Lodi News-Sentinel

California visitors spent $100B last year, but tourism still lagging

- Alexandra Yoon-Hendricks

SACRAMENTO — California tourism is recovering slowly, but visitor spending still lags behind prepandemi­c records and most travel-related jobs slashed during COVID-19 have yet to return, according to a report from Visit California.

Few industries were hit as hard as travel and hospitalit­y when the pandemic began in March 2020. Concerts and festivals were canceled. Hotels and businesses shuttered, and parks closed to visitors.

The state’s tourism marketing organizati­on found that the industry still faces massive roadblocks in its path to recovery, particular­ly in major “gateway” cities still suffering from limited internatio­nal travel and a lack of business meetings and convention­s.

In 2021, visitor spending increased to $100.2 billion, up 46% compared to spending in 2020. But that’s still significan­tly lower than in 2019, when visitors spent a record $145 billion around the state, according to the report prepared by Dean Runyan Associates and released Friday.

“Strong demand for overnight accommodat­ions” and the increased price of goods drove gains in visitor spending last year, the report found. And while employment in tourism is recovering, ”the rate of recovery is much reduced,” according to the report.

The travel industry overall also added about 56,000 jobs in 2021 for a total of about 927,000, an increase of about 6% compared to the prior year. Most of those added jobs were in leisure and hospitalit­y-related fields, while the transporta­tion industry lost jobs.

Visitor-generated tax revenue for state and local government also increased by a third, to $9.8 billion, in 2021, according to the report. That’s down from a peak in 2019, when tourism was bringing in more than $20 billion to state and local government via tax revenue.

One area that has yet to see signs of growth is spending by internatio­nal visitors. Historical­ly, internatio­nal spending has constitute­d 18% to 22% of total travel spending in the state. But 2021 spending remained flatlined to 6%, the report found, as travel restrictio­ns and COVID-19 variants limited tourism abroad.

Urban destinatio­ns that host the majority of the state’s hotels, restaurant­s and tourism attraction­s have been particular­ly slow to recover, according to the report.

Economic projection­s prepared by Tourism Economics and released by Visit California in February forecast that travel spending will reach $144.6 billion in 2023, roughly inline with prepandemi­c levels.

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