Society | Aug 21

Tourist spending up in Japan as foreign travelers take in more cultural experiences

Aug 21 (Japan Times) - Consumption by inbound tourists in Japan has started picking up as retailers and the tourism industry encourage spending on unique experiences and personal items, rather than souvenirs.

Department store operators had been ringing up big sales from foreign tourists, especially Chinese travelers, in a phenomenon that came to be known as "bakugai," or explosive shopping, in which they snapped up products such as home appliances for families and friends.

According to the Japan Tourism Agency, travel-related spending, including hotel and meal charges, by foreign tourists totaled ¥1.08 trillion in the April-June period, a quarterly record.

Of that total, spending on shopping grew 15 percent from the year before to ¥414.6 billion.

But spending per person dropped 5 percent to ¥57,420, sharply lower than the ¥77,000 for April-June 2015, when bakugai demand was brisk.

The figures suggest that a fall in the amount of per-visitor spending has been more than offset by growth in the number of overall foreign visitors to Japan, industry sources said.


MORE Society NEWS

Princess Aiko, the eldest daughter of the Emperor and Empress, made her first solo visit to the tombs of the Showa Emperor and Empress Kojun on Thursday, to report her graduation from Gakushuin University and her new employment at the Japanese Red Cross.

There have been multiple reports of a mysterious black animal in downtown Tokyo, with the enigmatic creature captured on video looking around nervously before noticing the camera and staring it down for about 15 seconds, then running away.

A former host admitted to knowingly receiving approximately 25 million yen that had been deceitfully obtained by convicted scammer "Riri-chan," in a trial held on April 23.

POPULAR NEWS

The Cabinet Office's Government Public Relations Office recently stirred controversy with a social media post showcasing an overly lavish depiction of school lunches, leading to a public outcry over the authenticity of the meals presented.

Tokyo's Shinagawa district welcomes a new landmark with the grand opening of the Gotanda JP Building on Friday, April 26, featuring a dog-friendly hotel by Hoshino Resort, co-working spaces, and a vibrant culinary scene.

Starting this Saturday, 'SusHi Tech Tokyo 2024' begins a month-long showcase of Japan's advanced technologies, featuring attractions such as self-driving carts styled as futuristic floats and projection mapping installations, all available to the public for free.

Japanese company Smile-Up, the former talent agency known as Johnny & Associates, says it has sent a letter of protest to Britain's public broadcaster BBC over its program on sexual abuse by its late founder. (NHK)

A private organization has revealed that approximately 40% of the national municipalities, totaling 744, could potentially disappear by 2050 due to declining populations.

FOLLOW US