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Bricks and Mortar | Hong Kong’s tourism policy should meet needs of visitors and residents

Better policies and attracting tourists from other countries will help offset influx of mainlanders

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The reliance on mainland Chinese tourists has seen stores selling luxury brands, jewellery, electronics appliances and cosmetics expand aggressively over the past decade. Photo: Bloomberg

The outlook for Hong Kong's retail property market has become a hot topic for debate amid the recent decline in retail sales and proposed changes to the scheme allowing individual mainland tourists to visit the city.

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Figures from the Hong Kong Tourism Board showed the growth rate in overnight visitor arrivals from the mainland declined for the third consecutive month in June. The government's monthly statistics also showed sales revenue fell in June for the fifth month in a row.

However, you wouldn't know anything had changed after visiting the shopping districts and theme parks which were packed with mainland tourists during the summer.

Hong Kong is still a popular destination for mainland tourists. But the government should review its tourism policy and formulate comprehensive measures to reduce the impact of increasing numbers of mainland visitors on the lives of Hong Kong citizens - or risk provoking a new round of protests from locals.

The government needs to create a better environment for both tourists and Hongkongers

Hong Kong received 28.53 million tourists in the first half, with more than 76 per cent from the mainland. The reliance on mainland tourists saw stores selling jewellery, luxury brands, electronics appliances, cosmetics and drugs expand aggressively over the past decade. Many older shops and restaurants have closed and many will not survive because of skyrocketing retail rents. This has affected the lives of ordinary citizens, while the city is losing its unique character at the same time.

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