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Chinese tourists
This Week in AsiaEconomics

Move over Aussies, the Chinese are coming. And Indonesia can’t get enough of them

Bali volcano scare is only a blip as the number of Chinese tourists to Indonesia continues to rise exponentially

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A fisherman repairs his sail with Mount Agung volcano in the background in Karangasem, Bali, Indonesia. Chinese tourism numbers are up for the year on the Indonesian island, but the threat of a volcanic eruption is causing many cancellations. Photo: AP
Jeffrey Hutton
When Elsye Deliana first moved to Bali to work as a tour guide, she noticed visitors to the Indonesian island tended to hail from Hong Kong, Taiwan and other parts of Asia. But starting around 2010, the number of visitors from mainland China eclipsed those from Taiwan for the first time. From there they grew rapidly, doubling in four years and then doubling again two years after that.

Now the owner of her own agency – PT Star Cemerlang Wisata – Deliana says Chinese tourists are the mainstay of her business.

“In the past, people left China rarely. But in the last five years, the growth has been remarkable,” she says.

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Balinese people arrive at Besaki tempel to pray for Mount Agung during Purnama ceremony (full moon) in Karangasem, on Bali island. Photo: FP
Balinese people arrive at Besaki tempel to pray for Mount Agung during Purnama ceremony (full moon) in Karangasem, on Bali island. Photo: FP

Even as a potential explosion from its eastern volcano, Mount Agung, is scaring off tourists in droves, Chinese are reshaping Bali’s tourism industry, which is thought to comprise about 80 per cent of the economy.

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“Bali is in great demand. The numbers are increasing extraordinarily fast,” said I Ketut Ardana, local chairman of the Association of Indonesian Tours and Travel Agencies.

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