China's domestic spending continues to grow in November
Although China has largely brought the coronavirus under control, spending has been slower to recover as the world grapples with the impact of the pandemic, in particular the hospitality industry.

Retail sales in the world's second-largest economy rose five per cent on-year last month, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said.
The figure was in line with forecasts by analysts polled by Bloomberg and up from 4.3 per cent growth last month on the back of a week-long national holiday in October.
NBS spokesman Fu Linghui said at a press briefing that China's economy was seeing a "steady recovery" from the coronavirus pandemic, which first emerged in central China late last year.
But he warned that "given the resurgence of the epidemic, the world economic recovery is facing headwinds with increasing instabilities and uncertainties".
Although China has largely brought the coronavirus under control, spending has been slower to recover as the world grapples with the impact of the pandemic, in particular the hospitality industry.
Tuesday's data showed that catering sector revenue growth was down by 0.6 per cent in November after turning positive for the first time this year a month earlier.
Industrial production growth in November grew slightly to 7 per cent, ticking up from 6.9 per cent last month.
Iris Pang, ING's chief economist for Greater China, told AFP that mid-end consumers were supporting retail sales, in particular in the cosmetics and jewellery sectors, while medical items had continued to boost industrial production growth.
Meanwhile, the urban unemployment rate -- a key concern with a large number of graduates entering the market this year after the pandemic hit -- fell slightly to 5.2 per cent in November, the fourth straight month.
However, experts have cautioned the figure could be higher due to large numbers of people in China's informal workforce.
Julian Evans-Pritchard, the senior economist at Capital Economics, said the unemployment rate was now back to pre-virus levels and was underpinning China's retail sales growth.
"We think activity will remain strong in the near-term as households run down the excess savings they accumulated this year," he said.
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