Chinese demand for travel jumps as Beijing opens the floodgates
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Passengers bound for Beijing board an airplane at the Xiamen Gaoqi International Airport in Fujian province on Dec 26, 2022.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
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BEIJING – A surge in holiday bookings shows China’s vast population is ready and hungry for travel as the country dismantles border controls and emerges from nearly three years of self-imposed isolation.
After the announcement that travellers will not be subject to quarantine from Jan 8 onwards,
The top five destinations were Singapore, with a 600 per cent increase in bookings,
China’s Covid Zero policy effectively stopped overseas leisure trips throughout the pandemic, with people urged to stay in the country “unless absolutely necessary” for work, study or compassionate reasons. Travel visas to Hong Kong have not been issued since early 2020 and authorities stopped granting new passports in August 2021 for any unnecessary and non-urgent reasons.
China is now preparing to issue new passports and Hong Kong permits again, and opening the floodgates to three years of pent-up travel demand. Within half an hour of the government’s reopening policy announcement, searches for overseas destinations shot up by 1,000 per cent, hitting a three-year high, according to Trip.com. Macau and Hong Kong were among the top searches.
The week-long Chinese New Year holiday at the end of January presents a good opportunity to fly overseas – searches related to travel packages during the break climbed 600 per cent.
It will still take time for Chinese tourist numbers to return to pre-pandemic levels, when they made up the largest group and were some of the biggest spenders. Japan requires a negative Covid-19 test upon arrival for travellers from China, while Malaysia has imposed new tracking and surveillance measures. The United States is weighing similar steps due to mounting concerns over renewed risk of infections as China battles Covid-19 – almost 37 million people in the country may have been infected with the virus on a single day last week, according to estimates from the government’s top health authority.
High air fares could also keep a lid on travel, according to some of the responses to a poll on Weibo, which is similar to Twitter.
Demand for travel into China is rising too. Bookings for inbound flights to mainland China increased by 412 per cent on Tuesday morning from a day earlier, according to Trip.com data. Many of the Chinese diaspora across the globe – including overseas students – have been kept out due to strict quarantine requirements and haven’t seen family and friends in years.
“I’ve waited so long for this day,” an overseas student wrote on Weibo. “Finally getting to go home!” BLOOMBERG