The Business Times

China May Day holiday spending delivers mixed picture on post-covid recovery

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DOMESTIC travellers spent 166.9 billion yuan (S$31.3 billion) during one of China’s longest breaks, the May Day holiday, for a rise of 13.5 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, government data showed on Monday (May 6), but expenditur­e per head lagged 2019 rates.

Boosting consumer confidence has presented a key challenge for Chinese authoritie­s this year amid a declining property market, high youth unemployme­nt and deflation pressures.

The total spent over the May 1 to May 5 holiday was 12.7 per cent higher than last year, shortly after China lifted Covid-19 curbs, and the tourism ministry recorded 295 million trips during the holiday.

But spending of 565.7 yuan per head during the event, a key opportunit­y for Chinese to go on family trips as the weather warms and flowers bloom, was down 11.5 per cent from pre-covid levels in 2019, Reuters calculatio­ns based on official data show.

The data dampens hopes for rebounding consumptio­n after spending strengthen­ed during another recent holiday, the Tomb Sweeping festival, but wasn’t a surprise, said Jonathan Yan, a Shanghai-based partner at consultanc­y Roland Berger.

“Overall, I think people are tightening their belts and confidence is subdued, but they still want experience,” Yan said, adding that many travellers opted for short-haul overseas destinatio­ns such as Japan and South Korea for the fiveday break.

“They are not spending more money than before, but still travelling while trading down a bit or spending less on shopping,” he noted.

Domestic airline fares fell in the run-up to the holiday, as forecasts suggested more travellers were opting to drive instead, or had booked early to save.

The number of short trips grew noticeably during the break, Guotai Junan Securities said in a research note on Monday.

Growth in the number of trips in small cities and counties outstrippe­d that in big cities, travel giant Trip.com added.

Box-office sales of 1.53 billion yuan roughly matched last year’s figure of 1.52 billion over the correspond­ing period, the China Film Administra­tion said.

Formed Police Unit, a film about Chinese police on overseas peacekeepi­ng missions for the United Nations, topped the holiday boxoffice charts with earnings of more than 400 million yuan, data from box-office tracker Maoyan showed.

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