The Sun (Malaysia)

Japan sees 2.69 million visitors in January

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Japan welcomed more than two million visitors for an eighth consecutiv­e month in January, official data showed yesterday, setting the stage for a potential record year for tourism.

The number of foreign visitors for business and leisure was 2.69 million last month, down slightly from 2.73 million in December, data from the Japan National Tourism Organisati­on showed.

Arrivals in December were an all-time high for that month and capped a pandemic recovery year that saw a little more than 25 million visitors enter the country.

Tourism to Japan all but halted for more than two years during the Covid-19 pandemic.

But the industry was dealt a major tailwind last year by rapid depreciati­on in the yen that made Japan a bargain compared to many destinatio­ns.

Inbound tourism is an increasing­ly important part of the Japanese economy, and visitors spent more than ¥5 trillion (RM160 billion) last year for the first time, exceeding the government’s goal.

Arrivals in January were impacted by the major earthquake on Jan 1 in the western prefecture of Ishikawa, the Japan National Tourism Organisati­on said, although the number was on par with the level in 2019 when the country welcomed a record 39.9 million tourists.

Travellers from South Korea, Taiwan and Australia set an all-time record for any single month.

Tourism from China is still far below pre-pandemic levels, when mainland travellers made up nearly a third of all visitors and 40% of tourist spending.

But there are signs of life in the segment.

Chinese visitors numbered 415,900 in January, up 33% from the previous month.

Department store operators

Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings and J. Front Retailing reported that the Lunar New Year contribute­d to strong sales of luxury goods and duty-free items in the first half of this month.

Chinese visitors may be opting for more leisurely travel this year, a trend known as “chill stay”, as opposed to rushed shopping splurges seen in years past, said Teppei Kawanishi, general manager at travel industry consultanc­y Honichi Lab.

“The style is to go around one sightseein­g spot slowly and enjoy it like the locals,“Kawanishi said. – Reuters

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