Most dream of more economic stimulus, the best friend to defeat the industry

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Most Americans prefer more economic stimulus, especially friends for the travel industry, who suffer from the coronavirus pandemic.

A Morning Consult survey for the American Hotel and Lodging Association (AHLA), published Thursday, found that 70% of respondents that Congress deserves to help the trip recover, adding incentives to motivate Americans to travel again.

At the moment, almaximum no one travels. It’s never necessarily money. This is due to crashes, quarantine orders, and considerations for virus capture.

Popular summer tourist destinations are closed. Disney World Orlando is closed, influencing the Orlando and Kissimmee hotels.

Broadway is closed, erasing only the reasons for traveling to New York in the summer. This week, the governors of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut announced that they will require other Americans to be quarantined for two weeks if they came from a state where the coronavirus is in motion. This eliminates the almaximum of all trips from the southern states to the three-state zone for the foreseeable future.

To emphasize how un interested other Americans are in traveling, only 18% of respondents said they had booked a hotel since March.

The devastation caused on the exit from the hotel is nine times worse than September 9, with more than 8 in 10 hotels having to fire or fire pandemic staff, according to AHLA.

Some of the Morning Consult survey:

“Most hotels seek hunting to survive,” says Chip Rogers, PRESIDENT and CEO of AHLA. The organization is pressuring Washington to stimulate the industry.

Many privately owned hotels were able to get Small Business Administration emergency relief grants and were recipients of the Payroll Protection Program.

According to Oxford Economics, hotels backed one in 2 jobs in the U.S., or about 8.3 million jobs in total. According to the Oxford report, state tax revenues from hotel operations are expected to decline by $16.8 billion by 2020.

The result of the survey presented will not go down to an appearance of normality until next year. Most Americans told Morning Consult that they had no plans to leave the state for something else in 2020, a year lost to almost everyone.

I spent 20 years as a journalist for top productive in the industry, adding as a member of the staff founded in Brazil for WSJ. Since 2011, I have focused on business and making an investment in the great

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