U.S. and China Bid for Tourism With Expanded Visa Deal, WhuuPeee
By Jess Macy Yu November 11, 2014
Americans studying and working in China have welcomed the announcement
that, starting Wednesday, both China and the United States will begin
offering each other’s citizens multiple-entry visas of up to 10 years.
President Obama
announced the agreement in a speech Monday evening at the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation summit meeting, saying that students could receive
five-year visas, while tourists and business travelers could be granted
10-year visas.
“I’m happy for it
because I definitely plan on being here for longer than one year,” said
Kyle Obermann, 22, from Austin, Tex., who is studying Chinese at Peking
University in Beijing. “It’ll be nice to not worry about the housing
permit and red tape and paying fees in just a one-year limit.”
The visa agreement
represents an attempt by the United States and China to advance cultural
exchanges and to benefit both of their economies by easing the flow of
trade and investment. Previously, Chinese and American travelers usually
were limited to one-year visas.
In his speech, Mr.
Obama cited the 1.8 million Chinese who visited the United States last
year and contributed $21 billion and 100,000 jobs to the American
economy.
“This agreement could
help us more than quadruple those numbers,” Mr. Obama said, shortly
before the White House released a statement forecasting that by 2021,
Chinese travelers to the United States will bring in an estimated $85
billion a year.
The announcement came
as Chinese interest in traveling to the United States is at an all-time
high. Chinese tourists contributed $9.8 billion in 2013 to the United
States economy, according to Brand USA, an initiative established under
the 2009 Trade Promotion Act to promote tourism to the United States.
The primary reasons for Chinese travel are holidays or to visit a
relative or friend, and the leading destinations are California and New
York.
Forecasts for tourism to China are less rosy.
Last year, overall visits by foreign tourists to China were down by 3.3
percent from 2012, a decline attributed to a stagnant global economy,
the rising value of the renminbi and reports of environmental pollution
in China. According to a study
published by Travel China Guide, a leading online tour operations
company in China, there were 3.1 million visits by Americans to China
last year on tourist visas, making up 11.8 percent of tourists. That
ranked them third after visitors from Asia and Europe.
Still, the new visa regulations have the potential of attracting more Americans to China.
“The new policy will
make a lot of things easier, and help people avoid some troublesome
aspects of getting a work permit,” said Amber James, 24, from West Palm
Beach, Fla., who is a counselor at Elite Scholars China, an organization
in Beijing that prepares Chinese high school students for admission to
American colleges. “If I’m going to be in China long term, this is an
avenue I’d definitely go.”
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