Mexico turns to tourism to bolster economy
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Beaches, battered peso
attracted an increased number of visitors in 2008 Gregory
Bull / AP file
Cancun remains the
preferred beach spot in Mexico for U.S. college students on
spring break.
It's got sun, white-sand
beaches and better yet — a battered peso.
Mexico is counting on its
weakened currency against the dollar and its proximity to
the U.S. to attract recession-shocked Americans and fuel its
tourism industry — a major source of foreign income.
Tourism officials say
Mexico saw 3 percent more visitors who spent an estimated 4
percent more in 2008, with tourists flocking to its beaches
and cobblestoned streets even during the global economic
crisis. And, unlike most tourist destinations around the
world, there is no sign that this year will be any
different.
Cancun, Mexico's top beach destination, had an occupancy
rate of more than 90 percent during the holiday season, and
officials expect at least 85 percent of the Caribbean
resort's 31,000 rooms to be occupied during the winter
months.
Cancun remains the
preferred beach spot in Mexico for spring-breakers, with
some 30,000 revelers expected to visit this year. The same
amount came to Cancun last year, according to Quentin Roo
state's Tourism Department.
Erin Erwin, a senior at
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said she
and five of her friends booked their spring-break trip to
Cancun because it offered a good deal.
"The prices get so
expensive, so I wanted to book my trip early, and my friends
chose Cancun because it was really cheap out of all the
destinations," Erwin, 21, said.
The group is paying about
$1,000 each for five nights at an all-inclusive hotel.
"It's basically the
environment for college kids. There is drinking, and having
fun and there's sun and it's warm and you lay out and not
worry about anything," she said.
Jackie Lewis, managing
director of studentcity.com, a Web site devoted to
spring-break travel, said reservations for spring break in
Cancun and Acapulco remain strong, mostly because they can
find good deals.
"We've seen students who
are asking for packages that are cheaper, so they may not be
staying at the five-star hotels and looking for seven-nights
all inclusive. They may be doing four or five nights at a
four-star or three-star," Lewis said.
Mexico attributes the
positive tourism trend to a tumbling peso, which lost 30
percent of its value in 2008. In August, it was trading at
10 to the dollar. Now it is 14 to the dollar.
Another advantage is the
drop in jet fuel prices, which has made flying cheaper and
Mexico more attractive to North Americans looking to save
some money.
Brian Hoyt, a spokesman
for Orbitz Worldwide Inc., which owns Cheaptickets.com and
Orbitz.com, said the company's hotel bookings in Mexico were
up 25 percent in the first 11 months of 2008, compared to
the same period the prior year.
"There's never been a
better time to travel (to Mexico) from a value standpoint
than right now," Hoyt said.
The Tourism Department
says more than 18 million tourists, about 80 percent from
the U.S., visited Mexico between January and October 2008
and spent about $14 billion.
Mexico is counting on
tourism to drive it through the global economic crisis, with
more aggressive ad campaigns on the Internet, the
construction of a $7.5 billion resort in the Pacific Coast
state of Sinaloa, and increased promotion in places like
China, Russia and India, where the number of people with
disposable income is rapidly growing.
That will likely pay off.
With endless beaches, quaint colonial mountain towns, ruins,
and booming cities filled with restaurants and museums, the
industry employs some 2.25 million people.
The Caribbean, meanwhile,
has seen a sharp drop in tourism prompting resorts to lay
off workers. Cheaper rooms can still be found in the
region's islands but experts say they are often offset by
expensive airfare.
Jesus Almaguer, president
of Cancun's Hotels Association, said Mexico is already
drawing more North American tourists who would normally go
to other Caribbean spots.
"We compete a lot for
Canadian tourists with Jamaica and the Dominican Republic
and I would dare to say that we're winning the battle this
year," Almaguer said.


