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在线翻译:
szdaily -> In-Depth -> 
Golden Week holiday a driver for domestic, global recovery
    2020-10-13  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

THIS year, China’s National Day holiday, or the Golden Week holiday, has emerged from the shadow of COVID-19 as more than 600 million tourists made domestic trips, showing China’s strong rebound from the pandemic, which will give the global economic recovery a leg up.

Train tickets were sold out, hotel reservations were hard to make, and highways crawling with vehicles: millions of Chinese people could finally enjoy an eight-day holiday without worrying about quarantines, tests and other restrictions on their movements.

China’s successful containment of the virus reassures the people that it is safe to travel domestically in the long-awaited holiday, which provides plenty of opportunities for their pent-up demand to be met. The Golden Week is sure to help boost consumer confidence and facilitate economic recovery.

Booming tourism

The annual public holiday is traditionally a prime time for entertainment, travel and spending. According to statistics released by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, a total of 637 million visitors were received in tourist attractions across the country, representing 79 percent of last year’s number, and tourism revenue amounted to 466.56 billion yuan (US$69 billion), regaining 69.9 percent of that earned last year.

Wuhan, the heroic city once hard hit by coronavirus, has re-established its appeal to visitors who thronged famous scenic spots in the city, especially the Yellow Crane Tower. The historic building launched night tours for the first time since its opening to the public in 1985 after reconstruction. The landmark topped the “country’s hottest scenic spots” rankings by a large online travel agency Trip.com Group, with the number of visitors who made reservations reaching the daily limit of 25,000 in the week.

Notably, Wuhan this year ranked among the top 10 tourist destinations and sources in the Golden Week, according to data from Fliggy, a popular online travel platform.

In Beijing, chilly drizzle did not drench the enthusiasm of more than 90,000 people, who gathered at Tiananmen Square in the early morning of Oct. 1 to watch the flag-raising ceremony to celebrate the 71st National Day. The crowd burst into cheers when the Five-starred Red Flag was hoisted to the top of the flagpole amid the national anthem.

“In any year, the outlay of the weeklong holiday is a closely watched barometer of the country’s economic health,” The New York Times reported, noting that this year’s holiday offered “the clearest measure yet of China’s recovery from the pandemic.”

Economic rebound

China’s consumption has started to recover as its total volume of retail sales reachieved positive growth this August, said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington D.C.-based think tank, adding that retail sales are expected to speed up recovery due to stimulus by “revenge spending” in the Golden Week.

Chinese card payment giant China UnionPay saw its online payments go up by 9.6 percent year on year to 921.5 billion yuan during the first three days of the holiday, with payments over its network exceeding 330 billion yuan on Oct. 1, an increase of 15.5 percent over the same day of last year.

From Oct. 1 to 8, average daily sales of the wholesale and retail sector rose 14.1 percent compared with the National Day holiday last year, with sports goods and equipment registering a year-on-year growth of 114.6 percent, the State Taxation Administration said, citing value-added invoice data.

Consumption of services also saw a quick rebound during the holiday. Average daily sales of the catering and accommodation sector climbed 12.7 percent, while that of tourism services recovered to 69.8 percent of the level seen in the same period last year, the administration said.

Gu Qingyang, an associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, noted that holiday consumption will help boost the service sector and promote more balanced development in other industries, such as transportation, tourism and catering, which bore the brunt of the epidemic.

In a recent written interview with Xinhua, Ding Jia, general manager of Germany’s tour operator Kaytrip in China, said that the Chinese Government has taken efficient and powerful control measures against the epidemic, ensuring the safety of people’s travel and boosting their confidence.

The latest long holiday is believed to lead a new wave of holiday spending boom, thus adding strong impetus to China’s economic recovery, Ding added.

“China’s success in containing the coronavirus and reviving economic activity has been notable,” said R. N. Bhaskar, consulting editor of Asia Converge and guest faculty at several institutes in India and overseas, noting that a recent official report on manufacturing showed the Chinese economy is recovering better than expected.

With the epidemic largely under control in China, the Golden Week holiday is putting on display the country’s confidence in its economic rebound and its public health measures, Bloomberg said.

Growth driver

The massive consumption potential during the Golden Week will not only expedite the recovery of China’s domestic economy, but also promote imports and investment from other countries, as the flourishing “holiday economy” gives a strong boost to global trade.

Four offshore duty-free shops in Hainan, southern China’s island province, were busy receiving “big spenders” in the Golden Week, with their retail sales surging by 167 percent, according to statistics from the Ministry of Commerce.

Inside a duty-free shopping mall in the resort city of Sanya, Shao Kehui, a tourist from East China’s Zhejiang Province, lined up for more than 20 minutes before entering the Gucci store for a handbag worth about 14,000 yuan. “Due to the pandemic, we cannot go abroad, but it’s a good choice to travel in Hainan and enjoy duty-free shopping here,” said Shao.

Tommy Wu, a senior economist at Oxford Economics, said that the “holiday economy” will undoubtedly stimulate China’s domestic consumption, benefiting home and international brands and hotel groups.

Many economies are still struggling to recover from the pandemic, while China’s huge demand indicates the need for substantial imports, contributing to global economic recovery, Wu added.

Mikhail Morozov, deputy editor-in-chief of Russia’s Trud newspaper, said that China’s economy will remain a major growth driver for the global economy, noting that countries across the world will speed up economic recovery if they “hoist their sails catching China’s wind.”

(Xinhua)

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