Tourism Hopes And Fears As Japan Ends Pandemic Isolation
The Guardian|October 19, 2022
After more than two years of near-total isolation, Japan has reopened its borders to overseas visitors but the road back to the pre-Covid tourism boom could be long and bumpy.
Justin McCurry
Tourism Hopes And Fears As Japan Ends Pandemic Isolation

Last week, the country lifted some of the strictest pandemic border controls in the world when it removed a cap of 50,000 arrivals a day, reinstated waivers for short term visas and dropped a rule requiring tourists to visit as part of group tours.

The prime minister, Fumio Kishida, is pinning his hopes on free-spending visitors taking advantage of a weak yen, which recently reached a 32-year low against the dollar, to boost businesses and resurrect Japan’s reputation as one of the world’s must-see countries.

In Gion, a popular district in Kyoto, local shop owners greeted the return of tourists with a mixture of optimism and trepidation. The last couple of years have been really tough,” said Hiroko Inoue, the owner of Furouan, a kimono shop. There were no foreign visitors and very few Japanese tourists. My guess is that sales were less than 1% of those before Covid-19.”

Just over 500,000 foreign visitors have come to Japan so far this year, a fraction of the record 31.8 million who arrived in 2019.

This story is from the October 19, 2022 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the October 19, 2022 edition of The Guardian.

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