An empty screen displaying no flights in the international arrivals area of Beijing Capital International Airport. Getty Images
An empty screen displaying no flights in the international arrivals area of Beijing Capital International Airport. Getty Images
An empty screen displaying no flights in the international arrivals area of Beijing Capital International Airport. Getty Images
An empty screen displaying no flights in the international arrivals area of Beijing Capital International Airport. Getty Images

The reasons why China’s high-spending tourists are staying home, at least for now


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During last year’s bruising Covid lockdown in Shanghai, Qin Bing dreamed of travelling overseas. As China reopens its borders on Sunday after three years of Covid isolation, however, the 36-year-old marketing manager is staying put.

In fact, the $280 billion force that is Chinese tourism may not re-emerge for months, thanks to lingering infections, restrictions for new arrivals and surging costs tied to a breakdown of the global travel infrastructure.

“Ticket prices are going crazy,” said Qin, who used to fly abroad at least three times a year before the pandemic but now fears Covid reinfection and high flight costs.

“Travel packages are only for people who have money to burn ― definitely not me.”

China’s 1.4 billion residents endured the strictest movement restrictions of the pandemic, largely cut off from the world for three years as the government pursued a zero-tolerance approach. The pent-up demand was expected to unleash a surge of travel and spending after China scrapped its quarantine starting this Sunday.

Yet the tenor of its long-awaited re-opening boom seems to be diverging from the revenge travel — an all-out, bucket-list trip to make up for lost time — that many anticipated. The follow-on boost for businesses starved of China’s high-spending tourists will likely be delayed, as a full recovery to pre-pandemic levels may take months.

Covid explosion

One gate-limiting hurdle is the explosion of Covid across China. Millions of people are sick or recovering, and the numbers are expected to remain high for weeks as the virus migrates from big cities to rural and outlying areas.

The size and scope of the outbreak led other countries to tighten border rules, including popular destinations like Japan, South Korea and the US.

“Most consumers aren’t mentally ready to travel to another country right after recovering from Covid,” said Chen Xin, head of China leisure and transport research at UBS. “We may need to wait until next year at the earliest to see the outbound travel return to pre-Covid levels.”

Airlines aren’t rushing to add capacity either.

Flights leaving China in the first quarter are at 10.7 per cent of pre-pandemic levels, though they are more than double the anaemic rates from a year ago, figures compiled by aviation analytics company Cirium show.

The dearth of options mean it’s expensive to fly almost anywhere overseas. Average outbound tickets cost 3,822 yuan ($558) as of January 3, according to Tongcheng Travel data, up 18 per cent just since Christmas.

It’s unlikely that international flights can meaningfully increase before the Lunar New Year in two weeks, and travel visas and passports may take longer to obtain, UBS’s Mr Chen said.

No bookings

Indeed, contradicting concerns that tourist hotspots from the Eiffel Tower to the Grand Canyon will be strained once again by Chinese revelers, travel agencies say they’re struggling to persuade people to book trips. Agents are worried the low prices of the past decade won’t return anytime soon.

While a seven-day trip from south-western China to the Thai capital of Bangkok would’ve cost $274 in 2018, a similar trip now starts at $1,108 according to Zhao Ling, a Deyang-based travel agent who works for Chengdu Everbright International Tour.

“A lot of people have been asking about packages, but no one’s booking,” Ms Zhao said.

Tourist hotspots are tempering expectations. Thailand is expecting 300,000 visitors from China in the first quarter of this year, less than 10 per cent of pre-pandemic levels, according to Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul. Only 60,000 visitors are expected in January.

Hoteliers in Phuket, the southern island famed for its white sand beaches, are anticipating a slow Lunar New Year. Mainland tourists aren’t expected to arrive in large numbers, said Suksit Suvunditkul, president of the Thai Hotels Association Southern Chapter and chief executive of Deevana Hotels and Resorts.

There are few scheduled flights and his hotel hasn’t seen a surge in advanced bookings from Chinese tourists yet, Mr Suksit said.

Battered tourist hotspots

Even if Chinese tourists come, the once-bustling resorts, sights and night markets may not be ready. Many hotspots have been battered by the pandemic — and the continued absence of the once ubiquitous and biggest-spending visitors, whose money had a supersized impact on local economies.

The global supply chain that kept Chinese visitors happy — from buses to Chinese restaurants to Mandarin-speaking tour guides — has largely collapsed.

A lot of people have been asking about packages, but no one’s booking
Zhao Ling,
travel agent at Chengdu Everbright International Tour

Labour shortages are raging in places like Singapore and Thailand, where most businesses can’t hire workers or upgrade amenities quickly enough after a years-long dry spell. Millions of workers once in the hospitality industry have changed jobs.

“Singapore is just not ready to handle the sudden influx,” said Stanley Foo, founder and managing partner at Oriental Travel and Tours in Singapore. “I’m most worried about the manpower shortages in attractions. We can’t even handle the current number of visitors.”

Chinese operators of so-called “zero-dollar” packages — pre-paid tours in which tourists were shepherded through shopping and sightseeing itineraries, often with commissioned stops at overpriced souvenir shops — are also worried.

“It took us 10 years to get Thailand tour packages down from 10,000 yuan to 2,000 yuan, years of effort and relationships, a lot of buy-in from airlines, hotels, local stores,” said Ms Zhao, who used to lead a 30-person group every month before the pandemic.

“There was a whole supply chain. Now that chain is completely broken.”

Domestic demand

Ms Zhao has since pivoted to offering domestic tour packages, primarily to Xinjiang and Tibet.

China’s holidaymakers may prefer skiing in Harbin or shopping in Hainan’s duty-free malls to travelling abroad over the Lunar New Year, according to UBS’s Mr Chen.

Domestic flights have recovered much faster than international flights, with 12,216 trips scheduled on January 8. That’s nearly 100 per cent of the domestic capacity in 2019, VariFlight data show.

Still, the return of Chinese tourists after a three-year absence, even if just a trickle for now, is raising spirits in the global tourism industry. Bookings for international travel during the Lunar New Year surged more than 540 per cent from the near-nil level of a year ago, according to Trip.com.

“We do miss them,” said Singapore’s Mr Foo.

Cricket World Cup League 2

UAE results
Lost to Oman by eight runs
Beat Namibia by three wickets
Lost to Oman by 12 runs
Beat Namibia by 43 runs

UAE fixtures
Free admission. All fixtures broadcast live on icc.tv

Tuesday March 15, v PNG at Sharjah Cricket Stadium
Friday March 18, v Nepal at Dubai International Stadium
Saturday March 19, v PNG at Dubai International Stadium
Monday March 21, v Nepal at Dubai International Stadium

Results

6.30pm Madjani Stakes Rated Conditions (PA) I Dh160,000 1,900m I Winner: Mawahib, Tadhg O’Shea (jockey), Eric Lemartinel (trainer)

7.05pm Maiden Dh150,000 1,400m I Winner One Season, Antonio Fresu, Satish Seemar

7.40pm: Maiden Dh150,000 2,000m I Winner Street Of Dreams, Pat Dobbs, Doug Watson

8.15pm Dubai Creek Listed Dh250,000 1,600m I Winner Heavy Metal, Royston Ffrench, Salem bin Ghadayer

8.50pm The Entisar Listed Dh250,000 2,000m I Winner Etijaah, Dane O’Neill, Doug Watson

9.25pm The Garhoud Listed Dh250,000 1,200m Winner Muarrab, Dane O’Neill, Ali Rashid Al Raihe

10pm Handicap Dh160,000 1,600m Winner Sea Skimmer, Patrick Cosgrave, Helal Al Alawi

Biog

Mr Kandhari is legally authorised to conduct marriages in the gurdwara

He has officiated weddings of Sikhs and people of different faiths from Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Russia, the US and Canada

Father of two sons, grandfather of six

Plays golf once a week

Enjoys trying new holiday destinations with his wife and family

Walks for an hour every morning

Completed a Bachelor of Commerce degree in Loyola College, Chennai, India

2019 is a milestone because he completes 50 years in business

 

The specs

Engine: 2.0-litre 4-cylturbo

Transmission: seven-speed DSG automatic

Power: 242bhp

Torque: 370Nm

Price: Dh136,814

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New process leads to panic among jobseekers

As a UAE-based travel agent who processes tourist visas from the Philippines, Jennifer Pacia Gado is fielding a lot of calls from concerned travellers just now. And they are all asking the same question.  

“My clients are mostly Filipinos, and they [all want to know] about good conduct certificates,” says the 34-year-old Filipina, who has lived in the UAE for five years.

Ms Gado contacted the Philippines Embassy to get more information on the certificate so she can share it with her clients. She says many are worried about the process and associated costs – which could be as high as Dh500 to obtain and attest a good conduct certificate from the Philippines for jobseekers already living in the UAE. 

“They are worried about this because when they arrive here without the NBI [National Bureau of Investigation] clearance, it is a hassle because it takes time,” she says.

“They need to go first to the embassy to apply for the application of the NBI clearance. After that they have go to the police station [in the UAE] for the fingerprints. And then they will apply for the special power of attorney so that someone can finish the process in the Philippines. So it is a long process and more expensive if you are doing it from here.”

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Coal Black Mornings

Brett Anderson

Little Brown Book Group 

Five films to watch

Castle in the Sky (1986)

Grave of the Fireflies (1988)

Only Yesterday (1991)

Pom Poki (1994)

The Tale of Princess Kaguya (2013)

Manchester City (0) v Liverpool (3)

Uefa Champions League, quarter-final, second leg

Where: Etihad Stadium
When: Tuesday, 10.45pm
Live on beIN Sports HD

Isle of Dogs

Director: Wes Anderson

Starring: Bryan Cranston, Liev Schreiber, Ed Norton, Greta Gerwig, Bill Murray, Jeff Goldblum, Scarlett Johansson

Three stars

Sting & Shaggy

44/876

(Interscope)

Brief scores:

Scotland 371-5, 50 overs (C MacLeod 140 no, K Coetzer 58, G Munsey 55)

England 365 all out, 48.5 overs (J Bairstow 105, A Hales 52; M Watt 3-55)

Result: Scotland won by six runs

FIXTURES

New Zealand v France, second Test
Saturday, 12.35pm (UAE)
Auckland, New Zealand

South Africa v Wales
Sunday, 12.40am (UAE), San Juan, Argentina

Dhadak

Director: Shashank Khaitan

Starring: Janhvi Kapoor, Ishaan Khattar, Ashutosh Rana

Stars: 3

Blonde
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What is graphene?

Graphene is extracted from graphite and is made up of pure carbon.

It is 200 times more resistant than steel and five times lighter than aluminum.

It conducts electricity better than any other material at room temperature.

It is thought that graphene could boost the useful life of batteries by 10 per cent.

Graphene can also detect cancer cells in the early stages of the disease.

The material was first discovered when Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov were 'playing' with graphite at the University of Manchester in 2004.

Updated: January 08, 2023, 4:00 AM