By Patturaja Murugaboopathy and Ryan Woo
REUTERS - GRAPHIC: Chinese tourist spending: http://link.reuters.com/zej93w
Embassies are re-writing visa rules and governments are
hammering out aviation pacts as record spending by Chinese travellers
sets off a race around the world for a share of the Chinese tourist
dollar.
Chinese
spending on international travel in 2014 rose to $165 billion from $129
billion in 2013, the biggest percentage increase in two years,
according to data released by the State Administration of Foreign
Exchange last week.
Chinese disposable incomes have been steadily rising and would-be
travellers got an additional boost in the past year from favourable
foreign exchange rates, with the yuan appreciating more than 10 percent
against the yen and the Australian dollar. The gains versus the euro
have been even greater, at more than 14 percent, and the yuan set a
record against the single currency last month.
Governments near and far are keen to get their countries
onto Chinese itineraries. In November, the United States signed a
landmark deal with China extending one-year visas issued to Chinese
travellers to up to a decade. This year Malaysia and Indonesia are
planning visa exemptions, while Thailand is considering exempting visa
fees, which were briefly suspended last year. Australia in January
signed an agreement with China allowing more passenger flights from
Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou with immediate effect.
Air traffic data for China's big airlines confirms a
rising preference for overseas travel in the world's most populous
nation. Air China's international routes recorded 14.6 percent growth in
2014 in revenue passenger kilometres (RPKs), a gauge of traffic, versus
6.1 percent for domestic routes, Reuters calculations show. China
Southern Airlines' international RPK growth was 20.2 percent versus 10.0
percent domestically. China Eastern Airlines posted international RPK
growth of 4.4 percent.
(Reporting By Patturaja Murugaboopathy in BENGALURU and Ryan
Woo in SINGAPORE; Additional reporting by Shilpa Murthy in BENGALURU;
Editing by Edmund Klamann)
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