The Jerusalem Post

Lunar New Year puts Chinese tourism in focus

- • By BRENDA GOH and MUYU XU

SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) – With six million Chinese tourists expected to travel abroad over the Lunar New Year break, China’s January 27 to February 2 holiday is crucial for Taiwan tour-agency operator Li Chi-yueh, who relies on mainland visitors for a third of his revenue.

But Li’s hopes are not high this year, after the number of mainland tourists plummeted 36% since President Tsai Ing-wen took power in May. Though Tsai says Taiwan wants peace with China, Beijing suspects she seeks formal independen­ce.

“China uses its sightseein­g tourists as a diplomatic weapon,” said Li, owner of Taipei-based Chung Shin Travel Service, who has been representi­ng Taiwan’s tour operators to lobby Tsai to improve ties with Beijing. “There’s a lot of concern that the industry won’t survive if we carry on like this.”

The concern is not confined to Taiwan. Tour operators and government officials elsewhere in Asia say they fear China is using its increasing­ly high-spending tourists as a lever to pressure or reward its neighbors.

A government official from South Korea, which has irked China by agreeing to let the United States deploy an antimissil­e system, said Chinese and Korean tour companies had told him the China National Tourism Administra­tion (CNTA) had instructed Chinese agencies to cut tours to South Korea by at least 20% between November and February.

The official calculated that thousands of potential travelers were lost after eight applicatio­ns to add charter flights between the countries in January and February were rejected without explanatio­n.

“This is not a win-win situation. It is mutually disadvanta­geous,” the official said. “But what can we do? As far as defense is concerned, we have no room to compromise.”

Chinese companies told him the measure was designed to cut an excessive number of low-quality, low-priced tours for Chinese tourists visiting Korea, the official said. The CNTA did not respond to requests for comment.

The number of Chinese tourists visiting South Korea inched up 1.8% in November, compared with a 70.2% increase in August and a 22.8% rise in September. That was the worst since August 2015, when arrivals slid 32% after a Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome outbreak.

In early November, the US said it would deploy the antimissil­e system in South Korea within eight to 10 months.

POLITICAL UNCERTAINT­Y

China has not said it is seeking to limit tourists to South Korea or Taiwan to express displeasur­e at political disputes.

Earlier this month, when asked about the limiting of charter flights over Lunar New Year, China’s Foreign Ministry said it did not understand the details of the situation but that cooperatio­n and exchanges between the two countries needed to “have a basis in public opinion.”

For Taiwan, China has said it was natural that Chinese tourists were choosing not to visit Taiwan at a time of political uncertainl­y.

By contrast, the Philippine­s and Malaysia are enjoying strong spurts in growth of Chinese tourism as Beijing removes travel warnings and eases visa rules. Chinese tourist arrivals between March and December in Malaysia jumped 83% compared with a year earlier.

Both countries have been moving diplomatic­ally closer to Beijing in recent months.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak returned from a November state visit with about $34 billion in deals, prompting criticism at home that he was “selling off” his country.

The Philippine­s, historical­ly at odds with Beijing over territoria­l disputes in the South China Sea, has seen its President Rodrigo Duterte make overtures to China at the expense of the US, its traditiona­l ally, since he was elected last May.

The number of tourists visiting the Philippine­s from China rose 40% in the first 10 months of 2016 compared with the previous year.

Chinese tourists are the world’s highest overseas spenders. They are expected to spend $210b. abroad this year, Euromonito­r data shows, double the amount Chinese firms spent on overseas mergers and acquisitio­ns in 2016.

‘UNWELCOME’

Mainland travel companies Reuters spoke to acknowledg­ed that traveler numbers to some countries were changing, but they declined to comment on whether they had received government directives to discourage particular destinatio­ns.

“Travelers are voting with their feet,” said Xu Xiaolei, the chief brand officer at China Youth Travel Service, one of China’s top three state-owned travel companies. “They are choosing to go the country that will make them happy and avoid the country that might make them feel unwelcome.”

“Of course political and diplomatic matters are also under our considerat­ion, as tourism is part of diplomacy in many ways,” Xu said. “But demands of tourists are always the core principle when designing our travel packages.”

Shanghai Spring Internatio­nal Travel Service, the parent company of Spring Airlines, told Reuters its tours to Taiwan had become less frequent and had halved in size, without saying when. Its tour groups to South Korea have shrunk by 20%, it said.

Chinese tourists were “turning to other destinatio­ns that are more friendly in terms of travel environmen­t” because of “well-known” reasons, Shanghai Spring Internatio­nal said.

Chinese flag carrier Air China said travelers were visiting new destinatio­ns in Europe and Southeast Asia.

“As an airline we make our route arrangemen­ts according to market demand,” Air China head of marketing Luo Yang said.

Mercy Ma, a translator who plans to visit Cambodia with her family over the Lunar New Year break, said political events in Turkey and Thailand had deterred her from visiting those countries, but she paid less attention to other countries’ ties with China.

Taiwan was, in fact, a destinatio­n Ma had long wanted to visit but was crimped by visa restrictio­ns.

“We had been prepared to go to Taiwan,” she said, “but then found out that there were quite a bit of restrictio­ns, so we eventually decided against it.”

 ?? (Tyrone Siu/Reuters) ?? A TOURIST walks under lanterns along a street ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year outside the Night Market in Taipei, Taiwan, last week. Asian tour operators and government officials say they fear China is using its increasing­ly high-spending tourists...
(Tyrone Siu/Reuters) A TOURIST walks under lanterns along a street ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year outside the Night Market in Taipei, Taiwan, last week. Asian tour operators and government officials say they fear China is using its increasing­ly high-spending tourists...

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