Data from the US travel and tourism office shows a 21 per cent drop in
the number of Nigerians travelling to the country, the largest global
drop-off in visitors to the US.
As of 2019 October, 34,000 fewer
Nigerians travelled to the US compared to the previous year. After a
sustained period of growth between 2011 and 2015, the number of Nigerian
visitors to the US started to plateau in 2016 until the big drop-off
last year.
The dip in Nigerian visitors to the US followed a string of visa clampdown measures by the Trump administration.
After
indefinitely suspending its visa interview waiver for Nigerian
applicants (the waiver allowed frequent travellers renew their visa
without going through in-person interviews each time), the Trump
administration also raised visa application fees for Nigerians by
including additional “reciprocity fees” ranging from $80 to $303
depending on the class of visa. And even though the Nigerian government
immediately slashed visa application fees for American applicants in a
bid to get the US to reverse its price increase, the reciprocity fees
remain in place.
The measures followed reports that the Trump
administration was looking to impose visa restrictions on countries
whose citizens have a track record of overstaying beyond the validity of
their short-term US visas. As it turns out, Nigerians were the
highest-ranked African country for US visa overstays in 2018.
Even
though official data confirm the effects of the measures, there were
already warning signs the administration’s policies were having an
adverse impact on potential travellers. The policies also spawned
fear-fuelled rumours among locals as well: mid-last year, the United
States embassy in Nigeria was forced to deny a widespread rumour that it
had placed a ban on issuing student visas to Nigerians.
Despite
the Trump administration’s policies, the US remains a popular
destination for Nigerian students seeking foreign degrees as the
economic impact of spending by Nigerian students studying in the United
States reached $514 million over the past academic year.
The
second-largest drop was for visitors from Venezuela (17.7%). The South
American country is in the midst of an economic and political crisis
which has seen more than four million people flee the country and the US
is restricting entry to Venezuelan migrants.
Argentina followed with 15.6 per cent drop and Sweden, 11.1 per cent.
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