Industry eyes independent, high-spending Chinese tourists
Large shopping malls have no future, because of this," said Chayaditt Hutanuwatara, chairman of Show DC Corp., pointing to his black smartphone on a table in front of him. "International travelers need a different reason to shop, so we are going to offer a variety under one roof."
Chayaditt's plans for the six-floor sprawling complex, spread over 180,000 sq. meters, include fleets of 130 tourist buses shuttling travelers from Bangkok's two airports and from hotels across the city to Show DC, which plans to open its doors in April 2017.
Besides entertainment venues, which will occupy 50% of the floor space and a broad menu of dining and shopping options, the complex will house the "Bangkok City Lounge," which aims to be like a central tourism service center. "I am building this not for tour groups but for the independent traveler from China, India, elsewhere," Chayaditt said. "The paradigm of tourist business has to be changed."
Thai officials have pursued similar bold measures, with a growing crackdown on "zero-dollar Chinese tourists." Launched in September with the help of Chinese authorities, the campaign targeted Chinese tour companies offering cheap tour packages to largely first-time travelers that, according to reports, resulted in more pain than pleasure for both the tourists and Thai businesses catering to them. The Thai initiative, shutting down three "zero-dollar tour companies" and impounding 2,150 tour buses, marked an about-turn after an earlier push to boost tourist numbers on the back of such cheap Chinese tours.
According to a Thai tour agent, who did not want to be named, the Chinese tourists groups are "trapped" once they come to Thailand. They are forced to stay, travel and shop in places that are part of this tightly-controlled network, she said.
"If they step out of line or go to a shop not designated, the tourists are scolded, sometime hit and even not given their hotel room keys," she added. "Thailand also loses financially, since the money flows to these Chinese operators and not to Thais."
On the downside, the crackdown on this vibrant market raised alarms back home, as travelers from China slipped dramatically from October, when the country marked its "Golden Week" holiday. As 2016 drew to a close, the Tourism Authority of Thailand revealed that the number of Chinese tourists had fallen by 16% in October, 30% in November and 10% in December compared with the same months in 2015. Consequently, Thailand has scaled down the number of tourist arrivals from China, from 10 million to 8.9 million for 2016.
Yet, Yuthasak Supasorn, TAT's governor, is determined to stay the course. "The government will continue the crackdown on zero-dollar tours and illegal business in a bid to shift to more quality (in the tourism sector)," he told media in mid-December. Kobkarn, the tourism minister, argues likewise that measures are needed to achieve "sustainable growth" in the Chinese sector.
But analysts are warning against this over-dependency on a single market, as tourism receipts from China are expected to reach 400 billion baht in 2016. A slowdown in Chinese tourist numbers cannot be ruled out, warned the Siam Commercial Bank's Economic Intelligence Centre. It urged state and private operators to tap new source markets and to expand tourism services, flagging major sport events and health care as fertile terrain.