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Why Fewer Chinese Are Shopping in Europe’s Fashion Hubs

Post-Covid spend by US tourists in Europe has surged past 2019 levels. Chinese travellers, by contrast, have largely favoured domestic and regional destinations like Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan.
Louis Vuitton store celebrating Lunar New Year in China with a dragon outside the store.
Lunar New Year decorations outside a mall in Thailand, a country that is one of the more popular destinations this holiday. (Courtesy)
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This week, China was on the move for the country’s Spring Festival holiday, which kicks off straight after Lunar New Year. But while well-to-do Chinese are travelling again, they are staying much closer to home.

US tourist spend.

According to data from Global Blue and Bernstein, while Mainland Chinese shopping in Hong Kong was at 426 percent of 2019 levels in January, and spend in Japan was at 232 percent, Chinese spend in continental Europe is only at 80 percent of 2019 levels.

American spend in key European hubs, by contrast, has surged since the end of the pandemic reaching 290 percent compared to 2019.

To be sure, the majority of travel during China’s 40-day ‘Chunyun’ period has always been domestic, with trips to hometowns particularly popular. But as one indication of the shift, flights from Beijing to Sanya, the Chinese tropical beach destination and duty-free hub, over the Lunar New Year weekend were in such high demand that the cost of a ticket surpassed 10,000 yuan ($1,400), roughly the same as the price of a flight to Paris on the same dates.

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“I was just in Paris in January. Nobody was at the tax refund area but usually there would be a line,” said Aroma Xie, the Shanghai-based director of the showroom Seiya Nakamura 2.24.

Long waits for visas are one barrier, especially when destinations like Singapore and Thailand have dropped visa requirements for Chinese visitors, further boosting Chinese tax-free spending in Asia, which according to Global Blue has already grown to nearly a third higher than what it was in 2019. Chinese footfall in Japan is still less than half of what it was pre-pandemic, according to Global Blue, but the country has seen a recent uptick of Chinese tourists too, and they are spending more. Thanks to a weak yen, they are buying more than twice as much as they did in 2019.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong is expected to welcome 1 million mainland Chinese visitors during the holiday, according to the city’s tourism board, about 80 to 85 percent from where it stood in 2019. Domestic hubs like Chongqing, Kunming and Guilin, which offer shopping and entertainment closer to home are also growing in appeal.

Then there’s the preference for shopping malls of the kind rarely found in Europe, especially amongst those travelling as multi-generational family units. “You’re all in the same place but you can each do your own thing at a mall. It’s not all about one person’s destination, it’s a family destination,” Xie explained.

Economic uncertainty, including high unemployment amongst young Chinese is yet another factor. It is younger shoppers who travel more independently and are best able to navigate European street-facing stores without the need for the comforts of a lounge and other mall amenities, that have taken the biggest hit financially. A generation who knew only prosperity has had to confront redundancies and salary cuts, even in sectors like technology, said Gary Bowerman, the director of Check-in Asia, a tourism research firm, and author of the book “The New Chinese Traveller.”

Strained politics and racial tensions after Covid-19 that led to an upswing in anti-Asian attacks are also part of the puzzle. “There is definitely a feeling of uncertainty about international travel after reading western press,” said Huishan Zhang, a Chinese designer based in London. And with videos circulating on social media of anti-Asian assailants hurling insults like “go back to China,” some Chinese have decided not to come in the first place.

France is the outlier in Europe, where according to Global Blue senior vice president Mathieu Grac, Chinese spend has now returned to 2019 levels. That’s a strong rebound compared to Italy which sits at just 64 percent and Spain at 81 percent compared to 2019. But Bernstein said it expects other European countries to catch up starting around mid-year.

China is also taking steps to boost travel flows between the regions. Last November, it waived visa requirements for citizens of five European countries: France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands to visit China. Although the gesture was not fully reciprocated, it resulted in some goodwill measures. Germany stepped up the processing times of Chinese visas dramatically, according to Bernstein, and France announced a new kind of visa which allows Chinese who complete certain studies stay for up to five years.

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Further Reading

Where to Engage Shoppers This Chinese New Year

While travel to Europe remains muted, Chinese shoppers are flocking to Singapore, Thailand and other Southeast Asian destinations where fashion retailers are hoping Lunar New Year marketing investments will pay off.

About the author
Tiffany Ap

Tiffany Ap is Senior Correspondent at The Business of Fashion. She is based in New York and covers marketing and the critical China market.

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