
Ticket Stub Economy: How Holidays Ignite Local Spending
Discover how the ticket stub economy is turning simple travel tickets and attraction receipts into holiday spending power across the Chinese mainland.
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Discover how the ticket stub economy is turning simple travel tickets and attraction receipts into holiday spending power across the Chinese mainland.
China’s National Day and Mid-Autumn holidays drive cultural events, record-breaking travel, and consumer innovation across the Chinese mainland.
President Trump’s 145% tariffs on imports from the Chinese mainland are driving up toy costs and risking shortages for this year’s Christmas season.
May Day holiday travel hit 314M trips (+6.4% YoY) with ¥180.3B in spending (+8%), showcasing the Chinese mainland’s robust domestic demand and policy-driven growth.
In the first two days of the May Day holiday, China’s box office revenue exceeded 300 million yuan, highlighting a robust rebound in the entertainment market.
China’s Year of the Snake sees a surge in consumer spending driven by national policies and holiday initiatives, boosting economic growth in 2025.
Regions across the Chinese mainland are launching innovative consumption models to boost the holiday economy during the National Day week from October 1 to 7.