South China Morning Post

Nation braces for travel boom as bookings for holiday surge

Early figures for May Day break suggest looming rush, with Hong Kong one of the popular choices

- Mia Nulimaimai­ti miyasha.nulimaimai­ti@scmp.com

China is expected to see a robust wave of tourism during the coming May Day holiday, with the sector expected to seize the opportunit­y to consolidat­e its recovery well above prepandemi­c levels and invigorate the country’s economy through a heavy bout of consumptio­n.

Hong Kong is likely to remain one of the more favoured destinatio­ns for travellers leaving the mainland during the period – also known as Labour Day, scheduled to last from May 1 to 5 – and Southeast Asia stands to benefit most from any resurgence, research from tourism platforms and statements from analysts show.

Since last week, domestic airfare bookings for the holiday surged 21 per cent compared to last year, according to mainland ticketer Umetrip – a 41 per cent increase over the figure from 2019.

Hotel bookings for smaller county-level cities on Chinese travel platform Ctrip rose 68 per cent year on year, while purchases of tickets for scenic areas in those towns were up 151 per cent during the same period.

The volume of visa fee charges for outbound trips during the May Day holiday has also exceeded the same period in 2019, according to a report released by Ctrip on Tuesday.

“Overall, it is expected that this year’s May Day holiday tourism will see a steady increase based on last year’s high enthusiasm,” Ctrip said.

Hong Kong remains the first choice for mainland travellers due to its accessibil­ity via multiple points of entry and a reputation for security, according to Lin Huanjie, dean of the Institute for Theme Park Studies in China.

“Tourists can return to the mainland after completing a oneday tour, which is very important for those with low travel budgets,” Lin said.

Despite the rise of online shopping and the establishm­ent of the Shanghai Disney Resort – changes that have reduced Hong Kong’s unique appeal for mainland travellers – Lin said the city continued to be a favoured destinatio­n due to its rich array of cuisines and cultural offerings.

Tourism has stood out in the country’s overall consumptio­n mix as a driver of rapid growth, a contrast to other areas such as retail sales that have been slower to revive. Consumptio­n is viewed as essential to fuel the country’s post-pandemic recovery, which has been hampered by a prolonged property crisis and low enthusiasm in the private sector.

Last year, the mainland saw 4.891 billion domestic trips, 81.4 per cent of 2019’s total. Tourists also tightened their wallets, with their 4.91 trillion yuan (HK$5.3 trillion) in spending reaching only 74 per cent of the 2019 level, according to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

“Fast pickups during the Lunar New Year and Ching Ming Festival suggest the market will see strong growth in the coming May Day holiday,” Lin said. “Pandemic scars are fading among travellers. Market data shows tourism has rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, and we expect revenues to surpass those of 2019 this year.”

During February’s China Internatio­nal Consumer Products Expo in Hainan province, travel giant Fosun Tourism Group said the industry had fully rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, and orders for May Day were surging.

“The coming two weeks are the most critical time for orders, and we are optimistic about the outlook for the May Day holiday,” company co-president Minglong Cao said.

Tourism revenues in Southeast Asia and the Asia-Pacific region were set to hit record highs as outbound tourism recovered, Cao told media outlet The Paper.

Beijing has rolled out measures to attract more visitors from overseas, including expanding the list of countries whose nationals can visit without a visa and broadening the scope of payment platforms to include internatio­nal credit cards. Permanent visa-free travel arrangemen­ts with Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore have also added to the country’s appeal as a tourism destinatio­n.

“It will take at least two years for [mainland] China’s outbound tourism to return to pre-pandemic levels, since three years of turbulence have constraine­d incomes and [people] will inevitably reduce their spending on non-essential items,” Lin said.

These factors, along with a higher exchange rate with the US dollar, meant inbound tourism was set to recover faster, Lin said.

Data released in March by the National Immigratio­n Administra­tion showed inbound travellers reached 2,945,000 in the first two months, 2.3 times the figure from the previous year and 41.5 per cent of pre-pandemic levels.

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