The French resort operator Club Med has received a buyout offer from, among others, the Chinese conglomerate Fosul International. Fosul wants to help expand Club Med to China, where the company already operates two resorts.
This news highlights the growing importance of Chinese tourists in the global economy.
Only a short while ago, American tourists were the world's most important tourists. They were also among the world's most reviled tourists, with the stereotype of the loud, obnoxious, ostentatious, and rude "ugly American" becoming known throughout the world.
But now it's Chinese tourists who are spending big, appalling locals and embarrassing their country.
Last week, a 15-year old tourist from Nanjing scrawled his name on a 3,500 year-old carving in Egypt's Luxor Temple. Another Chinese tourist took a picture of the graffiti and posted it to a Chinese social media site, triggering a massive backlash and parental apology.
Nor was this the only Chinese tourism incident that has caught people's attention.
Gwynn Guilford of Quartz describes a litany of recent complaints about Chinese tourists:
Reports of children defecating in public pools and urinating in restaurants
Spitting
Littering
Speaking loudly
Ignoring dress codes in Buddhist temples
Jaywalking
Drunken singing
The reason Chinese tourists have entered the public's consciousness, meanwhile, is presumably the result of an explosion in the number of Chinese tourists.
A couple of years ago, the New York Times reports, Chinese tourists overtook American tourists as the world's biggest international travelers. Chinese tourists made 70 million international trips in 2011, versus only 59 million for Americans. Last year, the Chinese also became the world's biggest tourism spenders. They spent $102 billion in foreign countries worldwide, while Americans and Germans spent about $84 billion apiece.
For those who cater to tourists, this huge new pot of spending is a major market opportunity.
And it's one reason why those who complain about loud, obnoxious Chinese tourists will likely keep their complaints relatively quiet.
As with the "ugly Americans" before them, Chinese tourists come bearing more than cameras. They come bearing money. And most local businesses are happy to tolerate a bit of obnoxiousness in exchange for new customers.
More from our partners, Business Insider:
Business Insider: OPEC is freaking out about America's shale boom
Business Insider: One day in, people already love NYC's new bike share
Business Insider: US corporate law firms have stopped caring about diversity
Business Insider: These skyscrapers predicted history's worst financial crises
Business Insider: Who are the most powerful people in mobile advertising?
We want to hear your feedback so we can keep improving our website, theworld.org. Please fill out this quick survey and let us know your thoughts (your answers will be anonymous). Thanks for your time!