Photo/Illutration People visit the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall during the five-day Labour Day holiday in Beijing on April 30. (REUTERS)

SHANGHAI--China’s tourism rebounded to pre-COVID-19 levels in the May Day holiday as the number of domestic trips rose by more than two-thirds from a year earlier, government data showed on May 3, a welcome boost for the world’s second-biggest economy.

If sustained, a recovery in the service sector could ease worries that China’s post-pandemic economic recovery could soon lose momentum with the property market still soft, its vast manufacturing sector weak and exports facing persistent headwinds.

Travel-hungry Chinese made 274 million domestic trips during the five-day break that began on April 29, a rise of 70.8 percent from a year earlier, and 19 percent more than during 2019, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism said on its website.

During these trips, Chinese tourists spent 148 billion yuan ($21 billion), a 128.9 percent increase from a year earlier, and on a par with 2019 levels.

The figures from this year’s May Day holiday--the first travel season since the pandemic without restrictions--are being monitored as a gauge of China’s economic health.

Official data on April 30 showed activity in China’s non-manufacturing sector grew in April, albeit at a slower pace than in March.

“The strong holiday tourism data, together with the still-solid April services PMI, bode well for consumption and services recovery in coming months, despite the softening in manufacturing growth momentum,” wrote Goldman Sachs in a note.

“This also adds conviction to our above-consensus 2023 GDP growth forecast (6.0 percent).”

The next leg of consumption recovery will rely on higher income growth and improved consumer confidence which will make the recovery model more sustainable, Goldman Sachs added.

Asset manager Vontobel said it believes China’s recovery should accelerate, benefitting companies that cater to domestic consumers across leisure and e-commerce, as well as travel-focused businesses in China and across Asia.

Total box office collections of May Day movies this year exceeded 1.5 billion yuan by the end of the holiday period, ranking third in May Day box office receipts in Chinese film history, state television reported on May 4.

The travel boom during the May holiday “can be seen as a turning point of China’s tourism sector,” official Xinhua News Agency said on May 3.

The China Tourism Academy estimates about 4.55 billion domestic tourist trips will be made this year, up 73 percent from 2022, Xinhua reported.