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Haohao

Tourists Avoiding China Because of Pollution, Corruption, and Bad Food

Posted: 01/15/2015 1:00 pm

A foreign tourist wears a mask in Beijing’s Tian An Men Square.

Foreign tourism to China continues to decline due to increasing air pollution, an ever-widening wealth gap, corruption, food safety problems, and poor public security, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

In a recent report by the Academy’s Public Opinion Research Office and China Travel Daily, lead expert Liu Zhiming argues, “Incidents such as off-the-chart PM 2.5 readings and food safety scandals are certainly not helping China’s national image.”

In the first nine months of 2014, the number of foreign tourists dropped 0.77 percent, to 19.21 million, compared with the same period in 2013, BBC Chinese wrote. The China Travel Daily and the Academy of Social Sciences collected about 23,000 responses from 23 countries, representing approximately 90 percent of the country’s inbound hospitality market.

Numbers from the China National Tourism Administration painted an even grimmer picture: In 2013, China attracted 26.29 million foreign tourists, which was a 3 percent decline over 2012.

While China’s inbound tourism is dropping, its outbound numbers are rapidly increasing. In 2013, 97 million Chinese citizens travelled abroad, which was the highest number of outbound tourists in the world, according to the China National Tourism Administration. This was 14 million more than in 2012. The number is expected to have surpassed 100 million in 2014, reported China Daily.

 Photos: AP

 

Haohao
  • RosietheRiveter

    Duh. Here in Shenzhen, all you have to do is go to any of the borders to see how unfriendly it is to tourists. At the ferry, cops will bust a private driver dropping you off, but ignore the dozen scumbags who shout “taxi! shekou!” when you’re coming out of the old, decrepit immigration area. Louhu, Jesus. It’s like the US-Mexican border, not like one rich city to another. The beggars, crooks, and hoods assaulting you, the dimly-lit and dirty stairways. I’ve lived here six years and it took us ten minutes to find the foreigner line, that included 5 minutes up stairs and then 4 minutes down a scary, pee-smelling other back staircase. And crossing the ‘drunk border’, Huanggang, if your flight from HK is late, good god, that’s like some Omega Man, post-apocalyptic nightmare scenario. My mom said it was exactly like Soviet Poland in the 70s.
    So yeah, air pollution is a tough nut, but enforcing laws and installing some lights and painting would cost like a couple thousand RMB, but….

  • David Claxton

    You’re right about Louhu RosietheRiveter, it reminds me of the time I went to Tijuana via San Diego (I think I also compared Louhu to Mos Eisley from Star Wars ha,ha). I remember one mentally challenged taxi driver; a Chinese friend (she’s female, not my girlfriend) and I came back to SZ/Louhu after 11pm and decided to wait for a bus which infuriated the cabbie (he asked us 12 times if we wanted a taxi, we said no which was then followed by him calling my friend a traitor to her country by dating a western man, thankfully the bus arrived soon after).

    I think the Confucian virtue of ‘harmony’ is overrated in China in areas like these (where tourists really are like ‘poo’ to a bunch of flies); the police should make the scumbags move away and the administrators could make that area look much nicer with a small investment (and safer). But I guess TIC applies ‘this is China’.

    As for the article, to me that’s all that is wrong with Beijing (with the issues mentioned in the article along with the CCP’s muzzling on internet censorship and foreign content, they have a warped view on what’s good for their citizens). BJ (sounds like an acronym for something more enjoyable ha,ha) is slowly poisoning itself and driving people out as if it’s a biohazard area (proof that economic growth and more disposable income for Chinese isn’t a good thing, particularly if they spend money on cars which they don’t need).

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