Yorkshire Post

High street retailers ‘ill-equipped’ for £1bn Chinese tourism boom

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BRITISH high street retailers are not equipped to deal with a boom in Chinese tourism, with a majority not accepting the country’s most common payment methods.

Mystery shoppers found that they were not able to pay with Alipay or WeChat at four in five of the non-luxury retailers in some of London’s top tourist destinatio­ns.

The luxury retailers, more attuned to the needs of rich travellers, have adapted better, with 41 per cent of them accepting both payment methods, and 21 per cent taking Alipay alone.

About 90 per cent of Chinese city dwellers use one of the two apps as their main payment methods, and even in the countrysid­e around half of them use them regularly.

“The number one pastime of Chinese tourists when visiting the UK is shopping,” said Richard Morecroft, the co-founder of JGOO, which conducted the research. JGOO offers to connect businesses to WeChat and Alipay.

Chinese tourists are expected to spend up to £1bn in the UK this year, according to the firm, an increase of 52 per cent.

Mystery shoppers visited 107 retail outlets in Oxford Street, Regent Street, Bond Street and New Bond Street. They also found that 29 per cent of shops employed at least one Mandarin speaker. However, more than half of the luxury shops were able to speak to tourists in Mandarin, the largest of the Chinese dialect groups.

Thirteen of the 107 retailers both accepted the payment methods and had Mandarin-speaking staff. They included Harrods, Selfridges and Watches of Switzerlan­d.

Mr Morecroft said visitors could be put off, costing millions of pounds in lost sales.

 ??  ?? BAGS OF TROUBLE: Stores on Oxford Street were among the London retail outlets that mystery shoppers visited to test payment methods.
BAGS OF TROUBLE: Stores on Oxford Street were among the London retail outlets that mystery shoppers visited to test payment methods.

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