Thailand pushes for EU-style travel visa
Schengen-type permit would ensure seamless mobility for travellers across six countries
Thailand is steering an initiative for a joint-visa programme with countries that together hosted about 70 million tourists last year as Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin ramps up initiatives to attract more long-haul and highspending travellers.
Srettha – who has pledged to elevate Thailand’s status as a tourism hotspot into an aviation and logistics hub – has discussed the Schengen-type visa idea with his counterparts in Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar and Vietnam in recent months. The facility is meant to ensure seamless mobility for travellers among the six neighbouring countries.
With most leaders positively responding to the single-visa concept, tourism-reliant Thailand aims to generate more revenue per traveller and cushion its economy from headwinds such as sluggish exports and weak global demand that have hurt its manufacturing industry.
The six nations reported a combined 70 million foreign tourist arrivals in 2023. Thailand and Malaysia accounted for more than half of the tally, generating US$48 billion in tourism revenue.
The single-visa is the mostambitious among Srettha’s tourism initiatives. The industry has served the country well, accounting for about 20 per cent of total jobs and making up about 12 per cent of the nation’s US$500 billion economy. Barring the pandemic years, tourism has flourished and provided a cushion against a slump in manufacturing and exports.
The tourism industry is upbeat, with Marisa Sukosol Nunbhakdi, a former president of the Thai Hotels Association, saying “a common visa could entice long-haul travellers to make an easier decision”. The visa validity would need to be extended to 90 days from the usual 30-day period to make it attractive, she said.
Srettha’s administration has set a goal of attracting 80 million tourists by 2027. And since taking power about seven months ago, his government has signed a reciprocal visa waiver deal with mainland China – Thailand’s largest market for tourists – and offered temporary visa waivers for travellers from India, Taiwan and Kazakhstan.
It is also mulling a plan to open casinos inside large entertainment complexes and event-based tourism will help the country generate more revenue.
If done right, the benefits of visa-free travel will not be confined to tourism alone as ease of travel would be a boon for business travellers and trade, according to Bill Barnett, managing director of hospitality and property consultancy C9 Hotelworks.
But a Schengen-type visa, which allows free travel around the border-free zone within Europe, may be an uphill task given the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ poor track record in expediting multilateral policy framework.
Most European Union nations are in the Schengen Area.