China Daily (Hong Kong)

Experts urge stricter regulation, and call for standards, vetting of players

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BEIJING — Chang Linglong has just returned from a trip to Shanghai that she describes as “a nightmare”. The 160square-meter apartment she booked on a short-term rental website turned out to be just 70 square meters. And instead of the “quiet, exquisite” house as described, she found it right on a busy street, and the noise kept her up all night.

“The promised coffee maker and hair dryer were also nowhere to be found,” she recalled.

And then, she asked: “Isn’t it a kind of fraud?”

Yang Li had an even worse time.

Landing at midnight in the southern city of Shenzhen, she and her friend were more than surprised to find they had nowhere to stay. Their booking had been canceled without notice.

“The owner said the website where we placed the order was temporaril­y unavailabl­e, so it was rented out on another platform,” Yang said.

She called the four service hotlines listed on the website. Three were nonexisten­t, and the other gave no convincing explanatio­n but merely confirmed that her booking was invalid.

Sharing is increasing­ly popular in China, with young people the biggest fans. Looking for more flexible and cost-effective travel experience­s, people love online home sharing.

Airbnb opened in China in 2012 and more than 2 million Chinese have used the service overseas. Domestic competitor­s quickly opened their doors and now over 800,000 properties are up for rent on Tujia, Mayi and Xiaozhu.

A February report by online consulting firm iResearch calculated a market turnover of 8.8 billion yuan ($1.3 billion) last year, and that is expected to grow by around 50 percent this year.

The supervisio­n lags far behind developmen­t ... since profession­al renters and small startups joined in.” Liang Shanying, an official at a tourism supervisio­n department in central China increase in Airbnb’s Chinese guests last year

Last year, Airbnb’s total Chinese guests jumped 146 percent while listings in China more than doubled to about 80,000. Sensing a potential spike in future demand, it is doubling investment in China and tripling its local workforce, and even taking a new Chinese name, Aibiying, which means “welcome each other with love”, Bloomberg reported.

It plans to offer customers in Shanghai its fledgling Airbnb Trips service — a menu of options that can include concert tickets and restaurant reservatio­ns. It’ ll begin to market “experience­s” — a feature that lets people book local excursions, Brian Chesky, its CEO, told Bloomberg.

To be sure, that is not the only kind of experience­s travelers are seeking.

A plethora of problems have emerged and it is not just the horror stories of dissatisfi­ed travelers that are causing concern.

Someone in East China’s Zhejiang province lost 60,000 yuan worth of camera equipment , while a renter in Tianjin found his sofa and mattress ripped up by the tenant’s two dogs. Neither got any compensati­on.

An Jinming from the Beijing tourism commission said complaints about sharing were 20 percent higher than for traditiona­l accommodat­ion, perhaps due to a lack of unified standards and regulation.

Short-term rentals mostly involve private homes. Landlords can list their homes sim- ply by providing an ID card, ownership certificat­e or lease contract and a few pictures. Checking the authentici­ty of this material is not a high priority for the websites.

A Mr. Hong “shares” two private houses in the tourist city of Lijiang in Southwest China’s Yunnan province.

“It is easy to list on these websites. The pictures I posted have been deliberate­ly edited and sometimes ‘beautiful’ pictures I upload are ‘stolen’ from other listings,” Hong admitted.

With so many houses registered each day, the website owners claim it is impossible to check the quality of all the properties and owners.

“We only check the informatio­n submitted by landlords. We set no requiremen­ts for tenants,” staff at a short-term renting website told Xinhua.

The picture is somewhat different overseas. Beijing resident Chen Yi, a firm advocate of online home sharing, said that on most foreign platforms both renters and tenants undergo complicate­d authentica­tion processes before using the service. After any stay, they review each other and get credits accordingl­y. Any misbehavio­r such as mess and noise may lead to a

State of the art

deduction in credits and these credits are an important reference.

“Scores are given based on these assessment­s. The more transparen­t the process, the more secure we feel,” said Chen.

According to Li Jinglong, head of the tourism department in Anhui University, China’s credit system in the shortterm rental market should be connected with banks, the police and third-party payments in the name of better regulation.

Regulation of short-term rental services needs to include such areas as fire safe- ty and the architectu­ral quality of the building.

“The supervisio­n lags far behind developmen­t, especially since profession­al renters and small startups joined in,” said Liang Shanying, an official at a tourism supervisio­n department in central China. He added: “It is hard for us to get a clear picture of the total number of shortterm properties or renters.”

There should be legislatio­n as soon as possible and a multi-layer credit-rating system to help the developmen­t of the industry, said Liang.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A couple in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, revamp and decorate their home for renting it out to tenants via home-sharing platforms.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A couple in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, revamp and decorate their home for renting it out to tenants via home-sharing platforms.

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