Beijing Tourism Green Book: The situation of inbound tourism is not optimistic

The Beijing Tourism Green Book "Beijing Tourism Development Report 2014", edited by the Beijing Tourism Society and published by the Social Science Literature Publishing House, was released on June 30th. The report points out that in recent years, the number of inbound tourists to Beijing has been continuously declining due to multiple factors. In 2013, the decline exceeded the national average, which has affected the achievement of the inbound tourism goals of Beijing's 12th Five Year Plan.

 

The Green Book points out that since 2008, the number of domestic tourists in Beijing has been steadily increasing, while the gap between the number of foreign tourists and domestic tourists is significant, with slow growth and a downward trend after 2012. For Beijing, the number of inbound tourists in 2013 was 4.501 million, a decrease of 10% year-on-year, accounting for less than 2% of the total tourism reception in Beijing, which is far from the positioning of a "world tourism city".

 

The Green Book also pointed out that although the number of inbound tourists and foreign exchange income from tourism have both declined year-on-year, in terms of quality and efficiency, the proportion of foreign exchange income from tourism in Beijing in 2013 was 4.2 times that of its population, with an average per capita expenditure of 1065 US dollars, a year-on-year increase of 3.6%. Among them, shopping consumption has significantly increased, and inbound tourism remains the most contributing component of Beijing's tourism sector.

 

The world's largest circus city officially kicks off Xiamen enters a new era of night tourism

 

pexels-photo-1369476

 

The Beijing Tourism Green Book "Beijing Tourism Development Report 2014", edited by the Beijing Tourism Society and published by the Social Science Literature Publishing House, was released on June 30th. The report points out that in recent years, the number of inbound tourists to Beijing has been continuously declining due to multiple factors. In 2013, the decline exceeded the national average, which has affected the achievement of the inbound tourism goals of Beijing's 12th Five Year Plan.

 

The Green Book points out that since 2008, the number of domestic tourists in Beijing has been steadily increasing, while the gap between the number of foreign tourists and domestic tourists is significant, with slow growth and a downward trend after 2012. For Beijing, the number of inbound tourists in 2013 was 4.501 million, a decrease of 10% year-on-year, accounting for less than 2% of the total tourism reception in Beijing, which is far from the positioning of a "world tourism city".

 

The Green Book also pointed out that although the number of inbound tourists and foreign exchange income from tourism have both declined year-on-year, in terms of quality and efficiency, the proportion of foreign exchange income from tourism in Beijing in 2013 was 4.2 times that of its population, with an average per capita expenditure of 1065 US dollars, a year-on-year increase of 3.6%. Among them, shopping consumption has significantly increased, and inbound tourism remains the most contributing component of Beijing's tourism sector.

 

The world's largest circus city officially kicks off Xiamen enters a new era of night tourism

 

pexels-photo-1369476

 

Created on:2023-12-19 17:10

Beijing Tourism Green Book: The situation of inbound tourism is not optimistic