Impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences
This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide online surveys were conducted, one in February 2020 when COVID-19 cases started to peak in China and another one in June 2020 when COVID-19...
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Published in | Tourism management perspectives Vol. 40; p. 100895 |
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Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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Elsevier Ltd
01.10.2021
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Abstract | This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide online surveys were conducted, one in February 2020 when COVID-19 cases started to peak in China and another one in June 2020 when COVID-19 was a global pandemic; both survey studies were accompanied with semi-structured in-depth interviews and altogether 37 interviews were conducted in two stages. Based on both quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data, the research identified that: 1) COVID-19 significantly reduced Chinese nationals' preferences to travel to countries with high infection numbers, and geographically faraway, administratively and culturally distant outbound destinations; 2) Chinese nationals reduced their preferences in all travel modes and most of the tourism forms, but most of them would prefer nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19; and 3) shortened trips in short travel distance are preferred after COVID-19. The findings offer rich insights and practical implications for governments, industry organisations, and tourism operators to formulate tourism recovery strategies toward Chinese tourists.
•This study examined the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences.•Two rounds of nation-wide online surveys and semi-structured in-depth interviews were employed.•The findings yielded that COVID-19 had changed Chinese people's outbound destination preferences.•Chinese nationals preferred nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19.•Shortened trips in short travel distance were preferred after COVID-19. |
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AbstractList | This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide online surveys were conducted, one in February 2020 when COVID-19 cases started to peak in China and another one in June 2020 when COVID-19 was a global pandemic; both survey studies were accompanied with semi-structured in-depth interviews and altogether 37 interviews were conducted in two stages. Based on both quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data, the research identified that: 1) COVID-19 significantly reduced Chinese nationals' preferences to travel to countries with high infection numbers, and geographically faraway, administratively and culturally distant outbound destinations; 2) Chinese nationals reduced their preferences in all travel modes and most of the tourism forms, but most of them would prefer nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19; and 3) shortened trips in short travel distance are preferred after COVID-19. The findings offer rich insights and practical implications for governments, industry organisations, and tourism operators to formulate tourism recovery strategies toward Chinese tourists.
•This study examined the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences.•Two rounds of nation-wide online surveys and semi-structured in-depth interviews were employed.•The findings yielded that COVID-19 had changed Chinese people's outbound destination preferences.•Chinese nationals preferred nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19.•Shortened trips in short travel distance were preferred after COVID-19. This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide online surveys were conducted, one in February 2020 when COVID-19 cases started to peak in China and another one in June 2020 when COVID-19 was a global pandemic; both survey studies were accompanied with semi-structured in-depth interviews and altogether 37 interviews were conducted in two stages. Based on both quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data, the research identified that: 1) COVID-19 significantly reduced Chinese nationals' preferences to travel to countries with high infection numbers, and geographically faraway, administratively and culturally distant outbound destinations; 2) Chinese nationals reduced their preferences in all travel modes and most of the tourism forms, but most of them would prefer nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19; and 3) shortened trips in short travel distance are preferred after COVID-19. The findings offer rich insights and practical implications for governments, industry organisations, and tourism operators to formulate tourism recovery strategies toward Chinese tourists.This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide online surveys were conducted, one in February 2020 when COVID-19 cases started to peak in China and another one in June 2020 when COVID-19 was a global pandemic; both survey studies were accompanied with semi-structured in-depth interviews and altogether 37 interviews were conducted in two stages. Based on both quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data, the research identified that: 1) COVID-19 significantly reduced Chinese nationals' preferences to travel to countries with high infection numbers, and geographically faraway, administratively and culturally distant outbound destinations; 2) Chinese nationals reduced their preferences in all travel modes and most of the tourism forms, but most of them would prefer nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19; and 3) shortened trips in short travel distance are preferred after COVID-19. The findings offer rich insights and practical implications for governments, industry organisations, and tourism operators to formulate tourism recovery strategies toward Chinese tourists. This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide online surveys were conducted, one in February 2020 when COVID-19 cases started to peak in China and another one in June 2020 when COVID-19 was a global pandemic; both survey studies were accompanied with semi-structured in-depth interviews and altogether 37 interviews were conducted in two stages. Based on both quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data, the research identified that: 1) COVID-19 significantly reduced Chinese nationals' preferences to travel to countries with high infection numbers, and geographically faraway, administratively and culturally distant outbound destinations; 2) Chinese nationals reduced their preferences in all travel modes and most of the tourism forms, but most of them would prefer nature-based, rural, and cultural destinations after COVID-19; and 3) shortened trips in short travel distance are preferred after COVID-19. The findings offer rich insights and practical implications for governments, industry organisations, and tourism operators to formulate tourism recovery strategies toward Chinese tourists. |
ArticleNumber | 100895 |
Author | Huang, Songshan (Sam) Shao, Yuhong Liu, Xinyi Zeng, Ying Li, Zhiyong |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Songshan (Sam) surname: Huang fullname: Huang, Songshan (Sam) email: s.huang@ecu.edu.au organization: School of Business and Law, Edith Cowan University, Perth, Australia – sequence: 2 givenname: Yuhong surname: Shao fullname: Shao, Yuhong email: scu_shaoyuhong@126.com organization: School of Tourism, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China – sequence: 3 givenname: Ying surname: Zeng fullname: Zeng, Ying email: zengying@stu.scu.edu.cn organization: School of Tourism, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China – sequence: 4 givenname: Xinyi surname: Liu fullname: Liu, Xinyi email: liuxinyiscu@126.com organization: School of Tourism, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China – sequence: 5 givenname: Zhiyong surname: Li fullname: Li, Zhiyong email: sculzy@scu.edu.cn organization: School of Tourism, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China |
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Keywords | COVID-19 Outbound travel Tourist psychology Chinese tourist Travel preference |
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Snippet | This paper examines the impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences. Employing a mixed-method research design, two rounds of nation-wide... |
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SubjectTerms | Chinese tourist COVID-19 Outbound travel Tourist psychology Travel preference |
Title | Impacts of COVID-19 on Chinese nationals' tourism preferences |
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