http://www.atimes.com/article/japans-tourism-boom-reform-economy-needs/



*Japan’s tourism boom could be the ‘reform’ its economy needs*
Thanks to a weaker yen, eased visa restrictions and stepped up advertising,
2017 marked a fifth straight record year of increased arrivals and tourism
spending. The influx is also giving the nation's limitations much-needed
exposure

By William Pesek <http://www.atimes.com/writer/william-pesek/> January 24,
2018 3:41 PM (UTC+8)

   [image: Visitors take selfies and pictures of the Tokyo skyline from the
   Roppongi Hills commercial complex on January 20, 2018. Photo: AFP / Behrouz
   MEHRI]


Visitors take selfies and pictures of the Tokyo skyline from the Roppongi
Hills commercial complex on January 20, 2018. Photo: AFP / Behrouz MEHRI

Is Japan destined to be known more for tour buses than Toyotas? Tourism is,
in fact, increasingly a key driver of Asia’s No. 2 economy – and arguably
the best reason to be optimistic about Abenomics.

Five-plus years into his much-ballyhooed revival scheme, Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe has put few big wins on the reform scoreboard. But thanks to a
weaker yen, eased visa restrictions and stepped up advertising, 2017 marked
a fifth straight record year of increased arrivals and tourism spending
<http://www.newsonjapan.com/html/newsdesk/article/122034.php>. Those nearly
29 million visitors in 2017 – a 19.3% jump from 2016 – spent more than
US$36 billion.

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The cash may be a drop in the bucket for a US$5 trillion economy, but the
rate of increase matters for an industry that in 2016 accounted for 7.4% of
GDP, rivaling the contribution from Japan’s fabled auto sector. Equally
important is how the Abe government is targeting a far bigger role. By
2020, Japan expects to host 40 million visitors a year, on the way to 60
million by 2030.

Growing pains abound, of course. In Kyoto, Japan’s cultural Mecca, there’s
considerable grousing about armies of backpack-clad *gaijin* clogging
streets, buses and subway cars. Sustainability worries are getting
increased press at a moment when Tokyo’s carbon footprint is growing. But
Japan’s tourism boom is increasingly pressuring the government to raise its
game on the economy.

Much of the credit goes to Abe’s mentor, Junichiro Koizumi, who as prime
minister in 2003 launched the “Visit Japan” campaign from which Abenomics
is now benefiting. Abe’s team wisely expanded the effort, including winning
the 2020 Olympics
<http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/japan-breaks-tourism-record-as-it-gears-up-for-2020-olympics>
for
Tokyo. Yet as the country counts the cash windfall, there’s both good news
and bad to digest.

Just as remittances take the onus off developing nations to create
opportunities at home, tourism booms can deaden the urgency for richer ones
to do their jobs

Bad first. As helpful as the gains emanating from tourism are to Japan’s
economy, currently enjoying its second-longest expansion since World War
II, they may enable complacency. Coupled with heady global demand, the
spoils may relieve pressure on Abenomics to implement vitally-needed
structural reforms. Abe’s team, after all, has taken a glacial approach to
loosening labor markets, encouraging entrepreneurship, empowering women,
reducing bureaucracy and inspiring greater risk-taking.


The good news is that the flood of foreigners into Japan
<https://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/mckinsey/industries/travel%20transport%20and%20logistics/our%20insights/can%20inbound%20tourism%20fuel%20japans%20economic%20growth/the%20future%20of%20japans%20tourism%20full%20report.ashx>
 is highlighting the nation’s limitations. These include basic tourism
infrastructure: aging airports, weak English proficiency, spotty Wi-Fi
access, an overly rigid service sector and a dearth of smoke-free zones.
Akihiko Tamura, head of the Japan Tourism Agency, isn’t being hyperbolic
when he calls Japan an “undeveloped country” in catering to foreigners.

Exports and an ultra-loose monetary policy from the Bank of Japan are
ginning up GDP and the Nikkei 225 average, but they haven’t boosted wage
growth. Bold retooling is needed to overcome deflation, not pumping ever
more yen into a financial system that’s neither lending nor borrowing. Just
as remittances take the onus off developing nations to create opportunities
at home, tourism booms can deaden the urgency for richer ones to do their
jobs.

“If Japan doesn’t mature to more sustainable tourism models, the
government’s targets may well prove impossible to reach,” Evan Burkosky of
the tourism consultancy
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/evanburkosky/?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_pulse_read%3B9x3lbVOsSmKVrW4r3n%2BtUw%3D%3D&licu=urn%3Ali%3Acontrol%3Ad_flagship3_pulse_read-profile>AVIAREPS
Japan wrote in a September report.

It’s not quite Commodore Matthew Perry, the US naval officer whose arrival
in Tokyo harbor in 1853 opened Japan to a curious world. But there is
surely a Trojan horse dynamic at play here, forcing an inward-looking
nation to lower its guard to the forces of globalization. Eased visa
restrictions for Chinese nationals alone exemplify a cultural shift that
augurs well for the economic outlook. In fact, Japan is racing to build
casinos to win a bigger share of mainland Chinese tourism cash. Relaxed
requirements are also pulling in more and more shoppers from Indonesia, the
Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand and elsewhere.

Abe’s team should increase support for an industry that’s fattening
government coffers, making Japan less reliant on exports and which could
help defeat deflation

The payoff can be seen in Osaka as much as anywhere. Japan’s gritty second
city is enjoying an absolute tourism explosion. As of 2016, the city had
enjoyed a 363% surge over five years, compared to a nationwide increase of
188%. That success owes much to increased availability of budget airline
flights
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-29/who-needs-a-runway-budget-airline-wants-to-land-in-sea-fields>
(something
of a revolution for Japan in themselves), from China, Southeast Asia, South
Korea and Taiwan.

Abe’s team should increase support for an industry that’s fattening
government coffers, making Japan less reliant on exports and which could
help defeat deflation. The services jobs associated with tourism are often
less physically demanding – a good fit for a fast-graying workforce.. The
boom also provides fertile ground for small businesses and new startups
catering to foreigners, from those enamored with Japanese culture and
crafts to others struggling to find their way around a nation lacking in
English signage and services.

Tourism will also prod Japan to embrace the sharing economy. In
tradition-bound Japan, Uber, Airbnb and others struggle to operate, never
mind thrive. A 2017 Yano <http://www.yanoresearch.com/about_yano/> Research
Institute study estimated <https://www.yano.co.jp/press/press.php/001560>
Japan’s sharing economy at less than 0.005% of GDP, compared to 4.6% in
China. Talk about a potential growth industry for young Japanese.

Economists wondering where Japan is heading tend to plow through reams of
data and charts and speeches by Bank of Japan bigwigs. These days, more
insights may come from counting tour buses idling in the nation’s teeming
shopping districts.

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