Chinese Economy's Spring Festival Holiday Data Highlights

 February 22, 2021
People visit an ancient cultural street in Tianjin, north China, Feb. 17, 2021, the last day of this year's Spring Festival holiday. [Photo by Sun Fanyue/Xinhua]

 

BEIJING, Feb. 20 (Xinhua) — China's economy continued to gather steam during the Spring Festival period despite millions of people staying put for the weeklong holiday which started on Feb. 11, which usually sees mass migration across the country.

The following are data highlights revealing China's economic vitality during the holiday:

— Online payments through online Chinese payment clearinghouse NetsUnion and card payment giant China UnionPay surged over the weeklong holiday.

Online payments on the two platforms from Feb. 11 to Feb. 17 totaled 6.36 trillion yuan (about 985.5 billion U.S. dollars), data from the two platforms shows.

— The sales revenue of China's catering sector during the holiday was 5.4 percent higher than it was during the Spring Festival in 2019, indicating the sector is returning to pre-COVID-19 levels.

The sales revenue of the sector during the Feb. 11 to Feb. 17 period soared 358.4 percent from the Spring Festival holiday in 2020, which was hit by the country's rapid and massive response to COVID-19, according to value-added tax data released by the State Taxation Administration.

— China's major coastal ports were busy during the holiday amid the strong recovery of the Chinese economy, with the container throughput of major hub ports growing rapidly, according to the latest data from the China Ports and Harbours Association.

During the period, the container throughput at Shanghai Port increased by more than 20 percent compared with the figure from 2020, while the container throughput at Ningbo Zhoushan Port increased by 28.85 percent.

 

(Source: Xinhua)

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