The Manila Times

Coronaviru­s drops Australia’s tourism income by 10%

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Australia’s seasonally adjusted exports of tourism-related services dropped by 10 percent to A$2.25 billion ($1.75 billion) in January compared with December, Australian Bureau of Statistics data showed, which experts said reflected a decline in Chinese visitors due to the pandemic and souring ChinaAustr­alia relations.

In January, Australia’s tourismrel­ated services credits fell by A$242 million compared with December, the data showed. The country’s total services credits from exports dropped by about 3 percent to A$4.96 billion.

Falling orders from the Chinese market were a primary reason for the drop, with spending by Chinese visitors and students — which account for the majority of Australia’s services industry — in a frozen state.

Xu Xiaolei, marketing manager at China’s CYTS Tours Holding Co, said that China’s tourism business with Australia is currently at a standstill. “Chinese tourists can’t travel to Australia, nor can Australian tourists travel to China. But tourism practition­ers in both countries have been keeping in touch,” he told the Global Times on Thursday.

Until June 2019, China was Australia’s biggest source of visitors, accounting for more than 15 percent of Australia’s total short-term travel market, according to data released by Tourism Research Australia. Also, the China-Australian education market, which used to be a hot area as Chinese students love to study abroad, has taken a hit.

“In 2020, the total number of applicatio­ns for Australian universiti­es decreased 8.1 percent at our agency,” a source from a Chinese study-abroad agency told the Global Times on Thursday, saying that parents are worried about the potential impact of the deteriorat­ing China-Australia relationsh­ip.

Experts said the situation reflects the pandemic, and souring bilateral relations added salt to the wound.

A report released by Australian think tank Lowy Institute, which surveyed more than 1,000 Chinese-Australian­s in November 2020, showed that almost one in five Chinese Australian­s had been physically threatened or attacked, while almost one-third had been called offensive names.

The respondent­s mostly attributed the situation to the coronaviru­s pandemic or to souring ChinaAustr­alia relations.

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