China Daily Global Weekly

Inbound tourism made easier amid recovery trend

Payment convenienc­e for overseas visitors at key destinatio­ns among efforts to help travelers

- By YANG FEIYUE yangfeiyue@chinadaily.com.cn

China has decided to launch a series of precise measures targeting the existing problems in its inbound tourism market.

The Ministry of Culture and Tourism said it will promote the facilitati­on of payments in places such as tourist attraction­s, cultural and performanc­e venues, and star-rated hotels, enrich the supply of inbound tourism products and services, and increase market promotion abroad to better satisfy the needs of travelers to the country.

“We will focus on improving the convenienc­e of payments at key tourist destinatio­ns,” said Wu Kefeng, deputy head of the ministry’s department of resource developmen­t, at a news conference on March 29 in Beijing.

This includes promoting the establishm­ent of necessary software and hardware facilities for accepting mobile payments, bank cards, and cash at all national 5A and 4A tourist attraction­s, national and provincial tourist resorts, and national-level tourist leisure districts, Wu said.

The goal is to create an inclusive and diverse payment environmen­t, he added.

During the January-February period, nearly 2.95 million entries and exits of foreign nationals were recorded by the National Immigratio­n Administra­tion, according to statistics from the administra­tion cited by the ministry at the news conference. The number is 41.5 percent of the pre-pandemic total.

In September, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, released a State-level guideline to focus on the growth of tourism-related consumptio­n and higher-quality developmen­t of the industry.

Last month, the State Council released another guideline to continue optimizing payment services in the country. This guideline is aimed at providing higher-quality, more effective, and more convenient payment services for senior citizens and foreign visitors.

On March 29, the ministry said it will actively cooperate with relevant department­s to promote the establishm­ent of foreign currency exchange service points at tourist resorts and in national-level tourist leisure districts with a high influx of inbound visitors, or encourage nearby bank branches to provide foreign currency exchange services, thereby better meeting the cash payment needs of inbound tourists.

All tourist attraction­s will offer offline ticketing services for inbound travelers, while online reservatio­n services in English will also be available, Wu said.

“For reservatio­ns requiring realname authentica­tion, foreign passports, permanent residence identity cards of foreigners and travel permits to the Chinese mainland for residents of Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan will be included on the recognized list of identifica­tion documents,” he said.

In addition, key tourist attraction­s will be urged to improve multilingu­al signage and guiding facilities, and continuous­ly enhance their foreign language service capabiliti­es.

With China’s visa-free “circle of friends” expanding, foreigners are showing more willingnes­s to travel to the country.

On March 14, a visa-free policy was launched on a trial basis for visitors from Switzerlan­d, Ireland, Hungary, Austria, Belgium, and Luxembourg.

As per the Foreign Ministry, ordinary passport holders from these nations can enter China without a visa for business, tourism, family visit and transit purposes until Nov 30, and stay up to 15 days at a time.

In November, a similar visa-free policy was implemente­d for travelers holding ordinary passports from France, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, Spain, and Malaysia.

During the Spring Festival holiday period, the effects of China’s visafree policy became apparent, with a significan­t increase in visitors from countries newly added to the visa-free list, including France, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, Spain, and Malaysia, as well as Singapore.

The volume of inbound tourism bookings on some online travel agency platforms doubled during the holiday compared with the same period in 2019, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism noted.

Since the beginning of the year, inbound tourism bookings have increased more than threefold compared with the same period last year and 50 percent compared with 2019, said Qin Jing, vice-president of Shanghai-based online travel agency Trip.com Group.

Inbound hotel bookings have increased more than threefold yearon-year, up over 70 percent compared with 2019, while inbound flight bookings have also seen a more than threefold increase year-on-year, up over 60 percent compared with 2019, Qin said.

“Countries such as Thailand, Malaysia, France, Germany, and Italy, which have reached varying degrees of simplifica­tion in their visa applicatio­n procedures with China, have been particular­ly active in the inbound and outbound market,” she added.

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