Record number of Chinese spend their holidays at home as the economic downturn strikes

This Golden Week holiday, a record number of Chinese people are choosing to stay at home instead of traveling, which could increase domestic consumption but dismays travel agencies who have been waiting for high-spending tourists to return to other countries since the pandemic ended.

The Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day are celebrated in China from Friday through October 6 in what is this year’s longest public holiday.

During the break, millions of people—mostly laborers and manufacturing workers—return to their hometown towns, along with a typical exodus of middle-class Chinese to foreign countries and a boom in domestic tourism.

However, past holidays this year have failed in terms of expenditure per person as a sluggish job market and low earnings hinder consumer spending as the economy tries to recover from the pandemic.

Even while more Chinese are still hesitant to spend money on nice-to-haves like vacations abroad, how much money they do spend domestically over the holiday will be a crucial indicator of consumer hunger and a key factor in the possible long-term growth of the world’s second-largest economy.

“It’s not wise to spend so much money,” said Joe Zhang, a worker in the Beijing tech sector who will vacation within China this holiday season after being unable to visit Japan due to exorbitant ticket costs. “I’m dissatisfied. Since I last traveled abroad three years ago, the 27-year-old has continued.

According to the China Tourism Academy, which is a component of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, “the most popular Golden Week in history” would see more than 100 million trips every day.

According to flight app Umetrip, trains are anticipated to be busy and the average number of daily flights is also a fifth greater than the 2019 holiday.

The first significant holiday since the lifting of all COVID-19 restrictions occurred during the Spring Festival break earlier this year, however travel was severely restricted due to an epidemic of the virus.

FLY LESS, BUY LESS

According to Boon Sian Chai, managing director and vice-president of foreign markets for Trip.com, China’s largest online travel platform, the outbound market has only returned to roughly 60% of its pre-pandemic levels despite the fact that the data indicates a rise in internal tourism.

The average cost of group travel tours from China is up to 30% more expensive than they were before the epidemic, in part because planes haven’t yet started operating according to their pre-COVID schedules, he added.

Cao, a resident of Anqing City in eastern Anhui Province, said she would spend the holiday in her hometown because paying the monthly installments for her newly acquired property were consuming the majority of her available funds. “I used to travel farther, but this year I will either stay in my hometown or go to nearby places,” she continued.

China last month lifted restrictions on group tours for important travel markets like Japan, South Korea, and the United States. However, Nancy Dai, China Market Analyst at ForwardKeys, predicted that international trips would be 48% lower than pre-COVID levels in the fourth quarter, citing visa concerns among other things.

Chinese travelers favor less expensive Asian countries, with Thailand by far the most popular choice since it implemented a visa waiver program, according to booking platforms and travel firms.

A family can save more than 1,000 yuan on total visa fees by traveling together, according to Zhou Weihong, deputy general manager at travel company Spring Tour. “That’s not too bad!”

More than any other nation, mainland Chinese travelers spent $255 billion abroad in 2019, with group tours believed to have contributed almost 60% of that amount.

Retailers who yearn for these travelers’ return, however, will have to wait a little longer.

Wang Zheng, another employee in the computer sector, stated, “I don’t think I will spend too much on shopping in Thailand.” Wang Zheng is 31. Enjoying the beach is the most important thing.

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