| 7/16/10 - U.S. Air Travel Abroad Down 5 Percent in April |
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The U.S. Department of Commerce has announced that U.S. outbound non-stop air passenger traffic totaled 2.9 million in April 2010, decreasing 5 percent compared to April 2009 and registering the first month over month decrease since November 2009. Top outbound markets were Europe, the Caribbean, Mexico and Asia. Air travel was up to the Caribbean and Asia, but Europe was down 19 percent as a result of flight interruption from Iceland’s volcanic ash. Mexico was down 4 percent. Departures were also down to Central and South America. The Middle East and Africa regions experienced the strongest growth at 29 and 25 percent, respectively. In the first four months of 2010, outbound air traffic increased one percent when compared to the same period in 2009, reaching 11.5 million. In the first four months of 2010, positive growth occurred in five of the eight overseas regions, with Oceania, the Middle East and Africa posting double-digit increases. Outbound travel to Canada was up five percent but down three percent to Mexico. U.S. spending in April 2010 by U.S. travelers on foreign carrier passenger fares totaled $2.4 billion (imports), up 15 percent compared to April 2009. For the month, the balance of trade for passenger fares was a $20 million surplus (foreign passenger fares on U.S. carriers [exports] exceeded imports). Highlights: U.S. Citizen Air Traffic to Overseas Regions, Canada & Mexico
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