Ypartnership Offers Some Good Economic News

A new Ypartnership survey reveals a significant increase in perceived “money available for travel” (82.4 in April 2010, up from 70.3 in April 2009), suggesting that consumers are now more confident about their personal finances.

This may mean that consumers are more inclined to make discretionary expenditures on travel services than they were one year ago, the Ypartnership’s Traveler Sentiment Index from its April travelhorizons report says.

Three of the six variables from which the index is derived (”interest in travel,” “time available to travel,” and the aforementioned “money available for travel”) are increasing, while the remaining three (”affordability of travel,” “perceived safety of travel,” and “quality of travel services”) are declining, the study shows.

“Although it may be premature to declare this the beginning of the long-awaited recovery of the travel industry, the data suggest we have finally bottomed out and are now poised for a rebound,” the Ypartnership noted.

The greatest decrease was observed in the “perceived affordability of travel” (down from 118.6 in April 2009 to 103.5 in April 2010), signaling that recent efforts by many travel service suppliers to increase fares and rates have not been lost on the traveling public.

The Traveler Sentiment Index now stands at 90.4 (compared to a base of 100, established in March 2007), up from the 89.1 recorded in April 2009, but down slightly from the 91.0 observed in February 2010.

Among the financial factors that influence interest in near-term leisure travel, most of the year-over-year changes reveal a positive trend, Ypartnership says. Although the higher cost of a gallon of gasoline and the rising cost of air travel were cited as growing concerns, the percentage of U.S. adults citing "high level of personal credit card debt" fell from 56 percent in April 2009 to 46 percent in April 2010. The percentage mentioning "value of investment portfolio" fell by 14 points. On a less encouraging note, however, concerns about potential job losses and the expected decline in income in the year ahead represent causes for concern.