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Chinese Travel Is Set to Return.

The Question
Is, When?
The country has dropped restrictions on overseas journeys for its citizens, but once-popular
destinations are still waiting for the flood of vacationers to arrive.

When the first Chinese tourists landed at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok this
month, they were greeted like celebrities with welcome banners, flowers, gifts, and a scrum of
reporters and photographers.

It was the moment that hotels, airlines, tour operators and government officials had long been
waiting for — the reopening of China’s borders after nearly three years of pandemic restrictions
that effectively cut the world off from Chinese travelers, once the largest source of global tourism
revenue.

“It is very exciting to visit warm beautiful places again,” said Hua Liu, 34, a graphic designer
from Shanghai, who was among the first visitors to Thailand, where she took a two-week beach
vacation late this month, as part of a Lunar New Year trip. “I will make up for the lost time,” she
said in a telephone interview. Her plan: “Stay at nice hotels, book spa treatments, eat at fine
restaurants and buy nice gifts for myself and my family.”

Before the coronavirus pandemic paralyzed international travel in 2020, China sent more
travelers overseas than any other market, with about 150 million Chinese tourists spending $277
billion abroad in 2018, according to a study by the United Nations World Tourism Organization
and the China Tourism Academy. That outflow halted in 2020 and in the last year, even as
countries around the world eased travel restrictions, China maintained an international travel ban
for its citizens as part of its “zero Covid” policy.

But on Jan. 8, the Chinese government opened its borders, allowing foreign travelers to enter and
Chinese residents to go overseas. Some in the travel industry were predicting a flood of
international Chinese travelers after search interest for outbound flights from mainland China
increased by 83 percent between Dec. 26 and Jan. 5, with international flight bookings up 59
percent in the same period, according to the Chinese online travel agency Ctrip.
But while there has been a bump in tourism to nearby destinations, including Macau, Hong Kong,
Thailand and Singapore, farther-flung destinations are still waiting. In addition to high levels of
Covid cases within China, Chinese travelers face long delays in getting passports and visas, high
prices for international flights and a lack of capacity, since many carriers cut flights during
China’s long lockdown. As of Friday, the number of airline seats available on direct flights from
China to Britain in January was at about eight percent of those available in 2019, according
to VisitBritain, the official tourist board. The first direct flight scheduled between China and
Switzerland on Jan. 26 was canceled because of a lack of passengers.
Thailand gets ready

Before the pandemic, busloads of up to 700 Chinese tourists daily crowded into Maetaeng
Elephant Park in the low-slung hills of northern Thailand, about an hour north of Chiang Mai.

Borprit Chailert, the park’s manager, is eagerly awaiting their return, but so far only about 40
Chinese vacationers have shown up, he said.

When they do arrive, renting elephants from nearby villagers to fortify his herd of 76 won’t be
difficult, Mr. Chailert said. But it’s hard to know when to bring on more workers and where to
find them, since many left the tourist region and switched jobs when tourism stopped, he said.

“If we want to hire 100 people today, we can’t do that because we’re not sure,” he said. “I don’t
know, maybe in the next two months the Chinese government says, ‘We’re closing the border
again.’”

With its economy heavily dependent on tourism, Thailand lost out on tens of billions of dollars in
spending by Chinese tourists over the last three years. The Chiang Mai office of the Tourism
Authority estimates that the city, known for its stunning Buddhist temples and heavy dependence
on tourism, will welcome back about 600,000 Chinese visitors this year who will spend about
$230 million — about half of the total from 2019.

The real numbers won’t start until the second quarter, people in the Thai travel sector say. Many
Chinese tourists traditionally come to Thailand on group tours (they made up about half of the
Chinese visitors in Chiang Mai), and the Chinese government is not letting tour operators restart
their businesses until Feb. 6, and then only under a pilot program with about two dozen countries,
including Thailand. For now, only independent Chinese tourists who can afford the expensive
airfare are taking trips.

But not everyone is keen to welcome back group tours. Even before Covid, operators in Thailand
and China saw a reversal of the group tour trend and a shift toward more tech-savvy Chinese
travelers armed with booking and experience apps taking trips on their own.

Over the last decade, while the overall numbers of Chinese tourists rose, group tours dwindled
amid a crackdown on cheap so-called zero-dollar tours in Phuket, the 40-mile long island on the
Thai peninsula’s west coast. Often illegal operations dodging taxes, the tours typically were
controlled by Chinese investors who owned buses, hotels, restaurants, spas and gift shops,
siphoning off tourist spending from locals. They were known for pressuring guests to buy
overpriced souvenirs at the shops they controlled.

“I don’t think that we will have more of the big tour groups,” said Nantida Atiset, a hotel owner
in Phuket and the vice president of the Phuket Tourist Association. “I think they will come back,
of course. It’s just a matter of how big they will come back.”
Pricey flights to London and Australia

In London, another popular destination for Chinese travelers, more than 300,000 people visited
Chinatown last week for the first Lunar New Year parade since the coronavirus, but few Chinese
tourists were present.

Feng Yang, the manager of Shanghai Family, a Chinese restaurant in central London, said that he
didn’t expect any travelers from China during the Lunar New Year period, but was hopeful they
would return in a few months. “They’re still affected by the coronavirus,” Mr. Yang said, adding
that his business would most likely not suffer because about 85 percent of his customers are
Chinese students from the surrounding universities, who aren’t going back to China for the
holiday.

The slow growth can be blamed on a combination of factors. “There aren’t many flights, they will
tend to be more expensive, and people will need a visa to come,” said Patricia Yates, the chief
executive of VisitBritain, adding that the return of Chinese travelers to Britain would be a “slow
build” this year with higher expectations in 2024. Round-trip flights to London from China are
currently running at around $1,300 and Ms. Yates expects the number of seats on flights from
China to Britain to grow to only 30 percent of 2019 capacity by June. “That is really necessary to
get people on planes,” she said.

Before the pandemic, China was Australia’s biggest visitor market in terms of spending. The
country received 1.4 million Chinese visitors in 2019 who spent $12.4 billion.

Chinese travelers have started to return to visit friends and family, but travel operators do not
expect an influx of leisure travelers for several months, as flights are expensive and Australia is
not on China’s approved list for group tour destinations. Australia also requires coronavirus
testing for Chinese travelers. This month, round-trip flights between China and Australia range
between $1,800 and $3,000. Before the pandemic, Chinese tourists were known for being willing
to spend money, said James Shen, the owner of Odyssey Travel in Melbourne. “Chinese tourists
are the ones who say, ‘I don’t want to take a boat, I want to take a helicopter,’” he said. “It might
be a 10-minute journey, 400 Australian dollars — very expensive — but Chinese tourists will
say, ‘I want to take this, not the boat, because maybe I’ll get seasick.’”

While many travel operators are eager for their return, some worry that the industry may not be
able to keep up with a new influx of tourists.

“The industry disappeared for two years; it’ll be very hard for it to recover,” said Rick Liu, the
owner of TanTan Holiday travel agency in Melbourne. Many drivers and tour guides found other
work while the tourism industry was on pause, he added, and hiring them back may be difficult.

“I’m happy that we’ll have more tourists, but I’m also a bit worried about whether we’ll be able
to accommodate them properly, provide them with high enough quality service,” he added.
“We’re a bit out of practice.”
- Yan Zhuang contributed reporting from Melbourne, Australia, and Derrick
Bryson Taylorfrom London -

CRE: New York Times

- Story headlines: Chinese Travel Is Set to Return. The Question Is, When?, Thailand gets
ready, Pricey flights to London and Australia.
China Thailand London Australia
What ? The reopening of With its economy Few Chinese Travel
China’s borders heavily dependent tourists were operators do
after nearly three on tourism, present. not expect an
years of pandemic Thailand lost out influx of
restrictions that on tens of billions leisure
effectively cut the of dollars in travelers for
world off from spending by several
Chinese travelers, Chinese tourists months
once the largest over the last three
source of global years.
tourism revenue.
When ? After the Before the Since the Pandemic
coronavirus pandemic coronavirus period
pandemic
Who ? Hua Liu, 34, a -Borprit Chailert, -Feng Yang, the -James Shen,
graphic designer the park’s manager of the owner of
from Shanghai, manager. Shanghai Odyssey
who was among -Nantida Atiset, a Family, a Travel in
the first visitors to hotel owner in Chinese Melbourne.
Thailand Phuket and the restaurant in -Rick Liu, the
vice president of central London owner of
the Phuket Tourist -Patricia Yates, TanTan
Association. the chief Holiday
executive of travel agency
VisitBritain in
Melbourne.
Where ? At Suvarnabhumi Maetaeng Chinatown in Australia
International Elephant Park in London
Airport in the low-slung hills
Bangkok of northern
Thailand, about an
hour north of
Chiang Mai.

Why/How ? High levels of -It’s hard to know Round-trip Round-trip


Covid cases when to bring on flights to London flights
within China, more workers and from China are between
Chinese travelers where to find expensive China and
face long delays them, since many (currently Australia
in getting left the tourist running at range
passports and region and around $1,300) between
visas, high prices switched jobs $1,800 and
for international when tourism $3,000.
flights and a lack stopped.
of capacity, since -The Chinese
many carriers cut government is not
flights during letting tour
China’s long operators restart
lockdown. their businesses
until Feb. 6, and
then only under a
pilot program
with about two
dozen countries,
including
Thailand. For
now, only
independent
Chinese tourists
who can afford
the expensive
airfare are taking
trips.

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