China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Treat yourself in festive spirit, but focus on value for money

- By BAI PING Contact the writer at dr.baiping@hotmail.com

I’m a platinum member of a popular Chinese booking site, spending the equivalent of thousands of dollars on travel for the past 11 months this year alone. Yet I’ve been excluded from its private club— Imay not be able to join it inmy lifetime.

Last week, I searched the site for the best affordable package trip I could buy formy family of five for the coming Chinese New Year, a ritual my colleagues and friends do every year around this time. Our destinatio­n is Southeast Asia where sun, beach and tropical breeze beckon to people who live in constant worry about smog.

However, finding bargain deals was difficult. As a parent of two young children, aged 7 and 1, I’m picky about flights, connection times and hotels. So hoping against hope, I clicked on the dingjiyou or “topclass tour” button and was directed to a micro site devoted to the rich travelers. I was dumbfounde­d by how much they pay for their breaks.

While I shied away from an offer of more than 63,000 yuan ($9,150) for a five-night family vacation on Bali Island during the holiday, a luxury four-night package would cost almost four times more.

The perks for the wealthy include business-class flights, upscale hotels, bespoke activities and sweeteners like a massage or a welcome cocktail “Rock My World”. In comparison, the deal I was looking at featured red-eye flights, stopovers in Manila and a basic itinerary interspers­ed with compulsory shopping tours arranged between tour guides and stores.

The eye-popping prices don’t seem to have deterred well-heeled travelers with much of the inventory sold out weeks before the traditiona­l Chinese holiday. In recent years, Chinese tourism operators and researcher­s have gone gaga over luxury travel that caters to a niche demographi­c, roughly defined as those who make at least 1 million yuan per year and spend more than 50,000 yuan on a single trip.

My booking site, of which I’ve been a loyal customer for more than a decade, screens potential travelers from its massive member database, offering private tours to tens of thousands who book five-star hotels and travel in business or first class several times a year.

As a frugal traveler, I’m not one of them. Whether I go alone or withmy family, I’d put a lot of planning into it and try to get more bang formy buck. For longer leg room, I try to get a first row seat or one near the emergency exit. We don’t dine in luxury hotels abroad. There are many serendipit­ous discoverie­s in small restaurant­s, food courts or even deli shops.

But rich and young Chinese travelers aged 18-36 can now go abroad every 3-4 months, mainly for leisure, with an annual spending of 420,000 yuan and an average hotel budget at 3,100 yuan per night, according to findings by the Hurun Report better known for its annual China Rich List.

Surely, such extravagan­t travel isn’t necessaril­y a rich man’s folly. And not all prestige-seeking travelers ignore the intrinsic utility of their money. In many cases, privileged travelers seek unique experience­s that impress their friends and colleagues on WeChat.

Two rich parents from my son’s kindergart­en class recently wowed us, with updates on their expensive family tour in the US, including a picture of them kissing their two young children, under a giant statue depicting a famous New York Times Square kiss that celebrated the end of World War II.

Yet, these costly experience­s often smack of ostentatio­us spending common among China’s nouveau riche. The Hurun Report says about half of rich Chinese Millennial­s’ tourism spending is still on luxury shopping, primarily clothing, bags, watches and jewelry.

We’ve heard stories about how Chinese tourists abroad have become more discerning and sophistica­ted, with shifts from snapping up bags to having a coffee or stroll on the beach. Perhaps the luxury travel craze is a phase.

Even the discounted Bali tour looks ridiculous­ly costly to me, since I really don’t care what other people think of us.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A tourist takes a photograph at a beach in Bali, Indonesia.
BLOOMBERG A tourist takes a photograph at a beach in Bali, Indonesia.

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