Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Spring Festival spending highlights momentum of China's economy !

Spring Festival spending highlights momentum of China's economy

Time:2024-05-21 09:51:48 source:Culture Capsule news portal

Tourists enjoy a night view in Xuan'en County, central China's Hubei Province, Feb. 11, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

China's eight-day Spring Festival holiday for the Year of the Dragon witnessed a booming consumer market, highlighting the vitality and momentum of the Chinese economy.

Data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism shows that 474 million domestic tourism trips were made during the Spring Festival holiday, marking a 34.3 percent increase from the same period last year and an increase of 19 percent compared to the pre-pandemic level in 2019. Domestic tourists spent about 632.69 billion yuan (about $89.07 billion) in total, up 7.7 percent from the same period in 2019.

The box office revenue during the holiday reached 8.02 billion yuan, hitting a new record for such a period, according to the State Film Administration.

The online transactions also saw a robust increase. NetsUnion Clearing Corporation, a Chinese online payment clearing house, and card payment giant China UnionPay processed an average of 2.63 billion online transactions or around 1.25 trillion yuan in value per day from Feb. 9 to 17. The figures represent an increase of 18.6 percent and 8.0 percent respectively compared to the previous Spring Festival holiday.

Different from the Western dragon, the Chinese dragon symbolizes good luck and prosperity in traditional Chinese culture. Robust consumption during the festival is encouraging and illustrative of the increasingly important role that consumption plays in the country's economic growth. This positive trend marks a solid start for the world's second-largest economy as it begins the new year.

China is the world's second's largest consumer market. Last year, its total retail sales of consumer goods grew by 7.2 percent to reach 47.15 trillion yuan last year, hitting a record high. Final consumption expenditure contributed 82.5 percent to China's economic growth last year, up 43.1 percentage points year on year.

China's super-large market, ongoing urbanization and evolving consumption structure provide broad space for consumption growth. And such huge potential will continuously translate into real consumption as the country expands domestic demand, through developing digital, green and health promotion consumption and boosting spending on big-ticket items such as new energy vehicles and electronic products, among other moves.

Given the sustained economic recovery and overall improvement of the employment landscape, residents' income is expected to continue growing steadily, thereby bolstering their purchasing power. The consumption potential of the Chinese market will be further unleashed this year, boosting the momentum of China's economic recovery. 

Related information
  • Mystery artist who erected signs comparing pothole
  • The 20 best shows to watch On Demand this weekend
  • Would you like a cicada salad? The monstrous little noisemakers descend on a New Orleans menu
  • Revealed: Why you should always take your own sandwiches to the airport
  • Yvette Fielding says her Most Haunted co
  • Pregnant Rooney Mara dresses her baby bump in head
  • A former Russian tycoon who once led separatist region launches a hunger strike in Azerbaijan jail
  • Todd, Julie Chrisley appeal bank fraud and tax evasion convictions
Recommended content
  • Medics remove 150 MAGGOTS from a woman's mouth after dental procedure left her with rotting tissue
  • Google is combining its Android software and Pixel hardware divisions to more broadly integrate AI
  • Taylor Swift channels her bridal Grammy look in Fortnight video teaser
  • Caitlin Clark 'is set to sign eight
  • Dodgers acquire pitcher Yohan Ramírez from Mets for cash
  • Start of Sen. Bob Menendez's bribery trial is delayed a week to mid