The Phnom Penh Post

China’s tourism spending power rises for third year

- Zhang Jie

CHINA’s tourism spending power index rose for three consecutiv­e years from 113.9 in 2017 to 115.4 this year, said a report jointly published by China Tourism Academy and China UMS.

More tourists selected high- quality accommodat­ion with a year-on-year growth reaching 45.3 per cent this year.

Travellers selecting highqualit­y accommodat­ion were mainly male aged 35 to 44. Males dominate the list as they have more stable income and wealth, said the report.

In Februar y, t he tourist consumptio­n amount on food and beverage surged 43.7 per cent compared with last month. Customers born in the 1980s were the main force on food and beverage spending during t he holiday, followed by the post-1970s gen- eration and generation.

The top 10 sources of tourists in domestic tourism were Shanghai, Hangzhou, Beijing, Guangzhou, Hefei, Ningbo, Nanjing, Wuxi, Suzhou and Tianjin, with the tourists from Shanghai spending most.

The report said about 50 per cent tourists selected a short trip during the holiday, but the number of long trip tourists has gradually risen in nearly three years. t he post-1990s

Average outbound spending

During this Spring Festival, Sanya and Harbin remained popular domestic tourist destinatio­ns. Moreover, Lijiang, Xiamen, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Urumchi, Changchun, Shenyang and Tianjin also ranked in the top 10.

The people living in the first- and second-tier cities were main force on tourist spending, and the people’s travelling demand from third- and lower- tier cities increased.

According to the report, tourist spending from firstand second-tier cities accounted for 63.6 per cent in the domestic sector while the number of tourists from third-tier cities such as Anqing, Lu’an and Taizhou rose rapidly, and saw a huge tourism consumptio­n potential.

Another report from online travel agency Ctrip said 57 per cent of travellers chose fourto-six day trips and 23 per cent chose seven days or more.

Ctrip’s report said the average spending in outbound travelling was 7,000 yuan ($1,033), or double that of domestic travelling.

China’s top 10 departure cities for outbound travelling were Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Shenyang, Nanjing, Qiangdao, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Jinan and Chengdu. Tourists from Beijing spent most during outbound travelling at nearly 9,000 yuan per trip, followed by Shanghai at around 8,500 yuan.

The 10 popular destinatio­ns for Chinese tourists were Thailand, Japan, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, Taipei, Cambodia and the Philippine­s.

Chinese tourists to Thailand and Japan accounted for over 30 per cent of the outbound travelling.

Tourists from Shanghai spent most in domestic travelling at 3,416 yuan, and tourists from Beijing, Guangzhou, and Hanzhou also spent over 3,000 yuan.

During this Spring Festive holiday, the young travellers aged from 25 to 34 accounted for 40.9 per cent of the total travellers, a six per cent increase from 34.8 per cent in 2017.

Ctrip said the post-1980s travellers became the main force of travel during the holiday, accounting for over a quarter of the total travellers, while the post-2000s accounted for 22 per cent.

Those over 50 preferred group tours arranged at offline travel agencies.

The family trip hit the mainstream with the figure accounting for 46 per cent during the holiday, and the proportion of those travelling with friends reached 26 per cent, according to Ctrip.

Tencent’s report also said the post-70s, post-80s and post90s generation­s accounted for 90 per cent of consumptio­n during the holiday, with the post-80s generation accounting for 40 per cent, while the post-2000s generation surpassed the post-50s generation on holiday consumptio­n.

 ?? VISUAL CHINA GROUP/CHINA DAILY ?? Women wearing Kimonos pose for a souvenir photo with blooming cherry blossoms in Kyoto, Japan on April 7, 2017.
VISUAL CHINA GROUP/CHINA DAILY Women wearing Kimonos pose for a souvenir photo with blooming cherry blossoms in Kyoto, Japan on April 7, 2017.

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