China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese drive record tourism growth in Australia

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Chinese tourists have helped drive up Australia’s visitor expenditur­e figures, while the number of Chinese who visited Australia grew almost 20 percent to more than 1.1 million in 2016, according to figures released by the federal government last Wednesday. The Internatio­nal Visitors Survey (IVS) showed foreign tourists spent a record 39.1 billion Australian dollars ($29.6 billion) throughout the year ending December 2016, a 7 percent rise on the previous year, with Chinese visitors accounting for almost a quarter of that figure.

Overall, the top five spenders in Australia were China, Britain, the United States, neighbor New Zealand, and Japan, contributi­ng more than half (or $15.8 billion) of the total visitor spend.

Spending by internatio­nal visitors ... has now grown by more than 35 percent in the last three years — supporting Australian jobs and ... economy.” Steven Ciobo, Australian Trade Minister

In a statement accompanyi­ng the IVS, Trade Minister Steven Ciobo said tourism was beginning to become one of Australian economy’s most important assets, considerin­g the rise of the middle class in Asian nations such as China.

“Spending by internatio­nal visitors to Australia has now grown by more than 35 percent in the last three years — supporting Australian jobs and the broader Australian economy,” Ciobo said on Wednesday.

Ciobo said visitor numbers and expenditur­e was up across the board, with “double digit growth” coming from 12 different nations, and added that the government would be doing more to harness an even greater share of the foreign tourist market in the future. The number of backpacker­s visiting Australia grew by 8 percent during last year, Ciobo added.

“The Turnbull government is supporting further growth in the Australian tourism industry, including by: investing a record $485 million in Tourism to market Australia abroad; negotiatin­g the world’s best aviation access agreements; and introducin­g visitor visa improvemen­ts.”

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