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Short-term stays boost sharing economy, finds report

By Ouyang Shijia | China Daily | Updated: 2019-07-15 09:16

Liu Fang (center), a guesthouse owner in Wuyuan, a county in Jiangxi province, informs her guests about the history of Huizhou-style antique houses on June 28. [Photo/Xinhua]

Curiosity and a sense of adventure among wanderlust-bitten Chinese travelers are imparting an exciting touch to the business of holidays, encouraging people to go beyond conventional hotel stays and soak in new experiences through vacation rentals, a report has found.

Released by the State Information Center, the report said China's short-term lodging sector, which includes the segment of homestays, is booming, thanks to its relatively lower costs, conveniences and novel experiences on offer.

Transaction volume of the sector rose 37.5 percent year-on-year to 16.5 billion yuan ($2.4 billion) in 2018, the report stated.

Various online platforms that champion the sector's cause offered 3.5 million housing units for short-term stays in nearly 500 Chinese cities last year.

The sector now boasts more than 4 million landlords or innkeepers and nearly 80 million users, the report said.

"Compared with the traditional online travel agencies, vacation rental platforms perform two key functions. One, they help landlords reduce operational and maintenance costs and also offer various value-added services to customers. Two, the platforms use sophisticated systems to support the entire social credit system," said Yu Fengxia, deputy director of the Sharing Economy Research Center, which is part of the SIC.

Yu noted first-and quasi-first-tier cities still constitute the main market for shared accommodation, while some second-and third-tier cities are accelerating the push to embrace the emerging sharing economy. Yu said 76 percent of tourists will choose second-and third-tier cities as destinations.

According to the report, Chengdu in Sichuan province topped all other cities in terms of the number of active users, followed by the three municipalities of Beijing, Shanghai and Chongqing, and Xi'an in Shaanxi province.

Lijiang in Yunnan province, Qinhuangdao in Hebei province and Guilin in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region have seen explosive growth in bookings on short-term lodging platforms, rising 650 percent, 600 percent and 300 percent year-on-year in 2018 respectively.

The report said an increasing number of younger people prefer to list their properties on such platforms or rent properties listed on them. Some 70 percent of the hosts and landlords on major short-term accommodation platforms were born in the 1980s and 1990s.

Females (60 percent) outnumber males among hosts or landlords on such platforms. Among all room guests, more than 70 percent are aged between 18 and 35.

Family vacations, with pets as part of the touring party, are a new trend. Nearly 39 percent of those booking short-term accommodation on platforms bring along their families. More than 40 percent of platform users have pets, among which nearly 67 percent prefer taking pets along.

With people's consumption power growing and their demand for high-quality services increasing, users will choose comfortable middle-and high-end accommodation instead of cheap ones. Therefore, participants will focus on offering mid-level and high-end homestays, the report said.

Quality is the new buzzword in China's sharing economy as focus shifts from speedy business expansion. The report said the annual growth rate of short-term lodgings is expected to remain around 50 percent in the next three years.

Jiang Qiping, secretary-general of the Center for Informatization Study, which is part of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said China's sharing economy will continue to expand, which will bring a wide range of services to people.

"To better develop the sharing economy, we need to learn from the experience so far and from lessons in the consumer internet field, so as to grasp new opportunities brought by the industrial internet," he said.

"Sharing economy participants should better cater to people's increasing need for life services and help improve the quality of users' lives."

Jiang said the key is to strengthen self regulation in the emerging sector and create a better environment for its further development.

"On the one hand, providers of short-term accommodation should become both supervisors and defenders of the sector, fully taking the responsibility for its present and future, in terms of service quality and safety. On the other hand, the government needs to strengthen the supervision and administration of the market and widen market access," he said.

Another report released by the SIC earlier this year showed China's sharing economy saw transactions worth 2.94 trillion yuan last year, up nearly 42 percent year-on-year.

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