09-09-2011, 02:05 PM
The Straits Times
Sep 9, 2011
China's 'scheme' parks
Local goverments love them for making officials look good, while developers us them as cover for lucrative projects, but 70% of the over 3,000 parks are losing money
By Peh Shing Huei
BEIJING: In a few years, mainland China will not only have its first Disneyland, but also a Hello Kitty theme park and maybe even the world's first Transformers carnival featuring signature robots Optimus Prime and Bumblebee.
But the entry of such global marquee names does not mean all is cheery in China's amusement parks. In fact, it is quite the opposite.
Some 3,000 theme parks have mushroomed in the country in the past few years - compared to just about 40 in both the United States and Japan - racking up debts for the local government and becoming glaring exhibits of corruption and unauthorised property development.
It is easier in China to get approval for building a theme park - in the name of boosting tourism - than it is to build homes. In central Anhui province, for example, only 50 per cent of the land earmarked for a proposed Chinese zodiac sign theme park is going to the rides and carnival. The rest is stashed away for apartments, according to local media.
Theme parks used as an excuse to secure land
'There are so many theme parks in China because developers use it as an excuse to secure land to build properties,' said analyst Bian Hongdeng.
'Local governments encourage it too because theme parks involve large sums of money and are prominent, making officials look good, and that leads to faster promotions,' said Mr Bian.
With 70 per cent of theme parks currently losing money, the government has admitted it has a problem.
Last month, China's top economic planning agency announced a suspension of new theme parks larger than 20ha or that have a total investment of more than 500 million yuan (S$95 million).
Even when theme parks are truly built with the intent of entertaining people, they have floundered because they rely too much on ticket sales and, most importantly, lack originality.
Most of China's theme parks fall predictably into a few genres: ethnic, safari, aqua, famous world architecture replicas, and Chinese history and culture.
Amusement parks based on Chinese classics like Romance Of The Three Kingdoms and Journey To The West can be found across the country, with at least 50 parks boasting the latter theme.
But none has become a global name, or even a famous China-wide brand.
'Compared to the Disneyland, which has moved into just five countries since 1955, China's theme parks development seems to be in such a rush. The themes of the parks are repetitive,' said the newspaper of the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
To make matters worse, the theme parks face strong competition from other tourist attractions.
'In a city like Hangzhou, for example, there are already so many attractions by the West Lake. Given the limited time that most tourists have, they are not going to visit the theme parks,' said Mr Zhang Guoyi, who runs the World Park in Beijing, which features miniatures of globally famous architecture.
And unlike major theme parks like Universal Studios, which milk lucrative tourist dollars from souvenirs, China's remain heavily reliant on just ticket sales.
That forces the parks to charge higher ticket prices, which turns off cost-conscious Chinese consumers.
'Theme parks have been too reliant on ticket sales, which make up nearly 90 per cent of the revenue. The ideal should be at about 50 per cent,' said Shanghai-based tourism observer Zhao Huanyan.
Yet despite the downside, theme parks have proliferated across China, with an extra boost in the last three years.
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Beijing offered fast-track approvals for these entertainment projects to encourage use of the government's four trillion yuan in stimulus money and to boost domestic consumption.
That allowed developers to use amusement parks as covers for more lucrative real estate developments, prompting experts to wonder how effective the new theme park ban would be.
As it is, just weeks after the suspension was announced, state-run Xinhua news agency reported a new multi-billion yuan military theme park to be built on the outskirts of Beijing over the next five years.
The park would comprise a 'fantasyland', where visitors would have an interactive experience with classical military stories and famous battles. There would also be an outdoor square to showcase the development of Chinese warfare.
Analyst Chen Nanjiang wrote on his blog: 'Just like the ban on golf courses, such one size fits all policies which do not take into consideration market demand usually do not get implemented and end up hurting one's authority.
'If foreign brand names like the United States' Six Flags and Korea's Lotte World want to come to China and local authorities are very welcoming, will this one document (from the planning agency) be effective?'
shpeh@sph.com.sg
Sep 9, 2011
China's 'scheme' parks
Local goverments love them for making officials look good, while developers us them as cover for lucrative projects, but 70% of the over 3,000 parks are losing money
By Peh Shing Huei
BEIJING: In a few years, mainland China will not only have its first Disneyland, but also a Hello Kitty theme park and maybe even the world's first Transformers carnival featuring signature robots Optimus Prime and Bumblebee.
But the entry of such global marquee names does not mean all is cheery in China's amusement parks. In fact, it is quite the opposite.
Some 3,000 theme parks have mushroomed in the country in the past few years - compared to just about 40 in both the United States and Japan - racking up debts for the local government and becoming glaring exhibits of corruption and unauthorised property development.
It is easier in China to get approval for building a theme park - in the name of boosting tourism - than it is to build homes. In central Anhui province, for example, only 50 per cent of the land earmarked for a proposed Chinese zodiac sign theme park is going to the rides and carnival. The rest is stashed away for apartments, according to local media.
Theme parks used as an excuse to secure land
'There are so many theme parks in China because developers use it as an excuse to secure land to build properties,' said analyst Bian Hongdeng.
'Local governments encourage it too because theme parks involve large sums of money and are prominent, making officials look good, and that leads to faster promotions,' said Mr Bian.
With 70 per cent of theme parks currently losing money, the government has admitted it has a problem.
Last month, China's top economic planning agency announced a suspension of new theme parks larger than 20ha or that have a total investment of more than 500 million yuan (S$95 million).
Even when theme parks are truly built with the intent of entertaining people, they have floundered because they rely too much on ticket sales and, most importantly, lack originality.
Most of China's theme parks fall predictably into a few genres: ethnic, safari, aqua, famous world architecture replicas, and Chinese history and culture.
Amusement parks based on Chinese classics like Romance Of The Three Kingdoms and Journey To The West can be found across the country, with at least 50 parks boasting the latter theme.
But none has become a global name, or even a famous China-wide brand.
'Compared to the Disneyland, which has moved into just five countries since 1955, China's theme parks development seems to be in such a rush. The themes of the parks are repetitive,' said the newspaper of the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
To make matters worse, the theme parks face strong competition from other tourist attractions.
'In a city like Hangzhou, for example, there are already so many attractions by the West Lake. Given the limited time that most tourists have, they are not going to visit the theme parks,' said Mr Zhang Guoyi, who runs the World Park in Beijing, which features miniatures of globally famous architecture.
And unlike major theme parks like Universal Studios, which milk lucrative tourist dollars from souvenirs, China's remain heavily reliant on just ticket sales.
That forces the parks to charge higher ticket prices, which turns off cost-conscious Chinese consumers.
'Theme parks have been too reliant on ticket sales, which make up nearly 90 per cent of the revenue. The ideal should be at about 50 per cent,' said Shanghai-based tourism observer Zhao Huanyan.
Yet despite the downside, theme parks have proliferated across China, with an extra boost in the last three years.
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Beijing offered fast-track approvals for these entertainment projects to encourage use of the government's four trillion yuan in stimulus money and to boost domestic consumption.
That allowed developers to use amusement parks as covers for more lucrative real estate developments, prompting experts to wonder how effective the new theme park ban would be.
As it is, just weeks after the suspension was announced, state-run Xinhua news agency reported a new multi-billion yuan military theme park to be built on the outskirts of Beijing over the next five years.
The park would comprise a 'fantasyland', where visitors would have an interactive experience with classical military stories and famous battles. There would also be an outdoor square to showcase the development of Chinese warfare.
Analyst Chen Nanjiang wrote on his blog: 'Just like the ban on golf courses, such one size fits all policies which do not take into consideration market demand usually do not get implemented and end up hurting one's authority.
'If foreign brand names like the United States' Six Flags and Korea's Lotte World want to come to China and local authorities are very welcoming, will this one document (from the planning agency) be effective?'
shpeh@sph.com.sg
My Value Investing Blog: http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/