Consumption up during long holiday (China Daily) Updated: 2004-05-10 00:20
Travel agents, restaurants owners and even souvenir peddlers are happily
counting revenues brought by heaps of nationwide tourists during the May Day
holiday last week.
While some went sight-seeing, shopping or eating, others made efforts to keep
fit, read or watch TV. Yet, others slumbered away the seven-day holiday.
Official statistics show that more than 100 million trips were taken during
the holiday week that ended Friday.
Travellers spent up to 39 billion yuan (US$4.7 billion), up 17 per cent
compared with the same period in 2002.
Since 2001, the government has moved to give people more leisure time to spur
domestic consumption.
Now Chinese people enjoy three seven-day holidays every year around the May
Day, National Day and Spring Festival.
Last year the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, SARS, forced the
central government to cancel the holiday week for spring.
According to the office for nationwide tourism co-ordination, nearly 30 per
cent of China's urban population chose travel for recreation during the holiday
week.
Some economists and sociologists believe the holiday also gives people a
chance to improve their lives.
To transport the tourists, roads and rails played an important role.According
to officials with the Ministry of Communication, about 310 million people used
public transportation in the seven days, 9 per cent more than in 2002.
Also, more and more people chose to travel with their own vehicles.
"Traffic was smooth when I drove from Beijing to the summer resort Beidaihe
in Hebei Province," said a female tourist surnamed Guo.
"Both Beijing and Hebei increased the number of exits on their highways and
there was no queue at all of the toll stations," Guo added.
Apart from travelling, recreational activities also included "keep-fit"
exercising at the gym, swimming, tennis and table tennis playing.
Doing physical exercises really embodied the significance of holidays, said a
middle-aged man surnamed Liang who became a gym club member at the Beijing Scite
Keep-fit Centre in the holiday week.
Liang designed an exercise agenda for the holiday, by which he played tennis
for one hour and a half on each of the seven days.
Shopping was another major activity which helped boost the holiday economy.
In Beijing alone, retail sales during the holiday week were estimated at 7
billion yuan (US$843.37 million), and sales income of commerce enterprises in
the city, at 1.11 billion yuan (US$133.73 million).
Hong Kong Tourism Boomed
During the holiday , about 400,000 Chinese mainland tourists visited Hong
Kong, yielding about 2.3 billion yuan (US$277 million) in revenues.
"Chinese mainland tourists have become a dynamic consumption force in the
Hong Kong retail market, with the extension of the Individual Visit Scheme in
more Chinese mainland cities," said Yu Pang-chun, Director of Hong Kong Retail
Management Association (HKRMA).
Yu said, triggered by the Individual Visit Scheme and the gradual growth of
the local economy, Hong Kong's consumption market is expected to witness a full
scale recovery in the second half of this year.
Statistics indicate that local consumers contributed to four fifth of the
overall retail business volume in Hong Kong. Tourists contributed one fifth and
Chinese mainland tourists' consumption volume accounts for about 70 per cent of
the tourists' consumption volume.
He predicted that with the extension of the Individual Visit Scheme to more
Chinese mainland markets, the raising of employment rate and improved economic
conditions in Hong Kong, Hong Kong's retail sales volume in 2004 would climb by
a single digit at least.
He said, Chinese mainland tourists usually buy digital cameras, cosmetic and
jewelry products in downtown areas or tourism spots in Hong Kong.
Disasters
But the holiday was not completely rosy, as there were several disasters and
accidents.
More than 70 people were injured when two vessels collided Saturday evening
on the Yangtze River near the Chongqing Municipality in Southwest China.
No deaths or missing had yet been reported, an official said on Sunday. The
crash occurred at 8:20 pm Saturday night between a passenger ship and an oil
tanker some two kilometers away from the Chuanwei Wharf in Changshou District of
Chongqing. More than 30 of the injured were hospitalized for observation.
In addition, rescuers are still continuing their efforts to find 15 miners
who were trapped for more than one week in a flooded coal mine in Wuhai city,
North China's Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region, as hope fades for them to be
found alive.
Thirty-two miners were working underground when the accident took place and
seventeen of them have been rescued.
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