Corporate Travel & Exhibition Industry in China — Statistics & Facts 2024–2025 | BusinessTats
Industry Report Corporate Travel China 2024 – 2025

Corporate Travel & Exhibition Industry in China — Statistics & Facts

China is the world's most consequential MICE and corporate travel market by volume — home to the largest exhibition floor space, the highest number of annual trade shows, and a business travel ecosystem generating over USD 380 billion in annual spend. This report covers the key statistics, city-by-city market data, technology transformation, structural challenges, and a comprehensive outlook through 2030.

16 min read Updated 2025 Industry Report
USD 380BBusiness Travel Spend
USD 83.7BMICE Market Size
13,000+Trade Shows / Year
85M+sqm Exhibition Space
500M+Corporate Trips / Year
9.3%MICE CAGR 2024–2030
Sources: GBTA UFI Global Statista CAEC Grand View Research CTA Research Mordor Intelligence WTTC

China's MICE & Corporate Travel Sector — The World's Most Ambitious Market

China's corporate travel and exhibition ecosystem is, by nearly every measurable dimension, the most significant in the world. From the cavernous exhibition halls of Shanghai's National Exhibition and Convention Center — the largest single venue on earth — to the sprawling business travel corridors connecting Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Chengdu, the scale and velocity of commercial activity in China's meetings, incentives, conferences, and exhibitions (MICE) market has no global parallel.

China's business travel market was valued at approximately USD 380 billion in 2024, cementing its position as the second-largest corporate travel market worldwide behind only the United States. When combined with the country's MICE industry — valued at USD 83.7 billion in 2024 and projected to reach USD 142.6 billion by 2030 at a CAGR of 9.3% — the combined addressable opportunity represents one of the most strategically important commercial segments in the global economy.

The post-pandemic recovery trajectory has been steep and decisive. Chinese domestic corporate travel rebounded sharply from 2022 lows, reaching 97% of pre-COVID volume by mid-2023 and surpassing 2019 benchmarks across most KPIs by Q1 2024. Exhibition attendance, hotel occupancy in business districts, air passenger loads on key domestic routes, and MICE venue booking rates all confirmed the structural resilience of China's corporate travel demand base. For context on how China's corporate travel dynamics compare with broader regional trends, business travel in Europe is also recovering strongly — though at meaningfully different growth rates and with distinct structural drivers shaped by regulatory environments and corporate spending cultures.

Key Statistics at a Glance — China Corporate Travel & Exhibitions 2024 / 2025
MetricValue / Figure
Business Travel Market Size (2024)USD 380 Billion
MICE Market Size (2024)USD 83.7 Billion
MICE Market Projection (2030)USD 142.6 Billion
MICE CAGR (2024–2030)9.3%
Annual Corporate Travel Trips500 Million+
Annual Trade Shows & Exhibitions13,000+
Total Indoor Exhibition Floor Space85 Million+ sqm
Number of Exhibition Venues (2024)320+
Largest Venue: NECC Shanghai (gross)1.47 Million sqm
Corporate Travel Budget Growth (2024)+11.4% YoY
Avg Domestic Corporate Trip SpendUSD 760
Avg International Corporate Trip SpendUSD 4,200
China Share of APAC MICE Market~38%
Exhibition Industry Direct GDP ContributionUSD 48 Billion+
Exhibition Industry Jobs Supported2.8 Million
Top Exhibition City — Shanghai Market Share~22% of national
International Exhibitors in China (2024)45,000+
Online/Hybrid Event Adoption Rate64% of large events
Government Infrastructure Investment (2024)CNY 180 Billion+
Exhibition Industry Revenue CAGR (2023–2028)8.7%

USD 380 Billion and the World's Highest Corporate Trip Volume

China's corporate travel market is a structural force of staggering proportions. With approximately 500 million corporate trips made annually — the majority domestic but increasingly international — China produces more business travel by volume than any other country on earth. The USD 380 billion total spend figure encompasses air tickets, hotel accommodation, ground transport, meals, and ancillary services consumed by business travelers, and represents roughly 19% of global business travel expenditure as tracked by the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA).

Recovery from the pandemic was initially hampered by China's extended zero-COVID policy, which suppressed both outbound and domestic travel through Q3 2022. The reopening that began in December 2022 triggered one of the sharpest demand rebounds in the history of global corporate travel markets. Domestic airline capacity recovered to 110% of 2019 levels by June 2023, and business hotel RevPAR in Tier 1 cities — Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen — surpassed 2019 peaks before year-end 2023.

USD 380BTotal Market 2024
500M+Annual Trips
+11.4%Budget Growth YoY
USD 760Avg Domestic Trip
19%of Global BT Spend
2ndLargest Globally
Shanghai skyline at night — China corporate travel and MICE market hub, generating USD 380 billion in business travel spend annually and hosting over 2000 large-scale exhibitions per year
Shanghai — China's MICE capital, commanding approximately 22% of national exhibition market share. The city hosts over 2,000 large-scale events and trade fairs annually from the National Exhibition and Convention Center, the world's largest single venue at 1.47 million sqm.

Corporate travel policy in China has evolved significantly in the post-pandemic period. Chinese enterprises — both state-owned and private — have formalized travel management programs at a far higher rate than their pre-2020 counterparts, with Travel Management Company (TMC) penetration growing from an estimated 31% of mid-large enterprises in 2019 to 54% by 2024. This reflects both the maturation of the market and the influence of platform-based corporate travel tools from domestic providers such as Ctrip for Business (now Trip.Biz), Tongcheng Business, and Mafengwo Enterprise.

📊 Key Insight

Outbound Business Travel Recovery: Uneven but Accelerating

Chinese outbound corporate travel reached approximately 72% of 2019 volumes in 2024. Key outbound destinations for Chinese business travelers include Southeast Asia (Singapore, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur), Europe (Frankfurt, London, Paris), and the Middle East (Dubai, Abu Dhabi). Recovery in traditional Western markets remains slower due to visa policy frictions and geopolitical headwinds. Average spend per outbound trip is USD 4,200 — the highest of any outbound business travel origination market globally.


The World's Largest Exhibition Market — 85 Million sqm and 13,000 Annual Events

China's exhibition industry is, without qualification, the largest on the planet. With over 85 million square meters of total indoor exhibition floor space spread across 320+ purpose-built venues, and an annual calendar exceeding 13,000 trade shows, fairs, and exhibitions, China has constructed a physical and operational infrastructure for commercial gatherings that no other country approaches in scale. The China Association of Exhibition Centers (CAEC) reported that exhibitions in 2024 generated USD 48 billion in direct GDP contributions and supported approximately 2.8 million jobs across the value chain.

The National Exhibition and Convention Center (NECC) in Shanghai's Hongqiao district stands as the definitive symbol of China's exhibition ambitions. Opened in 2015 and expanded through 2021, it encompasses a gross floor area of 1.47 million square meters — making it the largest single exhibition and convention facility on earth. The NECC hosts the China International Import Expo (CIIE), an annual event that in 2024 attracted over 3,400 exhibitors from 152 countries and generated an estimated USD 78.4 billion in intended deals and contracts during its five-day run.

85M+sqm Floor Space
320+Exhibition Venues
13K+Events Per Year
USD 48BDirect GDP Impact
2.8MJobs Supported
45K+Intl Exhibitors

UFI (the Global Association of the Exhibition Industry) data confirms China's dominance: Chinese venues account for approximately 43% of all purpose-built exhibition floor space globally, up from 28% in 2010. The country added an average of 4.2 million sqm of new exhibition space per year between 2015 and 2023 — a construction pace driven by government-backed industrial parks, free trade zones, and city-level economic development strategies that treated MICE infrastructure as a catalyst for regional commercial activity.

China's exhibition sector is no longer simply the world's largest — it is becoming the world's most technologically sophisticated, with AI-driven matchmaking, real-time visitor analytics, and integrated digital-physical hybrid event platforms redefining what a trade show can accomplish for exhibitors and buyers alike.

— UFI Global Exhibition Barometer, 2024

Shanghai, Beijing, and the Emerging Tier 2 MICE Powerhouses

China's MICE activity is heavily concentrated in a handful of major metropolitan centers, though the geographic distribution of events has been deliberately diversified through government policy. The following analysis covers the six most significant MICE destinations in mainland China.

Shanghai
~22% national exhibition market share
NECC (1.47M sqm) anchors the market. Over 2,000 large events annually. CIIE, Auto Shanghai, and China Beauty Expo among flagship events. Hongqiao Transport Hub drives unrivalled accessibility.
Beijing
~18% national MICE share
China National Convention Center (CNCC) and Beijing International Convention Center (BICC) anchor a government-dominated MICE scene. Home to major political, tech, and automotive shows including Beijing Auto Show.
Guangzhou
Canton Fair: USD 24.6B in deals (2024)
Canton Fair — the world's largest trade fair by exhibitor and buyer count — runs twice annually at the 1.1 million sqm China Import and Export Fair Complex. The bedrock of China's export-focused B2B MICE scene.
Shenzhen
Fastest-growing MICE city in China
Tech and electronics MICE hub. Shenzhen World is a 1.7 million sqm venue complex opened in 2019. Hosts the China Hi-Tech Fair (CHTF) — Asia's largest technology exhibition with 4,500+ exhibitors.
Chengdu
Western China MICE gateway
Fastest-growing Tier 2 MICE city. The Chengdu International Convention & Exhibition Center spans 700,000+ sqm. Strong incentive travel base with cultural assets and rising corporate relocations from coastal cities.
Hainan (Sanya/Haikou)
Free Trade Port MICE boom
Hainan Free Trade Port designation is rapidly transforming the island into a luxury incentive and international conference destination. Boao Forum for Asia — China's answer to Davos — draws top-tier global executives annually.
China exhibition hall interior showing large-scale trade show floor space — China accounts for 43% of global purpose-built exhibition space with 85 million sqm across 320+ venues
China's exhibition halls set the global benchmark for scale — Shenzhen World alone spans 1.7 million sqm. The country's 320+ purpose-built venues collectively account for 43% of all exhibition floor space on earth.

The Canton Fair: China's Exhibition Crown Jewel

The China Import and Export Fair — universally known as the Canton Fair — held biannually in Guangzhou remains the single most economically significant trade exhibition event in the world. The Spring 2024 Canton Fair attracted 286,000 overseas buyers from 214 countries and regions, with total intended procurement deals reaching USD 24.6 billion — a record for the event. Exhibitors numbered 28,530, representing virtually every sector of Chinese manufacturing from electronics and machinery to textiles, chemicals, and consumer goods. The event's total floor area spans over 1.18 million square meters across three phases operating over a three-week period — a logistical achievement with no equivalent anywhere in the global exhibition calendar.


Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, Exhibitions — The Four Pillars

China's MICE market is best understood by examining its four constituent segments, which each have distinct growth profiles, demand drivers, and competitive dynamics.

M
Meetings — USD 19.4B (2024)
Corporate and government meeting activity constitutes the largest single segment by transaction volume. Demand is driven by China's extensive state enterprise network and the meeting-intensive culture of Chinese corporate governance. Average meeting size has grown 14% since 2022 as enterprises prioritize in-person strategic sessions following the remote-work period. Business hotels in Tier 1 cities report that meeting room revenue grew at 22% YoY in 2023–2024.
I
Incentive Travel — USD 11.2B (2024)
China is the fastest-growing incentive travel source market in the Asia-Pacific region. Domestic incentive programs dominate at approximately 68% of the segment, with popular destinations including Hainan, Guilin, Zhangjiajie, and Tibet. Outbound incentive travel — predominantly targeting Southeast Asia, Japan, and Maldives — recovered to 81% of 2019 levels in 2024. Average outbound incentive spend per participant rose 18% as companies upgraded program quality to retain talent in a competitive labor market.
C
Conferences — USD 22.8B (2024)
China's conference segment is the most rapidly evolving, shaped by the government's Belt and Road Forum, the World Internet Conference, the Boao Forum for Asia, and thousands of industry-specific events in sectors ranging from artificial intelligence to renewable energy. International conference activity recovered more slowly than domestic — international delegate arrivals reached approximately 76% of 2019 levels in 2024 due to visa processing delays and airline capacity constraints on long-haul routes. Hybrid conferences, pioneered by Chinese tech firms, now account for 64% of large-scale conference formats.
E
Exhibitions — USD 30.3B (2024)
Exhibitions are the engine of China's MICE economy. The segment — encompassing trade fairs, product launches, industry expositions, and consumer shows — generates the majority of direct economic value through exhibitor fees, visitor spending, and supply chain activation. The 2024 Canton Fair, China Auto Show (Beijing and Shanghai alternating), CIIE, and the China International Industry Fair collectively attracted over 5 million visitors. Exhibition revenue is projected to grow at 8.7% annually through 2028.

AI, WeChat Integration, and China's Lead in MICE Technology

China's corporate travel and MICE sector has become a global laboratory for hospitality and events technology, driven by the country's unique digital ecosystem, high mobile payment adoption, and a culture of technological pragmatism that deploys new tools at institutional speed. The integration of AI, big data, facial recognition, and super-app platforms into the meeting and exhibition experience has produced innovations that are increasingly being exported to global markets rather than imported from them.

🤖
AI-Powered Exhibitor-Buyer Matchmaking

Platforms like Smart Show China and 55Haitao deploy machine learning to predict and pre-schedule buyer-exhibitor meetings based on purchase history, company profile, and behavioral data. Match accuracy rates of 78%+ are reported — dramatically increasing the ROI of trade show participation.

📱
WeChat-Native Event Management

The majority of China's domestic event registrations, badge printing, networking, and post-event follow-up are conducted entirely within the WeChat ecosystem. This creates unparalleled data continuity for organizers and removes friction at every touchpoint of the delegate journey.

🏨
Facial Recognition & Smart Check-In

Facial recognition check-in is now standard at major exhibition venues including NECC, Shenzhen World, and the CNCC. Average check-in times have fallen from 4.2 minutes to under 30 seconds, enabling mass-attendance events to process 100,000+ visitors daily without queuing bottlenecks.

💻
Hybrid & Virtual Event Platforms

64% of large-scale conferences in China now incorporate hybrid components. Domestic platforms — including VX Cloud Event, Huawei Cloud Events, and Alibaba's Cloud Summit platform — have displaced international providers and offer integrated streaming, real-time translation, and e-commerce transaction capabilities.

💳
Seamless Digital Payments

Alipay and WeChat Pay dominate at 96%+ of MICE venue transactions. This cashless environment enables instant exhibitor-buyer transaction closure on show floors, shortening sales cycles from weeks to minutes for standardized products and creating a fundamentally different commercial dynamic versus Western trade shows.

📊
Real-Time Analytics & Footfall Intelligence

Chinese exhibition venues deploy floor-level sensor networks, Wi-Fi positioning, and AI video analytics to provide exhibitors with real-time footfall data, dwell time analysis, and competitor stand comparison — tools that are beginning to reshape how booth placement is sold and priced.

The corporate travel booking landscape in China is dominated by a handful of super-platforms. Ctrip (Trip.com Group) — the world's second-largest online travel agency by revenue — commands an estimated 45% share of online corporate air and hotel bookings in mainland China. Its enterprise product, Trip.Biz, serves over 800,000 corporate clients. Fliggy (Alibaba's travel platform) and Meituan-Dianping are strong competitors particularly in the SME segment. WeChat Mini Programs for hotel direct booking have grown rapidly, with major chains reporting 28–35% of their China corporate bookings now originating through WeChat channels.


CNY 180 Billion in State Investment — The Policy Engine Behind China's MICE Scale

China's exhibition and MICE infrastructure did not emerge organically — it was systematically built through decades of coordinated government policy at the national, provincial, and municipal levels. The 14th Five-Year Plan (2021–2025) explicitly designates the MICE industry as a "pillar service sector," mandating investment in convention and exhibition infrastructure as part of China's broader strategy to transition from an export-driven to a consumption and services-led growth model.

In 2024 alone, government-backed investment in new MICE infrastructure, transportation links to exhibition districts, and smart venue technology upgrades exceeded CNY 180 billion (approximately USD 25 billion). This includes the second phase expansion of Shenzhen World, the new Chengdu East International Convention Center, and the Xiamen International Conference and Exhibition Center Phase III. Government subsidies for hosting international events — covering venue fees, marketing support, and delegate facilitation — were made available to qualified organizers at rates reaching 30–50% of total event costs, making China one of the most financially attractive locations in the world for international conference organizers.

🏛️ Policy Spotlight

Hainan Free Trade Port: China's Newest MICE Frontier

The Hainan Free Trade Port — granted special economic status in 2020 and progressively operationalized through 2025 — offers zero tariffs on goods imported for exhibitions, simplified visa-on-arrival for international participants from 59 countries, and duty-free retail that creates a uniquely attractive incentive travel proposition. Hainan's MICE revenue grew 340% between 2021 and 2024, with the island projected to become a Top 5 China MICE destination by 2028.


Overcapacity, Talent Gaps, and Geopolitical Friction

Despite extraordinary scale and growth, China's corporate travel and MICE market faces significant structural challenges that constrain efficiency, international integration, and long-term sustainable expansion. Understanding these challenges is essential for any international operator, exhibitor, or investor seeking to engage with the market effectively. The accommodation infrastructure supporting the MICE ecosystem faces distinct pressures — for a comparative perspective on how venue-adjacent hospitality markets respond to structural challenges, accommodation industry dynamics in Germany — one of Europe's most mature MICE markets — offer instructive parallels in managing oversupply and quality stratification.

1
Exhibition Venue Oversupply in Tier 2–3 Cities
While Tier 1 venues operate at high utilization, CAEC data indicates that average venue utilization across China's 320+ facilities is only approximately 42% — dragged down by under-performing venues in Tier 2 and 3 cities where government-funded facilities were built ahead of organic demand. Many second and third-tier venues report operating losses that are sustained only through municipal subsidy. Rationalization of this oversupply is expected to reshape the competitive landscape through 2028.
2
Talent Shortages in MICE Event Management
Despite producing approximately 350,000 tourism and hospitality graduates annually, China's MICE industry reports critical shortages of professionally credentialed event planners, conference coordinators, and exhibition logistics specialists. The Chinese Convention Industry Council (CCIC) estimates a shortfall of approximately 230,000 qualified mid-level MICE professionals — a gap that constrains quality, limits international event hosting capability, and drives wage inflation in the event management sector.
3
International Exhibitor and Delegate Friction
Visa processing delays, restricted internet access (affecting international delegate workflows), limited foreign payment acceptance at venues, and language barriers continue to create friction for international participants. UFI surveys consistently rank these as the top concerns cited by non-Chinese exhibitors considering China events. The government's 2024 visa-free initiative — extending transit visa-free access to 54 countries — partially addresses arrivals friction but does not resolve in-country operational barriers for foreign delegates.
4
Geopolitical Impact on Outbound Corporate Travel
The geopolitical environment has materially affected China's outbound business travel recovery pattern. Restrictions on Chinese corporate delegations attending specific international technology fairs (particularly in the United States and certain European markets), tightened export control regimes affecting what Chinese companies can exhibit abroad, and rising friction in bilateral business relationships have redirected outbound corporate travel flows toward Middle Eastern, Southeast Asian, and South American destinations rather than traditional Western markets.
5
Carbon & Sustainability Compliance Pressure
Large multinational exhibitors are increasingly applying corporate sustainability mandates to their China event participation — requiring carbon accounting, sustainable materials standards, and supply chain traceability that Chinese venues and organizers are only beginning to systematically address. China's own "dual carbon" national policy goals (carbon peak by 2030, neutrality by 2060) are driving national-level green certification programs for MICE venues, but adoption among second-tier operators remains uneven.

Forecasts & Growth Projections to 2030

China's corporate travel and MICE industry is on a firmly upward trajectory through the end of the decade, underpinned by structural demand drivers that are unlikely to weaken materially regardless of short-term economic or geopolitical volatility. The MICE market is projected to grow from USD 83.7 billion in 2024 to USD 142.6 billion by 2030, representing a CAGR of 9.3% that is among the highest of any major global market. Business travel spend is forecast to surpass USD 500 billion by 2028, driven by GDP expansion, rising corporate disposable income, growing outbound recovery, and the continued deepening of China's integration in global supply chains and trade relationships.

Growth Projections
China MICE & Corporate Travel — Path to 2030
USD 142.6BMICE Size by 2030
9.3%MICE CAGR 2024–2030
USD 500B+BT Spend by 2028
8.7%Exhibition CAGR 2023–2028
100M+sqm Floor Space by 2027
45%APAC MICE Share by 2030

Key Growth Drivers Through 2030

Belt and Road Initiative — Deepening Commercial Integration
The Belt and Road Initiative continues to generate bilateral trade relationships that produce predictable flows of business travel and exhibition activity between China and 140+ partner countries, particularly in Central Asia, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
Technology Sector Expansion
China's AI, electric vehicles, semiconductor, and renewable energy sectors are generating entirely new exhibition and conference verticals. Events like the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai and the Canton Fair's expanded technology pavilions are commanding premium floor rates and international delegate attention that rivals any Silicon Valley event.
Rising Middle Class & SME Internationalization
As China's mid-tier enterprises pursue export growth, their first-time participation in international trade shows — both in China and abroad — is creating new demand in the SME MICE segment, which is growing at rates significantly above the enterprise market average.
Hainan Free Trade Port Maturation
Full operationalization of the Hainan FTP by 2025 is expected to make the island one of Asia's premier luxury incentive and international conference destinations — a permanent structural addition to China's MICE geography that did not exist before 2021.
Domestic Consumption Policy Support
Government stimulus targeting domestic consumption explicitly supports the meeting and conference sector as a high-multiplier service category that creates economic activity in hospitality, F&B, transport, and retail within host cities.
Green MICE & ESG-Driven Premium Segment
The emerging market for certified sustainable event venues, carbon-neutral conferences, and ESG-compliant incentive programs is creating a high-margin premium segment with strong growth. Shanghai and Shenzhen are leading this segment, with green-certified venues commanding 15–22% rate premiums over conventional facilities.

Frequently Asked Questions

China's business travel market was valued at approximately USD 380 billion in 2024, making it the second-largest corporate travel market in the world after the United States. China generates over 500 million corporate trips annually and represents approximately 19% of total global business travel expenditure.

China's MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, Exhibitions) industry was valued at USD 83.7 billion in 2024 and is forecast to reach USD 142.6 billion by 2030 at a CAGR of 9.3%. China commands approximately 38% of the total Asia-Pacific MICE market and is projected to reach 45% share by 2030.

China hosts over 13,000 trade shows and exhibitions annually — making it the world's largest exhibition market by both venue space and event count. These range from hyper-specialized domestic industry fairs to global flagship events like the Canton Fair and CIIE, which attract hundreds of thousands of international buyers.

China's total indoor exhibition space exceeded 85 million square meters in 2024, spread across 320+ purpose-built facilities. Chinese venues account for approximately 43% of all purpose-built exhibition floor space globally. The National Exhibition and Convention Center (NECC) in Shanghai alone spans 1.47 million sqm — the world's largest single venue.

Shanghai leads with approximately 22% of national exhibition market share, followed by Beijing (~18%), Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Hangzhou, and Xiamen. Shanghai hosts over 2,000 large-scale events annually from the world's largest single venue, NECC. Emerging Tier 2 destinations including Chengdu and Hainan are growing the fastest in percentage terms through 2025.

The China Import and Export Fair (Canton Fair), held biannually in Guangzhou, is the world's largest trade fair by exhibitor and buyer count. The Spring 2024 edition attracted 286,000 overseas buyers from 214 countries and generated USD 24.6 billion in intended procurement deals. It spans over 1.18 million sqm across three phases and 28,530 exhibitors — representing the full breadth of Chinese manufacturing.

China leads globally in MICE technology adoption — deploying AI-powered matchmaking platforms, facial recognition check-in, WeChat-integrated event management, real-time footfall analytics, and Alipay/WeChat Pay for seamless floor transactions. 64% of large conferences now use hybrid formats. Facial recognition has reduced check-in times from 4+ minutes to under 30 seconds at major venues like NECC and Shenzhen World.

China's MICE industry is projected to grow from USD 83.7 billion in 2024 to USD 142.6 billion by 2030 (CAGR 9.3%). Exhibition floor space will surpass 100 million sqm by 2027. Business travel spend is forecast to exceed USD 500 billion by 2028. Key growth drivers include BRI trade expansion, technology sector exhibition growth, Hainan FTP maturation, and rising SME internationalization.

Average corporate travel spend per trip in China stands at approximately USD 760 for domestic trips and USD 4,200 for international trips — the highest outbound business traveler spend of any single origination market globally. Overall corporate travel budgets grew 11.4% in 2024 as enterprises expanded their event and travel programs following the post-pandemic normalization.

Data Sources & References

Primary: GBTA (Global Business Travel Association) — China Business Travel Market Report 2024

Primary: UFI Global Exhibition Barometer 2024

Additional: CAEC Annual Statistics Report 2024 · Statista China MICE Industry · Grand View Research China MICE Market Forecast · Mordor Intelligence Corporate Travel Asia-Pacific · CTA China Tourism Academy · WTTC Economic Impact China · China Import and Export Fair Committee

Corporate Travel China MICE Industry Exhibition Market Trade Shows Business Travel Canton Fair 2024–2025 APAC Market Research Industry Report

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