Thanks for your thoughts, Lisa. As you can tell, it concerns me when prices threaten to drop through the floor as it is simply an unsustainable policy. Many people have gone out of business or been laid off in the tourist business in central Florida this past 18 months and, while there have been (and continue to be) some great deals on various kinds of accommodation, it is not a long-term solution for the vacation providers - and that obviously has ramifications for consumers like us, too. Deals like $55/night would have been unheard of 4 or 5 years ago and the industry needs to regain its sense of balance price-wise. Otherwise, a lot more people will go out of business, the amount of choice will diminish significantly, and prices of those left will go UP a lot more as the price pendulum swings ever more wildly.
The thing that most concerns me, though, is talk of a near 10% price rise in theme park tickets in the new year as I don't think the parks have done anything in the last 12 months to justify that kind of increase - which will put more pressure on the associated providers (hotels, restaurants, etc) to keep things affordable.
But then perhaps we are getting into pure debate territory here and I'll have to end up moderating my own comments
The thing that most concerns me, though, is talk of a near 10% price rise in theme park tickets in the new year as I don't think the parks have done anything in the last 12 months to justify that kind of increase - which will put more pressure on the associated providers (hotels, restaurants, etc) to keep things affordable.
But then perhaps we are getting into pure debate territory here and I'll have to end up moderating my own comments
