# Spring%20Festival
Latest news and articles about Spring%20Festival
Total: 47 articles found

China’s Consumer Prices Tick Up as Producer Inflation Eases — Seasonal Consumer Bounce Meets Commodity-Driven Input Costs
February’s Chinese CPI rose 1.3% year-on-year and 1.0% month-on-month, boosted by a post-holiday surge in services. Producer prices continued to recover, with PPI up 0.4% month-on-month and an annual decline narrowing to 0.9%, reflecting rising commodity prices and firmer industrial demand.

Kuaishou’s Spring Festival Gambit: Red‑Envelope Games Drive DAU to a New Peak
Kuaishou’s 2026 Spring Festival campaign produced record daily activity driven by gamified cash incentives and QR‑based greetings, with a 60% rise in users of a shake‑to‑get red‑envelope feature and nearly 80 million participants across key events. The results highlight the platform’s skill at converting cultural rituals into digital engagement, but leave open questions about sustainability and costs.

China’s Record Spring Festival: 5.96 Billion Trips and a New Model of Cultural Consumption
China’s nine‑day Spring Festival generated historic travel and spending—5.96 billion domestic trips and 8.03 trillion yuan—highlighting a rapid reshaping of tourism around immersive cultural experiences, film and media tie‑ins, and stronger inbound flows. The holiday demonstrated tourism’s growing economic and soft‑power role, even as it exposes challenges in sustainability and regional inequality.

China’s New Year Rewired: Urbanization, ‘Reverse Spring Festival’ and the Globalization of Holidaying
China’s Lunar New Year travel has changed shape: highways were unexpectedly quiet before the holiday and surged after, even as Chinese tourists packed domestic attractions and flew abroad. The shift mirrors a deeper social transformation driven by a 67.89% urbanisation rate — over 950 million urban residents — which is weakening the automatic expectation of returning to ancestral villages and enabling reverse migration, longer outbound trips, and more discretionary uses of holiday time.

Guarding the Long Road Home: Armed Police at Hangzhou East Hold the Line During Record Spring Travel
As China faces a record 9.5 billion cross‑regional movements this Lunar New Year, armed police at Hangzhou East station are combining security patrols with public‑service duties to keep a major transport hub running smoothly. Their work reflects both practical crowd management needs and the state’s broader approach of using uniformed forces to reassure the public during large‑scale population movements.

Lunar New Year Exodus Strains Hainan: Flights and Ferries Sold Out as Return Rush Drives Prices Skyward
As the Lunar New Year return peak hits, Hainan is experiencing acute transport shortages: flights from Haikou to major mainland cities are selling out and ferry crossings on the Qiongzhou Strait have no available seats. The squeeze reflects a strong inbound tourism rebound to Hainan and an asymmetric flow of passengers that has pushed outbound fares sharply higher while some inbound fares have plunged.

China's Highway EV Chargers Coped with a Surge During Spring Festival, Signalling Faster Long‑Distance Electrification
China's monitored highway charging network recorded 1.4099 million sessions and an average daily delivery of about 11.8 GWh during the first three days of the Spring Festival, up 63% year‑on‑year. The National Energy Administration reported stable operation and said it will step up monitoring ahead of the return‑trip peak.

China's Highway EV Charging Surges Over Lunar New Year, Infrastructure Holds Up — but Return Peak Looms
China logged 1.41 million highway EV charging sessions in the first three days of the Lunar New Year, with daily charging of 11.8 million kWh — up 63% year-on-year. Authorities report stable operations and plan intensified monitoring for the holiday return peak, underscoring rapid EV adoption and the need for grid and charging-network upgrades.

A Thousand Cold Kilometres for a New Year Reunion: Duty, Family and the Quiet Rituals of China’s Border Guards
A northern border garrison in China became the site of a 40-hour family reunion when a soldier who has served 19 years welcomed his wife and children for the Lunar New Year. The story symbolises the personal costs of long deployments, the logistical demands of frontier posts, and the way state media uses such vignettes to frame the PLA as both dutiful and domestically rooted.

Forty‑Five Billion Yuan and a New Front: China’s Tech Giants Turn Lunar New Year Into an AI User‑Education Arms Race
China’s biggest tech firms spent more than 45 billion yuan over the 2026 Lunar New Year in an AI‑focused red‑envelope battle that mixed cash prizes, task‑based incentives and offline vouchers. The campaign was a large‑scale acquisition and product‑education experiment whose success will be decided not by downloads or single‑night peaks but by whether users form lasting habits and remain active after the holiday.

Beijing Pumps Rmb62.5bn into Spring Festival Stimulus, Turning Smart Gadgets Into This Year’s Must‑Buy
China has launched a Rmb62.5 billion Spring Festival subsidy program that prioritises trade‑ins for affordable smart devices, offering consumers 15% rebates up to Rmb500 on phones, tablets and wearables priced under Rmb6,000. The measures aim to stimulate near‑term spending while accelerating mass adoption of connected hardware, benefiting mid‑range manufacturers and related supply chains.

China’s New Year’s Eve Moves Online: Delivery Platforms Vie for Dinner Orders as Profitability Sours
China’s major delivery platforms have turned Lunar New Year’s Eve meals into a strategic instant-retail scenario, each adopting different approaches: JD focuses on quality and service, Taobao on targeted subsidies, and Meituan on steady platform integration. Operational improvements and riders’ willingness to work through the holiday are underpinning a permanent expansion of festival delivery, even as profitability pressures force more nuanced competition.