February 8 marks the start of the Chinese Lunar New Year
Spending during this season in 2014 on shopping and dining
was around 610 billion yuan – about US$100 billion in a country of extreme
wealth that is also home to 7% of the world’s poor. This is almost double the
amount American shoppers spent over the Thanksgiving weekend.
Migrant workers are the backbone of China’s low-cost and
labour intensive economy. They make up an estimated 278m workers who have
migrated from rural parts of China to work in the big cities and for many,
Chinese New Year is their only holiday. It’s often the only chance they have to
spend some time with their entire family, including children who are left with
their grandparents. Chinese New Year is believed to be behind the largest
movement of people in the world. Up to 2.91 billion trips are expected to be
made this year via road, railway, air and water. 100,000 migrant workers stuck
in Guangzhou train station in the heart of China’s manufacturing region due to
train delays, as they try to make their long journey home for the holiday. Migrant
workers bring home their hard earned cash, which is vital to the local rural
economy. Earnings from the big cities enable families to move into new and
better homes, send their children to school, purchase livestock and other home
additions such as new flat screen TVs.
Wealthier Chinese opt to avoid the New Year chaos and social
obligations by travelling abroad for their holidays. Last year 5.2m left
mainland China over the holiday. The most popular destinations are other
countries in East Asia, as well as the US and Australia. China is the biggest
outbound tourism spending country, with vast amounts spent on luxury goods. In
2015 Chinese consumers spent more than US$100 billion on luxury goods,
accounting for 46% of the world’s total. Around 80% of these sales are made
abroad.
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