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Honoring tradition in troubled times

Economic uncertainty has holiday travelers down — but not out

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By Rob Lovitt
Travel writer
msnbc.com contributor
updated 11:04 a.m. ET Nov. 17, 2008

Rob Lovitt
Travel writer

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Brother, can you spare $44.61?

That, according to the American Farm Bureau, is what the typical Thanksgiving dinner — turkey, stuffing, cranberries, pumpkin pie and all the fixings for 10 people — will cost this year. Ticking gradually upward, that’s an increase of 5.5 percent from the $42.26 the same meal cost last year.

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The cost of getting there? Well, that’s another story, given the roller coaster ride travelers have endured this year. Caught between soaring prices and shrinking demand, travel costs are all over the map and changing daily, and the forecast for the future is likely to be every bit as apparent and unchanging as Hank Paulson’s plans for the economy.

The next two weeks will be the busiest travel period of the year, and planes are expected to be as crowded as ever, even though fewer people will be traveling. That is because of huge cuts in capacity the airlines have made in a desperate bid to cut losses and return to profitability.

Meanwhile drivers will be pleasantly surprised by pump prices that have fallen to the $2-a-gallon range, about half what they were in the summer.

Maybe the situation doesn’t warrant dusting off the Depression-era song cited above, but this holiday promises to be as challenging as any in recent memory.

Travelers feeling down, but not out
The traditional barometer for Thanksgiving travel — AAA’s annual forecast — will come out November 18, but the prognosis for travelers is already looking gloomy. Last month, travel-trend forecasters IHS Global Insight issued their own projections, which listed a litany of challenges, including “rising inflation, increasing unemployment, tightening credit conditions, high levels of consumer debt, declining housing wealth and stagnant wages.”

No wonder the company is predicting a drop in domestic travel during the final quarter of 2008. Business travel is expected to take the biggest hit, tumbling by 4.6 percent, while leisure travel will slip 0.3 percent. The data suggest that while companies are slashing travel budgets to the bone, vacationers are simply scaling back.

“By no means is the sky falling,” says Suzanne Cook, senior vice president of research for the Travel Industry Association (TIA). “After years of growth, we’re now looking at modest declines.” As the major trade group for the U.S. travel industry, TIA’s latest research projects that total leisure travel for this year will slip 0.2 percent and 1.3 percent for 2009. “American travelers are trading down, but not out,” adds Peter Yesawich, chairman of Ypartnership, which helped conduct the research.

INTERACTIVE
Getting to Grandma's
Take an interactive look at past eras and crunch the costs of traveling over the holidays.
In other words, they’re doing what they always do, hoping to spend Thanksgiving with friends and family, calculating the costs of flying and/or driving and making the best of things in troubled times. If that’s your plan, too, here’s what to expect.

Fewer passengers, fuller planes
For many fliers, particularly those who fly infrequently, this Thanksgiving will likely provide an introduction to the nation’s rapidly contracting air-transportation system. During the 12-day holiday period (November 21–December 2), the Air Transport Association of America (ATA) expects U.S. airlines to carry 24 million passengers, down 10 percent from last year. Rest assured, planes will still be plenty crowded — the decline has more to do with capacity cuts than falling demand — as the industry tries to shrink itself into profitability.

Whether that will work or not is open to debate, but travelers are already facing fewer choices when flying, with some of the most dramatic cuts taking place during Thanksgiving. From Monday to Monday, U.S. airlines will operate approximately 187,000 flights, a drop of almost 18 percent over the year before, according to figures compiled by OAG (Official Airline Guide). Available seats on Thanksgiving Day and the following day have been slashed a whopping 67 and 39 percent, respectively.

Fewer flights and fewer seats means higher fares, right? Generally speaking, yes, and after 21 fare hikes during the first half of the year, it looked like there was no limit to how high airfares could go. (The most recent DOT statistics show the average domestic fare jumped eight percent during the second quarter of this year, hitting a record of $352.) By early fall, typical airfares over the Thanksgiving period were running 15 to 30 percent above the same time last year.

But a funny thing happened on the way to Turkey Day. (Funny weird, that is, not funny ha ha.) Last summer’s oil crisis segued into a global economic crisis that has forced businesses to cut back on their spending and prompted consumers to adopt a wait-and-see approach to their holiday travel plans.

So, when Northwest Airlines announced a fare sale late last month, it was quickly matched by the competition. “It wasn’t just a little bitty sale,” says Rick Seaney, CEO of FareCompare.com, the airfare research site. “People who were getting quoted holiday fares of $400–$600 were suddenly seeing fares well under $300.”

The best deals, suggests Seaney, come to those who can be flexible. As an example, he quotes a four-night Thanksgiving trip between Chicago and Fort Myers, Fla., and comes up with the following fares: a painful $493 if you fly Wednesday to Sunday, but just $219 if you travel Tuesday to Saturday and a bargain-basement $169 if you can go Monday to Friday. “You may have to trade off time at work or keep the kids out of school an extra day,” he says, “but it may be worthwhile if you want to see your friends and family.”

Tom Parsons, CEO of the travel-deal site BestFares.com, cites similar bargains for flexible fliers. Atlanta-Boston: $369 Tuesday-Sunday, but $169 Tuesday-Monday. Dallas-Miami: $559 Wednesday-Sunday, but $269 Tuesday-Saturday. New York-Los Angeles: $459 Tuesday-Sunday, but $309 Tuesday-Saturday. “If you live in Dallas and want to go see Mom in St. Louis, you can still find some reasonable fares,” he says, “as long as you stay away from November 30.”

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  Airfare wars make holiday bargains
Nov. 5: In a bid to grab more passengers, major airlines are dropping airfares even over the normally busy holiday season. KXAS's Brian Curtis reports.

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Reasonable, of course, is relative (and subject to change and limited availability), and despite the price drops, many fares remain higher than they were a year ago, especially when you factor in surcharges and à la carte fees. (Earlier this month, Delta become the last legacy carrier to start charging $15 to check a first bag, although the fee doesn’t take effect until December 5.) Such “skyway robbery,” as Parsons puts it, will only make it harder to calculate total travel costs over the holiday.

Nevertheless, and skyway robbery aside, the bigger picture — fewer flights, falling demand and good deals for those who can be flexible — bodes well for holiday travel. Barring bad weather or other surprises, there may very well be shorter lines at the airport, fewer delays in the sky and a less stressful experience along the way.


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