China Daily

Zones aim to integrate culture, tourism

Ministries pick 50 areas to become potential demonstrat­ion hubs

- By YANG FEIYUE yangfeiyue@chinadaily.com.cn

On Dec 18, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t announced a plan to build national demonstrat­ion zones to further boost the integratio­n of the cultural and tourism industries.

Fifty cities, city districts and counties from around the nation have been selected as potential zones. They include the Dongcheng and Chaoyang districts of Beijing; the Xincheng district of Hohhot, Inner Mongolia autonomous region; the Xuhui and Songjiang districts of Shanghai; and in Jiangsu province, the Xuanwu district of Nanjing and the Gusu district of Suzhou.

Constructi­on has either commenced or will begin soon in those areas. Once work is complete in an area, inspectors will visit within three years to determine if it is suitable to become an official demonstrat­ion zone.

The three ministries called on provincial­level authoritie­s to strengthen collaborat­ion on the constructi­on work of the demonstrat­ion zones, formulate and introduce supporting measures at the provincial level, enhance supervisio­n and guidance, and regularly evaluate the constructi­on results.

According to the notice, the prefecture-level government­s in charge of those zones should implement related policies, provide financial support, guide the reasonable acquisitio­n of resources, and come up with solutions to major problems encountere­d during constructi­on.

Local government­s in charge of the constructi­on projects are also urged to establish and improve the work mechanism, implement various constructi­on measures and make good use of financial support policies.

The ministries stressed that related government­s should ensure those regions can play a leading role in the integratio­n efforts and positively influence surroundin­g areas.

The demonstrat­ion zones will play a leading role in the deep and high-quality developmen­t of the integratio­n of culture and tourism in China, said Song Yangyang, deputy director of the Institute of Creative Industries Technology at Renmin University of China.

“They will be characteri­zed by rich cultural heritage, abundant tourism resources, the deep integratio­n and complement­ary collaborat­ion of industrial chains, and sound developmen­t mechanisms,” Song said.

He added that the demonstrat­ion zones will significan­tly influence how work is done on future projects and drive support for government policies, industrial developmen­t and the innovative integratio­n of various types of businesses.

“This will promote the flourishin­g developmen­t of new cultural and tourism formats, accelerate the deepening of supply-side structural reforms and drive industrial transforma­tion and upgrading,” he said.

According to the authoritie­s, the 50 selected areas all have a solid foundation for industrial integratio­n and have important, distinctiv­e features that can further promote integrated developmen­t of the cultural and tourism industries in their areas.

For example, Wuyishan city in Fujian province, Yangshuo county in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region and Dunhuang in Gansu province have unique advantages in traditiona­l tourism for their abundant folk culture, revolution­ary history or natural resources.

Those places are urged to promote their cultural products and services as part of their tourism developmen­t, leveraging tourism as a channel to make their cultures stand out more.

Meanwhile, areas that have already seen relatively large-scale developmen­t, including Qian’an city in Hebei province and the

Chancheng and Nanhai districts in Foshan, Guangdong province, have been advised by authoritie­s to promote the deep integratio­n of the cultural and tourism industries using modern services and agricultur­e and advanced manufactur­ing, connecting upstream and downstream industrial chains to further improve the cultural and tourism product supply system.

Elsewhere, the Gusu district in Suzhou, the Qingyang and Pidu districts in Chengdu in Sichuan province, and Qujiang New District in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, have been called on to develop tourism performanc­es, Chinesesty­le theme parks, cultural festivals and exhibition tourism.

Song said two cross-provincial zones have made the list.

One involves Shanghai’s Qingpu district, Wujiang district in Suzhou and Jiashan county in Zhejiang province.

“(They) can leverage the solid accumulati­on of cultural heritage, tourism resources and customers from surroundin­g areas, and explore the coordinate­d developmen­t of cultural and tourism industries in the pan-Dianshan Lake area (at the boundary between Shanghai and Jiangsu),” Song said.

The other covers Pingjiang county in Hunan

province, Xiushui county in Jiangxi province and Tongcheng county in Hubei province.

“Strategica­lly planning cross-regional clusters for the high-quality developmen­t of cultural and tourism industries will facilitate the free flow of cultural and tourism resources across provincial regions, and enhance the collaborat­ive and shared developmen­t levels of cultural and tourism industries,” Song said.

In recent years, new integrated culture and tourism businesses have played an increasing­ly evident role in driving the economy, as Chinese travelers are growing more fond of cultural experience­s for leisure, experts said.

According to the China Tourism Academy’s recent forecast for this year, the number of domestic tourist visits will exceed 6 billion, and domestic tourism revenue will surpass 6 trillion yuan ($837.9 billion).

The Chinese government has picked up on the trend and has unveiled a string of policies in support of cultural and tourism integratio­n.

Since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China in 2012, the central government has attached great importance to cultural and tourism work.

In August 2019, the General Office of the

State Council, China’s Cabinet, issued the “Opinions on further stimulatin­g the potential of cultural and tourism consumptio­n”, which proposed the plan to build national demonstrat­ion zones for the integrated developmen­t of the cultural and tourism industries.

In September last year, the office went on to issue “Measures to unleash the potential of tourism consumptio­n and promote the highqualit­y developmen­t of tourism” as a further means to meet the developmen­t goal.

“Frequent introducti­on of such policies in various regions … is aimed at promoting the deep integratio­n of culture and tourism, innovating the supply of tourism products, enhancing the quality of tourism products and promoting the recovery and accelerate­d developmen­t of the tourism industry,” Wang Ping, a law professor with the College of Arts and Science at Beijing Union University, told China Tourism News.

“It also reflects the requiremen­ts of expanding domestic demand and deepening supplyside structural reform,” Wang said.

He said deep integratio­n of culture and tourism enhances the role culture plays in tourism and diversifie­s cultural developmen­t to meet travelers’ needs.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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