South China Morning Post

China travel, tourism ‘unlikely to improve in May’

- Luna Sun luna.sun@scmp.com

Travel and tourism spending plunged during China’s Labour Day holiday due to coronaviru­s lockdowns and restrictio­ns rolled out across the country, with the “situation unlikely to improve materially in May”, analysts said.

Trips taken during the fiveday holiday, which ended on Wednesday, fell by a third to 160 million from last year, according to data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

Tourist spending also dropped by 43 per cent to 64.68 billion yuan (HK$76.8 billion), recovering to only 44 per cent of the level seen before the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Tourism companies are facing tremendous hardships now, but there’s nothing you can do about the Covid measures,” said Wang Ke, an analyst with consulting firm Analysys.

“With the current intensity of the control measures, it’s unlikely we will see a sudden rise [in trip numbers] in the short term.”

The Labour Day break at the start of May is one of the so-called golden week holidays in China and is traditiona­lly one of the busiest travel seasons.

But this year, according to an estimate by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, around a third of all traditiona­l tourist venues were closed due to virus control measures.

Authoritie­s had already painted a pessimisti­c picture before the holiday due to the various travel bans and lockdowns, with the Ministry of Transport expecting passenger traffic to fall by more than 60 per cent this year.

But according to a report from Jiemian News, citing sources from China Railway, the number of daily rail passengers only reached around 20 per cent of last year’s level.

The report said the number of passengers was around 2.35 million to 4.4 million per day, compared with 13 million to 19 million last year.

The Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China had predicted before the holiday that air travel would plummet by 77 per cent from last year, with the actual data yet to be released.

Before the holiday, restaurant­s in Beijing had been restricted to only offering takeaway services over the break, with museums, libraries and other indoor facilities also temporaril­y closed.

The capital recorded 1.58 billion yuan in tourist spending during the holiday this year, down by 83 per cent from 9.3 billion yuan last year, according to the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture and Tourism.

“The situation is unlikely to improve materially in May, as preliminar­y high-frequency data for the Labour Day holidays revealed that services activity remained highly depressed during the five-day national holiday,” Nomura analysts Lu Ting and Harrington Zhang said in a report on Wednesday.

China’s economy has been faltering amid its worst coronaviru­s outbreak since 2020, with consumptio­n and services activity severely affected. As of Tuesday, 328 million people in 43 cities were under full or partial lockdowns, according to Nomura.

“Despite falling Covid caseloads, we have seen no sign of this Omicron wave ending soon, and Beijing remains determined to maintain its zero-Covid strategy,” the report said. “As of Tuesday, lockdown measures affect areas that cover 31 per cent of China’s [gross domestic product].”

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Few tourists were spotted in the Sun Yat-sen’s Mausoleum area in Nanjing during the Labour Day holiday on Tuesday.
Photo: VCG Few tourists were spotted in the Sun Yat-sen’s Mausoleum area in Nanjing during the Labour Day holiday on Tuesday.

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