Beijing Review

Holiday Dilemmas

China Youth Daily October 9

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After the weeklong National Day Holiday, people have returned to work, though not everybody basked in the glory of an extended vacation. For many employees, the heavy burden of work means holidays lasting several days is a rare and hard-won occurrence. However, tourist numbers at many domestic attraction­s and sites peaked during the Golden Week, with people forced to choose between staying at home and struggling against the tide of tourists.

Many people have the appeal for longer holidays since the current public offerings are inadequate. However, prolonging holidays may not be the optimum solution. The length of official Chinese holidays, totaling 11 days, has exceeded the internatio­nal average. Yet people still find holidays insufficie­nt as the intervals between holidays can be extensive. The policy of paid annual leave has also not been fully implemente­d in China.

In many countries, employees benefit from official holidays in addition to paid annual leave, eschewing the crowds witnessed during Chinese holidays. It is thought that merely extending public holidays may impact domestic economic developmen­t adversely and fail to reduce congestion at attraction­s. The policy of paid annual leave needs to be better carried out in China to provide a feasible solution to the problem.

The policy needs to go further than simply adding more days to a holiday entitlemen­t. Relevant sectors need to strengthen supervisio­n and formulate comprehens­ive supporting policies to ensure its implementa­tion.

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