Global Times

Holiday economy rebounds

115m trips made, $6.74b spent during May Day break

- By Wang Cong

China on Tuesday marked a milestone in its efforts to recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic, as more than 100 million tourists flocked to popular attraction sites across the country during the just-concluded May Day holiday and spent billions of dollars, all while avoiding a much-feared resurgence of COVID-19 cases.

While the final tally on trips and consumptio­n during the five-day holiday remains low compared to that of last year due largely to remaining antiepidem­ic efforts and lingering fear of the virus, it offered a much-needed boost of confidence to the Chinese economy and a sound path for recovery going forward that strikes a balance between necessary efforts to prevent a resurgence of the virus and a gradual opening of more sectors, Chinese analysts noted on Tuesday.

Economic activities are expected to further pick up pace in the weeks and months ahead as progress during the holiday also helped allay concerns among many businesses and consumers and encourage gradually relaxing restrictio­ns in certain areas, Chinese experts said.

Long-waited rebound

During the five-day holiday, Chinese travelers made a total 115 million trips, down 41 percent compared to last year, according to data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism on Tuesday. Total tourism spending reached 47.6 billion yuan ($6.74 billion), down nearly $10 billion from last year, the ministry said.

Although the figures are significan­tly down from previous years, they are exceeding expectatio­ns, analysts noted, pointing out that restrictio­ns are still in place in many areas across the country aimed at preventing a second wave of the epidemic and so some inevitably steered clear of travel.

“It was a big test for both economic recovery and epidemic prevention and it is fair to say that we passed the test,” Jiang Yiyi, professor of the leisure sports and tourism school of Beijing Sport University, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

It is worth noting that even as hundreds of millions of people traveled during the holidays, there were no reported new clusters of infections as of noon on Tuesday. During the holiday, China reported seven new confirmed cases, six imported.

May Day holiday tested China’s ability to recover amid the risks of a resurgence, analysts noted.

Beyond the data, the enthusiasm of Chinese travelers was palpable on the streets of Beijing over the holidays and in countless online pictures of popular attraction­s across the country, including Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province, hit hardest by the epidemic.

In a clear sign of a nationwide recovery, Hubei opened up 22 main tourist sites for the May Day holiday, receiving a total of about 7.36 million trips and 2.45 billion yuan in tourism revenue, official data showed on Tuesday. But the number of trips at most sites was down as much as 80 percent from last year.

In Beijing, officials also lowered the public emergency response level and lifted certain travel restrictio­ns ahead of the holiday to boost travel.

The capital city received 4.63 million trips, about 55 percent of last year’s figure, and raised revenue of 4.18 billion yuan, about 36 percent of last year, official data showed.

“These are extraordin­ary figures, considerin­g that there are still a lot of restrictio­ns in place to prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s,” Cao Heping, a professor of economics at Peking University

in Beijing, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Tourism ministry officials noted that 30 percent of tourism sites across the country did not open and many limited visitors to about 30 percent of normal capacity.

“Both demand and supply are still under pressure for the tourism sector,” Jiang said.

Restrictio­ns and concerns did not stop many spending money online and offline on clothes, home appliances, food and gold.

In Shanghai, an online shopping festival with livestream­ing, discount and other sales promotions had generated more than 10 billion yuan as of 2 pm Tuesday.

In Guangzhou, South China’s Guangdong Province, Chinese moms, affably dubbed “dama,” reported emptied shelves of certain types of gold bars.

‘Shot in the arm’

“What this May Day holiday tells us is that the enthusiasm of Chinese consumers has not been curbed by the epidemic too much,” Cao said.

Many Chinese analysts noted that the most important takeaway from the May Day holiday was not just the rebound in tourism and consumptio­n, but a valuable lesson in how the country could strike a balance between economic reopening and epidemic prevention.

“This gave us very good informatio­n that if we take effective measures to prevent the spread of the virus, we can gradually reopen the economy,” Cai Jiangnan, director of the center for healthcare management at the China Europe Internatio­nal Business School, told the Global Times.

“If we do it right, we can take care of both.”

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Tourists wait for their trains at Hangzhou East Railway Station on Tuesday as the 5-day May Day holiday ends.
Photo: VCG Tourists wait for their trains at Hangzhou East Railway Station on Tuesday as the 5-day May Day holiday ends.

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