China Daily (Hong Kong)

Constructi­on of Hainan FTP gives impetus to duty-free shopping

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HAIKOU — South China’s island province of Hainan has seen exponentia­l growth in duty-free sales in the year after a new policy was implemente­d.

Hainan’s offshore duty-free sales hit 46.8 billion yuan ($7.2 billion) in the period from July 1, 2020 to June 30, soaring 226 percent year-onyear, provincial Customs said in Hainan’s capital Haikou on Saturday.

Duty-free shops in Hainan sold over 60 million duty-free items to more than 6.2 million customers during the period, up 211 percent and 102 percent year-on-year, respective­ly.

Since July 1, 2020, Hainan has raised its annual tax-free shopping quota from 30,000 yuan per person to 100,000 yuan. The previous tax-free limit of 8,000 yuan for a single product has been lifted, and the duty-free purchase limit for cosmetics was raised from 12 items to 30.

In addition, the categories of dutyfree goods were expanded to 45 from 38 with the addition of electronic products such as mobile phones and laptops.

As part of the key moves of constructi­ng Hainan Free Trade Port, the new policy in duty-free shopping attracted more consumers and triggered more spending. The dividends of the duty-free policy were further bolstered in the past year with the opening of five more

duty-free shops.

Qin Lin, a tourist from the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, was buying cosmetics at a duty-free shop in downtown Haikou. It was her first visit to Hainan, and duty-free shopping was an important part of her itinerary.

“With the duty-free shopping quota raised significan­tly, we can buy more kinds of stuff,” Qin said, adding that with overseas travel hindered by the COVID-19 pandemic, Hainan offers consumers a convenient alternativ­e for duty-free shopping.

Covering an area of 120,000 square meters, the Sanya Internatio­nal Duty Free City in Hainan’s Haitang Bay is the world’s largest single duty-free shop. With settlement of more than 350 internatio­nal luxury brands, the place has become a top attraction for tourists from home and abroad.

Gao Xujiang, deputy general manager of the China Duty Free Group, which operates the shop in Sanya, said despite the pandemic last year, the shop has become the top single commercial complex in

duty-free sales in both China and the world, making CDF the largest duty-free retailer in the world.

Apart from the one in Sanya, another world-class tourism and shopping complex — Haikou Internatio­nal Duty Free City — is being built by the CDF and is expected to open next June.

As fine-tuned favorable policies continue to draw consumers, the island’s offshore duty-free sales are seen exceeding 60 billion yuan in 2021, quadruplin­g from 2019, Shen Xiaoming, Party secretary of Hainan, said at a news release in April.

A report jointly released by KPMG China and the Moodie Davitt Report in May said the enhanced shopping policy in July 2020 gave tremendous impetus to brands as other duty-free markets fell into a deep pandemic-driven slump.

The report predicted Hainan Free Tade Port will likely become the world’s biggest duty-free market in

the near term if it continues on its current growth curve.

China released a master plan last June to build the island into a globally influentia­l and high-level free trade port by the middle of the century.

The plan also took aim at Hainan building itself into an internatio­nal tourism and consumptio­n destinatio­n. Duty-free shopping has already become one of the core competitiv­e features of Hainan’s tourism consumptio­n.

The new policy significan­tly boosted duty-free consumptio­n in Hainan, and won back a great deal of overseas business. This will help promote the constructi­on of Hainan as a major attraction in internatio­nal tourism, said Liu Feng, director of the Research Center for Free Trade Port with Chinese Characteri­stics at Hainan Normal University.

 ?? WANG CHENGLONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A woman browses products at a duty-free store in Haikou, Hainan province, on June 18.
WANG CHENGLONG / FOR CHINA DAILY A woman browses products at a duty-free store in Haikou, Hainan province, on June 18.

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