Tourism May Suffer Greatly as Gas Prices Predicted to Soar

November 5, 2021  ·
  W. D. W. Pro

A new report from Bank of America to CNN has leaders in the tourism industry deeply concerned. According to Bank of America, oil prices are likely to rise by another 45%, despite gasoline already being at a seven-year high and over $4.00 per gallon in some states across the country. This potential rise, predicted by Bank of America by June 2022, would effectively raise the average cost of a gallon of gas in the United States to about $5.00 per gallon. For those of you keeping stats, that would annihilate the previous record for average cost of gasoline which currently stands at $3.64 per gallon.

We’ve already covered on That Park Place how supply chain issues and inflation are threatening to stifle a tourism industry comeback, but even those are dwarfed by the danger of record-smashing gasoline costs. Why? Because when gasoline costs rise, the cost of everything rises behind it as a result of energy being required for the production of every imaginable item or service. If gas rises an incredible 45% from its current near-records, inflation could easily enter into a period not seen since the Jimmy Carter administration.

For tourism, coming out of a pandemic, the timing could not be worse. Already, news reports are out there warning that current fuel costs are threatening the industry. The idea of having to pass fuel costs onto the customer for staggering oil prices would be catastrophic for an industry that was essentially shut down for more than a year. While larger corporations might be able to hold their prices for a bit longer, smaller companies and local tourist locales would have no such luck.

“Last year at this time, many people wondered if they could safely gather with their extended family as the coronavirus raged unchecked.

This year, they’re trying to figure out if they can even afford to get there.

Just look at what’s been happening with the price of gas. ‘We’re actually about $1.20 higher than we were last year in Massachusetts, and the average driver is now paying about $17 more per fill-up per tank,’ explained Mary Maguire, Director of Public and Legislative Affairs for AAA-Northeast.” — MSN.com

With Barron’s now recommending investors get out of bonds due to inflation and economic stagnation, they’re suggesting people might look to energy funds and stocks as a way to protect against degradation of their capital value. That’s fine for individuals and companies that can do so. But when it comes to hotels, local restaurants, and leisure locations, there’s no shifting away from their capital assets, from their real estate, from their services. And all of that will be heavily impacted if fuel prices soar to the numbers predicted by Bank of America. It is not an overstatement to say that government officials should be doing everything in their power to ease fuel cost prices unless they wish to see the tourism industry decimated by a double-whammy of pandemic and record-level energy costs.

Needless to say, if gasoline is at $5.00 on average across the country, it’s going to be far higher in certain states. Does anyone think the locales along Route 66 are going to enjoy road trippers disappearing? Who is going to be able to afford flying as jet fuel is directly tied into oil prices? It’s the middle class that drives most tourism (by far), not the elites who will be less affected.

For those dependent on fun-searching visitors, the heartache of the past two years may not be ending any time soon. 

Author: W. D. W. Pro
Founder, Publisher, CEO WDW Pro is an opinionated commentator on all things Disney and Entertainment. He runs one of the most-viewed pop culture news channels on YouTube with many millions of views every month. First becoming well-known on WDWMagic.com, the author was brought on to work at Pirates and Princesses. Pro has previously released exclusive details on a variety of rumors and leaks before they were made public. Some exclusives have included breaking info on new Epcot attractions, detailing the light saber experience at the Star Wars hotel, reporting a Harrison Ford injury severity before anyone else, revealing Hugh Jackman was coming to the MCU, Storm would be linked with Wakanda and more. WDW Pro has written articles viewed by millions of readers while maintaining an 87% accuracy rating for revealing "insider" information in 2020. In 2021, the author had a better than 90% accuracy on reported leaks and rumors. Pro joined That Park Place on June 22nd, 2021. The author's accolades include being featured on The Daily Wire, cited by Timcast, numerous references by YouTube personalities, as well as having material tweeted by Dr. Jordan Peterson. WDW Pro is honored, and grateful, while hoping to make the world a better place. In 2023, a third party audit found Pro's accuracy for rumors and scoops to be 92.5%. SOCIAL MEDIA: X: http://x.com/wdwpro1 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WDW_Pro EMAIL: wdwpro@thatparkplace.com
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tony

The cost of getting gasoline out of the ground is going up. Back in the day, you could 40-50 units of energy for every one unit spent getting oil out of the ground. It’s at 7-1 now and dropping. It’s not a sustainable model and one that could find an energy company crashing in the future.