BEIJING, Dec. 12 -- Hotel room rates for tourists
during next year's Olympics will not be as high as previously reported by
Chinese media, officials from the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of
the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG) said Tuesday.
Local media reports earlier this year said hotels in
the capital were planning to charge non-official visitors eight to 10 times
their usual rates.
Xiang Ping, deputy director of the BOCOG's Games
services department, said some hotel owners had announced high rates to see how
the market would respond.
She said prices would likely drop, however, once the
supply of rooms increases.
"It is just a game between hotel owners and the
market," Xiang said.
"Hotel owners have been getting a lot of room
inquiries, signaling that demand is extremely high, so they released high rates.
"The exorbitant rates are mainly a sales strategy,
and reasonable deals are still available if buyers haggle," she said.
Xiang said very few hotels have actually signed
contracts with clients, and those that have are not that expensive.
The BOCOG has signed contracts with 120 hotels to
accommodate the "Olympic Family", which includes visiting Olympic officials,
media professionals and sponsors. The prices of 30,000 contracted rooms are
lower than those previously quoted by the BOCOG.
"The average price per night at a five-star
contracted hotel is just over 2,800 yuan (380 U.S. dollars). We had previously
said 2,960 yuan," Xiang said.
"About 80 percent of those rooms have been booked."
She said that although the government will not
intervene to stop owners of tourist hotels hiking prices, she was confident the
market will lead to reasonable prices as the Games approached.
Some 500,000 foreign visitors and 1 million domestic
tourists are expected to pour into Beijing for the Games.
(Source: China Daily)