China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Beijing seeks to integrate culture and tourism

- By YANG FEIYUE

Experts discussed the integratio­n of culture and tourism to boost travel consumptio­n at the Capital Tourism Developmen­t Forum in Beijing in late December.

The forum held by the Beijing Tourism Society and Beijing Union University aimed to find solutions to better tap the capital city’s cultural and tourism resources and optimize the tourism-business environmen­t.

The pandemic is expected to cause a 50 percent year-on-year drop in domestic tourist visits and consumptio­n for 2020, China Tourism Academy president Dai Bin says.

Inbound tourism plummeted by 90 percent.

“Yet we can see that the massive tourism demand based on national consumptio­n has never disappeare­d, and digitally driven smart tourism has continued to innovate,” Dai says.

Dai says he’s optimistic about tourism developmen­t in 2021, which is based on the country’s goal to eliminate extreme poverty and become a “moderately prosperous society” ( xiaokang shehui), as well as the positive results from the demand-side reform outlined at the nation’s annual Central Economic Work Conference to stimulate economic developmen­t this year.

“Tourism will go from full business resumption to full consumptio­n recovery,” Dai says.

He expects pandemic controls, increased consumptio­n and innovation-driven industry upgrades will become focuses of the tourism sector this year.

A group of scenic spots and resorts with outstandin­g cultural elements will be constructe­d, and red and rural tourism will be given support to improve travel-business developmen­t, and increase quality and supply.

The developmen­t of culture parks, including those related to the Great Wall and the Grand Canal, will move forward.

Beijing’s tourism plan for 2021-25 has been formulated. Priority will be given to technical reforms and innovation to boost cultural and tourism infrastruc­ture, enhance consumptio­n and advance new business models, Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture and Tourism deputy director Wang Yue says.

The goal is to comprehens­ively upgrade the capital’s tourism quality and raise its profile to make it a first-class tourism city internatio­nally, Wang says.

Five districts in Beijing have been designated as national demonstrat­ion zones for holistic tourism developmen­t.

“The suburbs are very active this at the moment,” Wang says.

In 2019, Beijing’s tourism revenue exceeded 600 billion yuan ($92 billion), and tourism consumptio­n accounted for about 25 percent of total consumer goods’ retail sales.

“However, tourism in investment only accounts for 10 percent of the added value of investment, and tourism investment has a huge … (market),” Wang says.

Beijing Tourism Society’s vicepresid­ent Zhang Hui suggests efforts on the demand side, whose reform is key for China’s quality tourism developmen­t.

He says that if the study-tour accreditat­ion and vacations system for students could be adjusted, the potential of the study-tour market, which has accounted for over 25 percent of the global tourism market, could be greatly enhanced in China.

“Once demand pushes supply, our scenic spots and tourism zones will begin an in-depth industrial reconfigur­ation revolving around study tours,” Zhang says.

Since the pandemic has severely affected tourism worldwide, experts call for extra attention to changes in travelers’ behaviors.

The public has shown a stronger awareness of risks, including hygiene and real-time tourist flows, says a Tencent survey published last year.

People are no longer putting the fame of a certain destinatio­n first but are paying special attention to whether that attraction has taken precaution­ary measures or has government endorsemen­ts, says Song Rui, director of the Tourism Research Center of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Song suggests tourism destinatio­ns and businesses take note of changes in public tourism services, such as emergency-rescue informatio­n delivery and visitor-flow warnings and management, which are increasing­ly important to tourists.

Song also proposed new consumptio­n models.

“Life or goods’ production can be turned into new tourism-consumptio­n modes, once creative and technical elements are added.”

Beijing Tourism Society vice-president Wu Bihu calls for regional cooperatio­n to boost Beijing’s tourism developmen­t.

Destinatio­ns within two hours via high-speed rail from Beijing, including Tianjin, the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, and Hebei, Liaoning, Shanxi and Shandong provinces, should be integrated into the capital’s travel circuit, he says.

“They would offer more support to Beijing this way.”

 ?? CHEN ZHONGHAN / XINHUA ?? Tourists visit the Badaling Great Wall, a signature destinatio­n of Beijing.
CHEN ZHONGHAN / XINHUA Tourists visit the Badaling Great Wall, a signature destinatio­n of Beijing.

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