

Earlier this week it was widely reported that in 2007 New York City had been visited by a record numbers of tourists who had spent record amounts of money here. Covering this announcement (by Mayor Bloomberg in his weekly radio program), the NY SUN reports that this phenomenon was interpreted by the deputy mayor for economic development and rebuilding, Robert Lieber, as being the result of a combination of factors, including increased investment in the city's cultural institutions, the attraction of New York's restaurants, a marketing effort abroad, and the low value of the dollar to foreign currencies.
Clearly, this has been a boon for a city that was down on visitor numbers following the 9/11 attacks due to the perception that the city (because of terrorism and nascent crime rates) was unsafe to visit. Last year tourism increased by 5% over 2006 with an estimated 46 million tourists who spent something in the region of $28 billion during their stays. A daily visit to Midtown Manhattan around lunchtime would inform the casual observer that there are almost as many tourists as business people with Italian, Spanish, French, German and British English mixing with the stressed cries of New Yorkers on their cellphones and the tap-tap, beep-beep of Blackberries.
An unusually favorable exchange rate with the Euro and British Pound (not to mention the Canadian and Australian dollars) certainly accounts for much of the visitors spending their money and getting as much as twice the value for it they would get at home, but from a Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York perspective it's interesting that in this time when many New Yorkers are finding living in their own city harder and harder to afford, visitors from abroad are flocking here and spending record sums in our stores and restaurants.
Is this situation set to continue? Or will rising dollar exchange rates reduce the number of foreign tourists? Is this disparity in spending/buying power a livability issue? And, if so, what is the solution?
Comments
(Post new comment)XBdceenogqyFQYe
Posted by Sheree BurgessSaturday, January 10, 2009, 01:08pm
hi
t6wuwc1n9ch79kol
good luck
YwHvQKREwxSpQZxeor
Posted by Brigitte MorseFriday, January 9, 2009, 12:06am
hi
t6wuwc1n9ch79kol
good luck
NYC will always be a prime
Posted by gold price todayWednesday, November 26, 2008, 12:23pm
NYC will always be a prime destination for foreign tourists. New York simply has a lot to offer, in terms of urban modernity, uniqueness and fabled NY charm seen on its people. You can easily distinguish who are the New Yorkers, if you've lived in NYC long enough.
I can see Canadians will be
Posted by williamsburg va real estateSaturday, May 24, 2008, 10:56pm
I can see Canadians will be coming down to New York in droves due to the favorable exchange rate for a long time to come.
Thanks Anonymous
Posted by Jonathan SillsFriday, January 18, 2008, 02:54pm
Thanks for your comment Anonymous. It's perhaps ironic that while so many New Yorkers are dissatisfied with the way the city is being changed by all the real estate development going on, foreigners are flocking to visit the city. There must be something that attracts them (aside from cheap flights and a friendly exchange rate) that natives can't see.
tourism
Posted by AnonymousWednesday, January 16, 2008, 01:14pm
It is difficult to see a downside in the flood of European, Asian and Canadian tourists in the city. It will keep our restaurants in business and help our retail. it is also unlikely to change any time soon. Nothing is going to happen under the present administration and any new administration is going to have a difficult time increasing taxes to the levels necessary to get our budget in order. Without a balanced budget and decreasing foreign trade deficits, the dollar will continue to slide.
The falling dollar will lead to more foreign ownership of both real estate and businesses. Absentee owners are a negative. Many of them will fail-remember the Japanese and Rockefeller Center.
The worst part of the falling dollar is what it does to New Yorkers' efforts to get to Paris. Ouch.
Post new comment