The Borneo Post

Overseas trips instead of family reunions for Lunar New Year

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SHI YING won’t be making the traditiona­l pilgrimage back to Shanghai to celebrate the Lunar New Year holiday with her extended family. Instead, they’re all going to Japan for shopping and sightseein­g.

That new custom lets her family bypass the mobs, clogged roads and subways, lousy customer services – and boredom – that can mark holidays at home. During the past few celebratio­ns, Shi and her relatives left China for Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and the US.

“The last thing my parents want for the Chinese New Year is a cheerless holiday with the three of us staying home in Shanghai,” said Shi, 30, who works for a non- government­al organisati­on in Beijing. “Going overseas during the Spring Festival costs about the same as going to some domestic tourist spots.”

The essence of China’s sevenday holiday, also called Spring Festival, is morphing as rising incomes and an expanding network of internatio­nal flights prompt more people to go abroad – the equivalent of Americans choosing Bermuda over the Midwest for Thanksgivi­ng.

Outbound travel for the holiday break is expected to top a record six million passengers, with airlines hauling near-full loads to Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asia.

“Chinese New Year is a major

Chinese New Year is a major internatio­nal peak for the Chinese airlines. For many, this is one of the only two opportunit­ies to take a long holiday during the year.

Steve Saxon, Shanghai-based partner at consultant McKinsey & Co

internatio­nal peak for the Chinese airlines,” said Steve Saxon, a Shanghai-based partner at consultant McKinsey & Co. “For many, this is one of the only two opportunit­ies to take a long holiday during the year.”

The Spring Festival shuts down the world’s second-biggest economy for a week as hundreds of millions of factory and office workers leave their adopted homes in Shenzhen or Beijing to reconnect with their ancestral ones, often on the opposite side of the country. Thousands more expatriate­s return.

This year’s celebratio­n, from Jan 27 through Feb 2, will see the biggest mass migration of people on Earth. More than 414 million Chinese will ride in planes and trains – as if everyone in the European Union was on the move.

About 58.3 million people are expected to fly, representi­ng a 10 per cent increase from last year, according to estimates by the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China. Chinese airlines generate about 20 per cent of their revenue during this period, Saxon said.

Chinese will travel to 174 destinatio­ns outside mainland China for an average of 9.2 days during the holiday period, according to online travel service Ctrip.com Internatio­nal Ltd.

“Any airline should be able to swim in money during a Chinese travelling holiday,” said Will Horton, a Hong Kong-based analyst at CAPA Centre for Aviation.

Fuelling those excursions is an economy growing annually by at least 6.7 per cent since 1990, giving people more money to spend. Disposable income for urban households rose 165 per cent from 2006 to 2015, reaching about 31,195 yuan ( RM20,479), according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

Instead of going back to her hometown in the northeast China forest, Xi Chunhui is going to Macau, Singapore and Hong Kong for 11 days with a friend.

“The Spring Festival celebratio­n is the same old thing every year at home,” said Xi, 27, an editor for an internet portal in Beijing. “I don’t think me not being there with them will kill the mood.”

Going sightseein­g abroad also is a consequenc­e of the government’s generation­s-long policy restrictin­g most families to one child, said Catherine Lim, a Singapore-based analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

A more- affluent younger generation now wants to see the world, she said.

“When your entire family size shrinks, there really isn’t much to do” at home, Lim said. “They want to spend more money – particular­ly the younger generation – on experienci­ng new destinatio­ns rather than buying the biggest Hermes bag.”

China is the biggest source of overseas travellers in the world, with 128 million people spending US$ 292 billion on their trips in 2015, according to the World Tourism Organisati­on.

That’s been a boon to the nation’s airlines, with demand running so high that discounts are ending as many as 50 days before takeoff, according to Ctrip.com. The top- dollar tickets help carriers make up for the massive price cuts offered during slow seasons.

China Southern Airlines Co., Asia’s biggest carrier, added nearly 3,600 flights during this peak travel season – and expanded services to Australia and New Zealand, the Guangzhou-based airline said. Subsidiary Xiamen Airlines Co. is adding more than 100 flights to Southeast Asia destinatio­ns such as Bali and the Maldives, said Hu Nan, a manager for internatio­nal business.

China Eastern Airlines Corp., based in Shanghai, added 400 flights starting this month mostly to connect second-tier cities with Okinawa, Japan; Bangkok and Chiang Mai, Thailand; and Cebu, Philippine­s.

“All the airlines in China, not just us, are throwing in all resources to brace for the Chinese New Year travel,” Hu said. “There is no slack there.”

On the destinatio­n sides, Japan, Australia and even Israel are rolling out the welcome mats for Chinese tourists by offering multiple-year, multipleen­try visas to Chinese passport holders. The United Arab Emirates is going a step further by offering visas upon arrival, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency.

Chinese visitors to Japan jumped 28 percent last year to 6.4 million – the most from any country, according to the Japan National Tourism Organisati­on.

When they arrived, they spent 1.47 trillion yen ( RM57.6 billion), according to the separate Japan Tourism Agency.

Chinese perceive Japanese electronic­s, luxury items and consumer goods like cosmetics and toothpaste to be of better quality than those made at home.

Shi’s family will fly to Japan on Jan. 27 for a seven- day trip in Kyoto and Tokyo. Besides the tourist attraction­s, they plan some serious shopping -- for cosmetics, clothes, rice cookers and high-technology toilet seats.

“My parents really get a kick out of travelling during the Chinese New Year,” she said. “Let’s hope I can cap my spending for the whole trip at 80,000 yuan.” —Bloomberg

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top left) A tourist takes a photograph in the Asakusa district of Tokyo on Jan 22. • Chinese tourists walk toward the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. • Chinese tourists sit on chairs in the Ginza district of Toky on Jan 22. — Bloomberg photos...
(Clockwise from top left) A tourist takes a photograph in the Asakusa district of Tokyo on Jan 22. • Chinese tourists walk toward the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. • Chinese tourists sit on chairs in the Ginza district of Toky on Jan 22. — Bloomberg photos...

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