Part 2 | The US$50 Billion Tourism Reallocation | Living Lab
Sizing the prize: which destinations will capture displaced US tourism demand?
Living Lab’s displacement model shows US$10.6bn of the US Tourism decline is contestable by five economies
Fifty billion dollars is a headline, not a strategy
Part 2 of 3. Living Lab’s displacement model shows US$10.6bn of the US$50bn decline is contestable by five economies. Qatar stands to gain most as a share of its base (+11.2%). The binding constraint for each destination is different. So is the strategy.
Part 1 mapped the US tourism decline and identified the five economies absorbing the bulk of displaced demand: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Mexico and Canada. All are posting record or near-record visitor numbers.
Part 2 asks the harder question: how much of the US$50bn is winnable by each destination, in the segments where it can compete, from the markets it can serve?
The Size of the Prize - segment by segment
A tourism ministry cannot bid for US$50bn. It can bid for the events, the routes and the visitor segments that match its sectors, its source markets and its infrastructure. The useful number is the contestable share.
Living Lab breaks the US$50bn into three contestable segments and one that is not.
MICE and business travel (US$9.9bn displaced). Highest per-delegate value. Most sensitive to visa disruption. Addressable pool for these five destinations: US$2.5bn.
Long-haul leisure (US$17.3bn displaced). High-spend travellers from Europe, Asia and Latin America who would have visited the US. Addressable pool: US$3.1bn.
Short-haul leisure (US$11bn displaced). North American demand that stays closer to home. Addressable pool: US$5bn. Mexico and Canada are the direct geographic substitutes. Gulf states do not meaningfully compete for this segment.
VFR and other (US$2.2bn displaced). Visiting friends and relatives. Origin-determined, not destination-determined. Not contestable.
Of the US$50bn, US$10.6bn (21%) is addressable by these five destinations. The rest disperses across more than 100 other markets.
US$10.6bn is contestable. what is stopping you?
Living Lab scored each destination across five lever blocks: access and connectivity, last-mile mobility, facilities, economics and ecosystem, and hotel capacity headroom.
Sector weightings vary. MICE weights connectivity and facilities most heavily. Leisure weights hotels and access. Short-haul leisure is zeroed out for Gulf states on geographic eligibility.
The figure below shows the result.
What Living Lab tells each destination
Three patterns emerge from the data.
Small economies gain most. Qatar’s modelled capture (US$1.2bn) is close to Saudi Arabia’s (US$1.3bn) in absolute terms. On a base seven times smaller, that translates to an 11.2% uplift versus 1.6%. The percentage, not the dollar figure, is the decision metric. For Qatar, the displacement is the difference between a growth story and a transformation story.
Mexico and Canada win on geography, not strategy. Together they capture US$6.5bn, but nearly all of it is short-haul substitution: the family that would have driven to Florida flies to Cancun instead. That demand is structural. It arrived without a bidding strategy.
What to do with this number
Map your contestable share. The number you need is not US$50bn. It is the slice that matches your sectors, your source markets and your infrastructure. The model gives you the starting point. Part 3 will will identify binding constraints and the winning stratagems for you.
Living Lab will help you build the economic case now. Audit-ready numbers, with multipliers calibrated to your own economy, are a prerequisite for funding and closing bids. Get them on the shelf now. Of the three contestable segments, MICE carries the highest per-delegate value, the greatest sensitivity to visa disruption and the shortest decision window. Part 3 also examines how to win MICE events and what separates the destinations that will capture them from those that will read about it.
Actionable Takeaway
US$50bn is a headline. It tells a tourism minister nothing about what to do on Monday morning.
These three steps do.
Map your contestable share. Not all displaced spending fits your destination. Filter by sector (medical sciences, technology and general sciences account for 44% of international association meetings), by origin market access (visa-free routes to the delegate pool the US is turning away) and by venue capacity. The number you need is not US$50bn. It is the slice you can win.
Build the economic case before you need it. Conference organisers choosing between Doha, Riyadh and Dubai will ask for proof of return. The most common reason planning boards reject hosting bids is an economic case that falls apart under scrutiny. Get audit-ready numbers, with multipliers calibrated to your own economy, on the shelf now.
Move this quarter. Venue decisions for 2027 and 2028 calendars are being made today. Displaced events that find a new home do not come back quickly. Lead times run two to four years. The destinations that size their opportunity now will set their calendars for the next three years. Everyone else will read about it.
Living Lab gives governments and convention bureaux decision-grade intelligence across their entire event, transport and F&B, accommodation portfolio
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