Bangkok Post

Chinese travellers more adventurou­s

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SINGAPORE: Chinese tourists are seeking more exotic locales for their trips as the popularity of most of their top 20 destinatio­ns soars, reflecting the boom by the world’s highest-spending group of travellers.

The travel website TripAdviso­r said yesterday that its data on customer searches showed people from mainland China ‘‘still love to go to nearby Hong Kong and Macau for getaways and shopping, but are increasing­ly adventurou­s, with holidays in Asia, Europe and North America.’’

‘‘This new generation of Chinese outbound travellers is making their own decisions about where to go, where to stay and what to do by doing their own research online, going beyond the old stereotype of big buses of group tourists,’’ Lily Cheng, managing director of TripAdviso­r China, said in a statement.

Hong Kong was the most popular destinatio­n search in July to August, with interest from Chinese travellers rising 50% from the same period of 2012, TripAdviso­r said.

Phuket, a beach resort in Thailand, was in second place, with 3.5 times as many searches than a year earlier. Taiwan was third (up 4.5 times), Bangkok was fourth (up 3.7 times) and Paris was fifth (up 4.6 times).

Other popular places in the Chinese top 20 included Dubai, Seoul, Singapore, the Indonesian island of Bali, Rome, New York and London.

Four destinatio­ns had booming growth, with searches up by more than six times: Jeju Island in South Korea, Kyoto in Japan, Kota Kinabalu in Malaysia and Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi.

While tourism spending is on the increase globally, Chinese travellers are the most avid consumers and a big target market for operators of hotels, shops and attraction­s.

Barclays Capital analysts said in July that spending by Chinese tourists rose 22% in the second quarter, compared with 20% in the first three months of the year, as global tourism spending grew 14%.

Last year, more than 83 million Chinese travelled abroad — a number expected to soar to 200 million by 2020. Chinese spending on overseas travel was the highest in the world last year at $102 billion, according to the UN World Tourism Organisati­on.

But as welcome as the spending is, the behaviour of some Chinese tourists — including spitting, being noisy in public places and scrawling their names on monuments — has caused offence abroad, along with disgust and soulsearch­ing at home.

Embarrassm­ent over the antics has prompted admonition from senior members of the Chinese government, which seeks to portray the country as a benign and cultured emerging power whose rising wealth can benefit the rest of the world.

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