase in visitors follows a reported sharp slowdown that began in 2016, which many travel and tourism industry leaders attributed partly to harsh rhetoric against Mexicans and Muslims by then-candidate and current President Donald Trump.

Before Trump’s election, the number of internatio­nal visitors had been climbing steadily, starting in late 2009. The rate of growth increased by as much as 8.9% a year until late in 2015, according to federal statistics.

The slowdown prompted travel and tourism leaders to launch campaigns to appeal to foreign visitors.

But in April, the tourism office stopped releasing visitation numbers, saying it had discovered that 4.5 million records from U.S. Customs and Border Protection had been misclassif­ied.

The office said in April that the mistake resulted from “a meaningful and increasing number of non-U.S. citizens traveling on visas to the United States being categorize­d as U.S. residents.”

After adjusting for the mistake, the numbers reported Wednesday found slightly more visitors came to the country in 2016 and 2017. Instead of a 2.4% decrease in 2016, the agency now reports a 1.8% drop in visitors from 2015.

For last year, the revised numbers show an increase of 0.7% instead of a drop of 1.8% compared with 2016.

Last year, the biggest drop-off in internatio­nal visitors — 12% — came from Middle Eastern countries, with a 6% decline from Mexico.

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