The spending by an individual on international tourism in China in
2012 amounted to just 75 US$, a tiny sum compared to 266 US$ for the USA
and more than 1,000 US$ for Germany, Canada or Australia. Still China
is topping the UNWTO tables with US$ 102 billion in total spending,
reflecting the fact that only the top ten per cent of Chinese society
are able to afford trips beyond the borders of Mainland China.
Recently published data for 2013 from the China Tourism Academy, the
China National Tourism Administration think tank, put the number of
outbound trips for the first three quarters of 2013 at 72.5 million,
demonstrating a Year-on-Year increase of 18 per cent. In other words,
more outbound border-crossings occurred from China in the first nine
months of this year than in the whole of 2011.
The new Chinese government is not only not hindering this
accumulation of wealth, but despite the ongoing campaign against
conspicuous consumption, the outbound leisure tourism industry actually
received public support on several occasions this year. In January the
Chairman of the China National Tourism Administration (CNTA), Shao
Qiwei, declared that “Outbound tourism will boost China’s development in
the long-term. The government, and particularly CNTA, will continue to
promote the travelling of Chinese people abroad as we believe in the
mutual benefits of collaboration.”
In April President Xi Jinping himself during the 2013 Annual
Conference of the Boao Forum for Asia on Hainan Island said in his
keynote speech that in the next five years China will probably have over
400 million tourists travelling abroad.
This was the first time ever a Chinese communist party leader spoke
internationally in a positive and comprehensive way about outbound
tourism. Since then, on several occasions Xi mentioned outbound travel,
for instance during Xi’s visit to Samarkand/Uzbekistan in September,
where he alluded to the shared history of travelling on the Silk Road.
Outbound tourism, especially to neighboring and to less developed
countries, has been increasingly used as a soft power tool even in the
face of a tourism trade deficit which will for 2013 certainly reach a
level of at least 70 billion US$.
This amount does not include foreign outbound direct investment,
which has developed into a major incentive for many an international
voyage undertaken by Chinese HNWIs. Investments overseas are seen as a
good opportunity to snap up properties perceived in China as a bargain,
but also as a means to get funds beyond the reach of the Chinese
government. This buying spree covers a wide range of shopping items,
from private islands in the Mediterranean to golf courses in Ireland and
from town houses in the posh parts of London and Paris to villas, farms
and business towers all over the world. Chinese nationals in the last
twelve months have invested almost 10 billion US$ in the USA, putting
them in second position as most important non- domestic investors in
real estate after Canadian buyers. So the next Chinese outbound tourists
entering your hotel might not come in to rent a room for the night, but
to buy up the whole place.
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