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Chinese tourists are the export that California is chasing

TOURISM

The California Travel and Tourism Commission has set up shop in Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai, aiming to market the state more aggressively as a destination for foreign visitors.

April 09, 2009|Don Lee

SHANGHAI — Five years after closing its overseas trade bureau here, California launched a new office Wednesday aimed at getting a bigger share of one of China's biggest exports: tourists.

The California Travel and Tourism Commission has set up shop in three locations in China over the last couple of months, in Beijing and Guangzhou in addition to Shanghai. The Chinese offices will cost $750,000 to operate this year, but California taxpayers won't be footing the bill. The funds will come entirely from assessments to the state's tourism industry, said Dale E. Bonner, California's secretary of Business, Transportation and Housing, who was in Shanghai for the official opening.


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"We have to make the investment now to lay the foundation for the [economic] recovery," he said from inside a yellow-carpeted Shanghai municipal bus, with Mickey Mouse, the Golden Gate Bridge and other California icons painted on the exterior. As part of the marketing campaign, four such California-branded buses will be rolling through the streets of China's largest city over the next month.

Nearly 46 million Chinese traveled outside of the mainland last year, yet only about half a million of them went to the U.S. The Golden State got the lion's share, California officials said. They estimated that 275,000 Chinese visited California in 2008, staying an average of three days.

Mainland Chinese tourists still rank far below visitors to California from Britain, Japan and South Korea. But their numbers are growing at a faster pace.

Chinese tour groups only recently started to arrive in the U.S., after Washington and Beijing last year lifted a ban on leisure group travel to America. And in recent months, representatives of U.S. cities and states have been tripping over one another promoting their sites at tourism fairs throughout China.

"The Chinese market represents the greatest potential for outbound tourists," said Caroline Beteta, chief executive of the California Travel and Tourism Commission, a privately funded nonprofit organization. "This is a growth industry for California," she said in Shanghai.

California closed a separate trade-promotion office here at the start of 2004, along with 11 other overseas bureaus, because of a $40-billion state budget deficit. Since then, officials have tried to boost California exports to China through targeted trade missions and other efforts.

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