China is rising rapidly as a new major source of
outbound tourists in the world, with 25.76
million Chinese citizens traveling abroad in the first ten month
this year, up 8 percent year-on-year.
According to Liu Kezhi, a senior official with the China National
Tourism Administration, about 76 countries and regions have so far engaged
in the business of outbound group tours for Chinese citizens.
Outbound
travel by Chinese citizens started in 1997 with destinations
consisting merely of Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines as
well as China's Hong Kong and Macao. Only 5.32 million Chinese citizens
traveled abroad the same year, the official said.
Outbound travel market of Chinese citizens has been growing fast ever
since, the official noted.
In 2002, the number of Chinese outbound tourists reached 16.6 million,
while in 2004 the number rose to 28.85 million.
For the first ten months of 2005, outbound Chinese tourists reached
25.76 million, an increase of 8.03 percent year-on-year.
An obvious feature of Chinese citizens traveling
abroad is that the proportion of outbound
tours of Chinese citizens on
public duty or for commercial
affairs
has decreased year after year, the official added.
According to the statistics of the World Tourism Organization, the
outbound travel expenditure of Chinese citizens in 2002 stood at 15.4
billion US dollars, increasing by 11 percent over that of 2001 and ranking
seventh in the world.
The total number of outbound tourists worldwide stood at 702 million in
2002 with an average annual growth of 2.7 percent.
While the average annual growth for Chinese citizens
traveling abroad hit 36.84 percent in the
same year, much higher than the worldwide average growth
rate.
(Agencies) |