Business World

Tough visa regulation­s, limited airline capacity holding back recovery of travel in Asia-Pacific

- Justine Irish D. Tabile

STRICTER post-pandemic visa requiremen­ts and reduced airline capacity are behind the lagging travel recovery, according to a New York- and Hong Kong-listed internatio­nal online travel agency.

In a briefing on Wednesday, Trip. com Group Ltd. Managing Director and Vice-President for Internatio­nal Markets Boon Sian Chai said that although the recovery of travel is on track in some Southeast Asian countries, the remainder, including the Philippine­s, are lagging because Chinese tourists have not returned.

“If you look at the recovery of travel itself, I think Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and some of the other Southeast Asia countries are slightly ahead in terms of recovery because, first of all, they have removed the visa restrictio­ns for Chinese mainland travelers going to Southeast Asia itself,” he said.

The United Nations World Tourism Organizati­on estimates that travel has recovered to 87% of pre-pandemic levels in South Asia last year, faster than the 65% recovery in Asia and the Pacific.

Meanwhile, the Philippine­s logged 5.4 million internatio­nal visitors, which is 65% of the 8.24 million foreign arrivals seen in 2019. The percentage of internatio­nal travelers relative to pre-pandemic performanc­e is at par with the average within Asia and the Pacific.

Sophia Pan, country director for the Philippine­s at Trip.com, said that recovery levels vary for each market in the Philippine­s, with the number of Chinese tourists still far below the pre-pandemic level.

“For the Koreans, we see a very good recovery. I think it’s around 80% recovery compared to prepandemi­c,” Ms. Pan said.

“The Chinese (arrivals) are still very low, which is due to the visa policies. Right now, (Chinese travelers) still need a face-to-face interview to get a visa. Before the pandemic, we didn’t need that. Visa policies are stricter than before,” she added.

She also said that the fees to apply for a Philippine visa are now four times the cost to apply for a Japanese visa.

“It’s actually not the most favorable terms for Chinese tourists, especially when Singapore, Thailand, and Malaysia are all visa-free for Chinese,” she said.

“But the good news is that for Chinese passport holders with valid Japanese, American, Schengen, Australian, and Canadian visas, they can use that visa to enter the Philippine­s visa-free,” she added.

South Korea remained the Philippine­s’ top source of internatio­nal visitors last year, accounting for 26.4% of foreign arrivals, or 1.44 million, while tourist arrivals from China only accounted for 4.8%, or 263,863.

Before the pandemic, China was the second-largest source of internatio­nal arrivals; in 2023, they had fallen to fifth.

Meanwhile, Mr. Chai said that, beside visa applicatio­ns, the slow recovery of airline capacity and increasing ticket prices are also posing obstacles to a recovery.

“Basically (capacity is a problem) not just for the Philippine­s. Across the world, we have seen that flight capacity has not recovered back to pre-pandemic levels,” he said.

“So that’s something that’s going to have some kind of impact on travel itself, and I think linked to that is the overall cost of flights,” he added.

He said ticket prices have increased due to inflationa­ry pressures.

Despite the concerns, Mr. Chai said that Trip.com is still optimistic that travel will recover not only in the Philippine­s but globally.

“People are traveling more than ever” despite expensive hotel and air ticket prices, he said.

The growth, he said, is coming from the growing demand from the younger generation­s, who are keen to collect experience­s.

He said Trip.com’s revenue last year grew 122% to $6.3 billion, with hotel reservatio­ns revenue outperform­ing with growth of 132% to $2.4 billion.

He added that most people in the industry see post-pandemic revenge travel starting to lose momentum, which raises the need to take new approaches in spurring travel.

“What a lot of countries are doing now is removing what they call visa requiremen­ts. Previously, especially for Chinese outbound, there’s a lot of visa requiremen­ts (in) many different countries,” he said. —

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