Marriott CEO Calls on U.S. to End the Visa Delays Damaging Tourism
25.08.2023 - 14:19
/ skift.com
/ Anthony Capuano
/ Sean Oneill
The top boss of Marriott International used an on-stage interview on Thursday as a platform to call on the U.S. federal government to do more to cut the wait times for interviews for first-time visitor visa applicants, which he said was leading to lost revenue because of reduced U.S. inbound tourism.
CEO Anthony Capuano, who leads the world’s largest hospitality company, was interviewed at an annual meeting run by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a business advocacy group. Capuano was asked which policies his team would press President Biden’s Administration on for industry benefit.
“Certainly reducing visa wait times, particularly for those countries that have the potential, would be the most impactful, in terms of sheer volume of visitors,” Capuano said. “I had a chance to talk with the Commerce Secretary [Gina Raimondo], and we talked about the fact that in some countries the average wait times right now exceed 400 days. So we are losing out on billions and billions of dollars of travel spend.”
Capuano also encouraged federal policy changes that would put more federal workers on the road and back in offices and a reform package for U.S. immigration policy in a way that would boost worker numbers.
The U.S. Travel Association last month created a website to highlight what it called the negative impact the visa delays are having on travelers and U.S. businesses. The organization projected that the U.S. would lose nearly $7 billion in travel spending in 2023 because between two million and six million people may be unable to visit this year despite applying to do so.
Some would-be travelers are more affected than others, with India, Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico among those reporting high wait times. Citizens from many countries outside the U.S. Visa Waiver Program must apply for a visitor visa in order to temporarily stay in the U.S., as Skift has reported.
Wait times and reasons for delay vary by consulate. Some consulates lost staff during the pandemic and a hiring freeze under the previous U.S. presidential administration. Demand has also soared on a surge of interest in post-pandemic travel and because many applicants must renew visas that expired during the pandemic. (See Skift’s coverage of the visa delays.)
Capuano gave a brief update on Marriott International’s business, though not a full report. The company will report its earnings within a few weeks.
In October, Marriott’s global revenue per available room, a key industry metric, was up about 3 percent over where it was in 2019.
“There’s been lots of discussion around whether we’ve hit the bottom of the pool of accommodation demand,” Capuano said. “We just don’t see it in the data. In fact, if you look at the performance we saw through