Travel industry leaders in the US called for an end to the “burdensome” visitor visa programme, saying it drives tourists and their job-creating dollars to other countries.

“The US imposes unnecessary barriers on international visitors that inhibit economic growth,” the US Travel Association said in a report outlining ways to increase travel to the US.

“Specifically, a burdensome US visa system drives millions of potential travellers to other countries at an enormous cost to our economy,” said the report, entitled Ready for Takeoff. The study considered every dollar spent by foreign visitors to the United States to be an export dollar, which makes travel “an easy export industry to expand and a key to closing our trade deficit”.

Increasing the number of visitors to the United States could help to double exports within five years and create 1.3 million new jobs by 2020, the report said.

A key step to achieving that, the study advised, is to do away with what the group called an onerous visa system.

It can take six months or longer for Brazilians and Chinese to get visas to come to the US.

“Brazil and China are some of the fastest growing economies in the world. Shouldn’t we be getting these people to come to the United States?” said Roger Dow, president of the US Travel Association.

The US visa system has also prevented foreign businessmen from attending revenue-generating trade shows and exhibits in the US, and some large trade shows and conferences are choosing overseas venues instead of US ones, to ensure that all members of a country’s delegation can attend.

“If somebody from India wants to exhibit something at a show in the US and we make it so difficult and expensive and inefficient to get to our leading show, there’s another event that takes place in Germany,” said Gary Shapiro, head of the Consumer Electronics Association. “And the Germans are waiting. They send teams out to recruit international exhibitors. This is economic warfare, and we’re not in the fight.”

According to the Office of Travel and Tourism Industries, which is part of the US Department of Commerce, just under 26 million overseas visitors came to the US in 2000, and 26.3 million came in 2010 – a one per cent increase.

During the same 10-year period, other leading travel destinations saw a 40 per cent increase in the number of overseas visitors they welcomed, and the number of global long-haul travellers increased by 61 million, said the American Hotel and Lodging Association.

A report released in 2007 by the Government Accountability Office said that the visa application process was changed in the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001 on the US, to increase security,

The State Department, which oversees consular activities, has taken steps to smooth out and speed up the visa process, but most fixes are temporary and many applicants still face long and costly procedures, the GAO said.

The travel industry leaders called in their report for President Barack Obama to issue a directive to capture “17 per cent of the global long-haul market and match Europe’s share in the Brazil, China and India markets by 2015”.

Neither Brazil, China nor India is included in the visa waiver programme.

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