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China seeks to tap duty-free shopping potential, adds 21 urban shops amid tourism surge

China will lift the number of urban duty-free shops to 27 as part of the latest move to improve consumption

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A tourist visits a duty-free shop at the Horgos International Border Cooperation Centre on the China-Kazakhstan border. Photo: Xinhua
Mandy Zuoin Shanghai

China will make duty-free purchases more accessible in most major cities by adding 21 downtown shops, including in Guangzhou and Shenzhen, to boost spending amid an inbound tourism surge.

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Eight new shops would be built, while 13 special foreign exchange goods duty-free shops – which only serve returning Chinese travellers – would be upgraded, the Ministry of Finance said in a joint statement with four other departments on Tuesday.

The adjustment came as Beijing steps up efforts to stimulate consumption, including extensive relaxations of visa policies, amid a shaky post-pandemic recovery within the world’s second-largest economy.

The changes will bring the total number of urban duty- free shops to 27 after adding to six existing locations in Beijing and coastal cities.

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According to the guidelines, urban duty-free stores would primarily serve travellers who are set to depart China within the next 60 days, including Chinese nationals.

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