Off the wire
Kenya says repatriation of Somali refugees on course  • South Sudan seeks to improve trade ties with Ethiopia  • Total number of Zika infections in Singapore rises to 304  • 1st LD: Dump site explosion in Benin capital kills 100, injures at least 200  • World Bank gives Egypt 1 bln USD in support of economic reform plan  • Sri Lanka targets at least 300,000 Chinese tourists this year  • 3rd LD-Writethru: China firmly opposes DPRK nuclear test  • Urgent: Dump site explosion in Benin capital kills 100, injures at least 200  • Australia increases Pacific disaster relief  • Xinhua China-related world news summary at 0930 GMT, Sept. 9  
You are here:   Home

China-U.S. tourism sees decade of progress: official

Xinhua, September 9, 2016 Adjust font size:

Tourism between China and the United States has seen significant progress in the past decade, an official said at an ongoing tourism forum in northwest China.

The combined number of tourists from China traveling to the United States and vice versa has exceeded 30 million since the two countries launched a high-level tourism dialogue mechanism in 2007, Li Jinzao, head of the China National Tourism Administration, said at the China-U.S. Tourism Leadership Summit in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region on Friday.

Li said the mechanism has enhanced communication and mutual understanding between people of the two countries and boosted economic growth.

China and the United States are important tourism sources for each other. Since Chinese group tours to the United States began in June 2008, tourism industries in both countries have expanded. Last year, about 4.75 million trips were made between China and the United States, with more than 2 million U.S. tourists coming to China. This year's trips between the two countries are expected to exceed 5 million, a record high.

In 2014, Chinese tourists spent about 165 billion U.S. dollars on overseas tourism, ranking first in global tourism spending, according to the World Tourism Organization under the United Nations. The United States was second in the ranking, with about 111 billion dollars spent. Endi