Thailand looks to lure back Chinese tourists by easing visa rules to score US$100 billion in tourism revenue
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Srettha discussed options with executives of Airports of Thailand Pcl and several airlines on Monday, with the near-term aim of attracting more foreigners in the fourth quarter, typically the peak season for tourism. The airport operator agreed to reduce bottlenecks to augment flight capacity by 20 per cent and find ways to speed up immigration clearances, Srettha said on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.
The new government aims to lift revenue from foreign tourists to 3.3 trillion baht (US$94 billion) next year, with the travel industry offering “the best short-term economic stimulus”, Srettha said.
Tourism accounts for about 12 per cent of gross domestic product and nearly one-fifth of jobs, according to Bank of Thailand data.
Thailand says 1 million Chinese tourists visited from January to mid-May
Thailand says 1 million Chinese tourists visited from January to mid-May
Thaneth Tantipiriyakij, president of the Phuket Tourism Association, said the message about scrapping the application fee for visitors from China and India has been conveyed to the prime minister during a weekend meeting in the island province that included travel-sector leaders.
“Visa-fee exemptions are a ‘quick win’ for tourism,” said Thaneth, adding that international visitors to Phuket through July were about 70 per cent of pre-pandemic totals, but the “Chinese arrivals recovery rate is only 30 per cent”.
Nationwide, foreign-tourist arrivals will be about 30 million in 2023, almost triple last year’s 11.2 million, according to Nomura Holdings Inc. The tally has already topped 17.5 million, the Ministry of Tourism and Sports said on Tuesday.
But the return of Chinese have been slower-than-expected even though China was the largest source of travellers last month at nearly 420,000. In 2019 before the pandemic, about 28 per cent of the record 40 million foreign arrivals to Thailand were from China, generating about 1.9 trillion baht in revenue in the process.
The lag in Chinese arrivals stems partly from stringent e-visa requirements introduced in May, especially for group travellers, Nomura analysts including Euben Paracuelles said in a report on Monday.
Chinese tourists opt to stay home, denting Southeast Asia’s economic recovery
Chinese tourists opt to stay home, denting Southeast Asia’s economic recovery
While Srettha’s plans might be helpful at the margins, the bigger question is really about demand-side conditions. “If China’s economic outlook for instance deteriorates further and consumer sentiment weakens, the risk is these supply-side responses to attract tourists will be less effective,” Paracuelles said in a separate email.
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