Gulf News

Asia gears up for Chinese tourists amid easing of Covid rules

Travellers from China will no longer need to quarantine on return home starting Jan. 8

- BANGKOK/SYDNEY — Reuters

Asian countries are bracing for an influx of Chinese tourists as Covid restrictio­ns are dismantled, and while some are wary, operators in others are preparing packages such as hotpot buffets to cash in on the expected spike in travel.

Chinese tourists will no longer need to quarantine on return home starting January 8, the government announced this week, a move that spurred a surge in bookings from what was the world’s largest outbound travel market in 2019.

The once $255 billion a year in global spending by Chinese tourists ground to a virtual halt during the pandemic, leaving a gaping hole in the Asian market, where countries from Thailand to Japan had depended on China as the largest source of foreign visitors.

Internatio­nal flights to and from China are at just 8 per cent of pre-pandemic levels, VariFlight data shows, but carriers are looking to ramp up capacity as authoritie­s ease Covid-driven limits on the number of flights.

Tourism recovery

“There is little doubt mainland Chinese are the spark plug for Thailand’s tourism recovery,” said Bill Barnett, managing director of hospitalit­y consultanc­y C9 Hotelworks. “It’s not a question of if it will happen, it’s now just a matter of how many and how fast.”

Malaysia Airlines and Vietnamese budget carrier VietJet

Aviation said they hope to restore China flights to prepandemi­c levels by June 2023, while others such as Singapore Airlines and Australia’s Qantas Airways declined to provide detailed targets as the situation evolves.

Chinese airlines are likely to make significan­t increases to capacity from the end of March, coinciding with the start of the summer scheduling season, Morningsta­r analyst Cheng Weng told clients in a note.

The prospect of cash-rich Chinese flocking to shopping streets across the world boosted luxury stocks this week, as China accounts for 21 per cent of the world’s 350 billion euro ($371.91 billion) luxury goods market. As the Lunar New Year holiday starts on January 21, some businesses are already gearing up.

Romantic packages

Sofitel Sentosa in Singapore is creating Lunar New Year packages aimed at Chinese visitors, including a hotpot buffet and romantic packages for couples, said Cavaliere Giovanni Viterale, general manager of that hotel and the upcoming Raffles Sentosa, as the company bets that a travel rebound will come “with a vengeance”.

In Japan, tour bus firm Hato Bus says next month it will try out Chinese-language tours it had halted during the pandemic, with the aim of a full resumption by the spring, a spokespers­on said.

Japan, however, is being cautious about Chinese tourism due to the rapid spread of the virus in China. It is requiring a negative Covid-19 test on arrival from Chinese visitors, and those who test positive must quarantine for seven days under new border measures taking effect on December 30.

The US said it would impose mandatory Covid tests on travellers from China, joining India, Italy and Taiwan in taking new measures, while the Philippine­s is considerin­g a testing requiremen­t.

Australia, Germany, Thailand and others, however, said they would not impose additional rules on Chinese travel for now, with France taking to social media platform Sina Weibo to emphasise it welcomed Chinese friends “with open arms”.

 ?? Reuters ?? Shoppers crowd at the Ameyoko shopping district, which is Tokyo’s biggest street food market, as they do their last-minute New Year’s shopping in Japan yesterday.
Reuters Shoppers crowd at the Ameyoko shopping district, which is Tokyo’s biggest street food market, as they do their last-minute New Year’s shopping in Japan yesterday.

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