February 6, 2013
Indian and Chinese tourists to Australia have tripled in the past decade. Indian visits went from 45,000 to 160,000.
February 6, 2013
Indian and Chinese tourists to Australia have tripled in the past decade. Indian visits went from 45,000 to 160,000.
Australia's strong dollar has done little to dampen its popularity with Chinese and Indian visitors, with tourist numbers from those countries tripling in the past decade.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics said there were 630,000 visits from Chinese tourists in 2012 compared with 190,000 in 2002. Indian visits went from 45,000 to 160,000 in the same period.
"Despite a high Australian dollar, Australia's short-term visitor numbers were up by nearly five percent since 2011 with 6.1 million short trips made to Australia — 270,000 more than we saw in 2011," said Neil Scott, the bureau's assistant director of demography.
Neighboring New Zealand was Australia's largest source of visitors, accounting for 1.2 million trips or one in five visitors, but China had overtaken Britain, the United States and Japan to bag the number two spot.
One in ten visitors to Australia was now from China, Scott said, with Asia now accounting for seven of the top ten source territories.
Japan was number five, with 5.8 percent of total visits, followed by Singapore (5.6 percent) Malaysia (4.3 percent), South Korea (3.2 percent), Hong Kong (2.9 percent) and India (2.6 percent) at number 10.
More than two thirds of Australia's short-term visitors came to holiday or visit friends and family, and the peak age group was 25-29 years old. The average stay was 11 days.
New Zealand was the destination of choice for travelling Australians, accounting for 13.4 percent of all overseas trips.
Indonesia ranked second at 11.1 percent followed by the US (10.5 percent), Thailand (7.6 percent), Britain (6.0 percent), China (4.6 percent), Fiji (4.0 percent), Singapore (3.7 percent), Malaysia (3.2 percent) and Hong Kong (2.8 percent).
Courtesy: AFP