City
Epaper

'Revenge spending' by Chinese tourists could boost global economy

By IANS | Updated: January 7, 2023 13:00 IST

Hong Kong, Jan 7 In the years before the Covid-19 pandemic, China was the worlds most important source ...

Open in App

Hong Kong, Jan 7 In the years before the Covid-19 pandemic, China was the worlds most important source of international travelers its 155 million tourists spent more than a quarter of a trillion dollars beyond its borders in 2019, the media reported.

That largesse fell precipitously over the past three years as the country essentially closed its borders. But, as China prepares to reopen on Sunday, millions of tourists are poised to return to the world stage, raising hopes of a rebound for the global hospitality industry, CNN reported.

Although international travel may not return immediately to pre-pandemic levels, companies, industries and countries that rely on Chinese tourists will get a boost in 2023, according to analysts.

China averaged about 12 million outbound air passengers per month in 2019, but those numbers fell 95% during the Covid years, according to Steve Saxon, a partner in McKinsey's Shenzhen office.

He predicts that figure will recover to about 6 million per month by the summer, CNN reported.

As China announced last month it would no longer subject inbound travelers to quarantine starting January 8, including residents returning from trips abroad, searches for international flights and accommodations immediately hit a three-year high on Trip.com.

Bookings for overseas travel during the upcoming Lunar New Year holiday, which falls between January 21-27 this year, have soared by 540 per cent from a year ago, according to data from the Chinese travel site.

Average spending per booking jumped 32 per cent.

The top destinations are in the Asia Pacific region, including Australia, Thailand, Japan and Hong Kong. The US and the UK also ranked among the top 10, CNN reported.

"The rapid buildup in ... (bank) deposits over the past year suggests that households in China have accumulated significant cash holdings," said Alex Loo, a macro strategist for TD Securities, adding that frequent lockdowns have likely led to restraints on household spending.

There could be "revenge spending" by Chinese consumers, mirroring what happened in many developed markets when they reopened early last year, he said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Toronto-Dominion BankSteve saxonAlex looCNNShenzhenHong KongFacebook groupTwitter sportsInternational data corp.State for international tradeState sportsU.s. newsAbc news' instagram
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTariff War: US Postal Service Suspends Incoming Packages From China and Hong Kong

InternationalJim Acosta Expected to Leave CNN Network After Removal from Weekday Time Slot

InternationalNew Year's Hong Kong to Los Angeles Flight Takes Passengers Back in Time, Departs in 2025 and Lands in 2024

CricketTeam India to Participate in Hong Kong Sixes 2024

InternationalBiden vs Trump Presidential Debate 2024: Donald Trump Declared Clear Winner of First US Election Debate, Joe Biden Polls at 33%

International Realted Stories

InternationalPM Modi congratulates Carney on election win, says looking forward to strengthen India-Canada partnership together

InternationalSouth Korea: Ruling on DP presidential candidate's election law violation case on Thursday

InternationalIndia, Egypt explore strategic skill development partnership

InternationalIndian student Vanshika found dead in Canada, family suspects murder

InternationalBangladesh: Polytechnic Institutes go on nationwide shutdown for technical education reforms