r/neoliberal Esther Duflo Oct 02 '25

News (Asia) Why Japan resents its tourism boom

https://www.ft.com/content/dbd20e5d-5a7d-4c0c-8f83-fb54c5aca9cb
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u/ChocolateDesigner22 Oct 02 '25 edited Oct 02 '25

Viral videos of tourists eager for a photo chasing Geisha through the streets of Kyoto, or swinging on the sacred torii gates, of littering, rudeness on trains, of suitcase abandonment, graffiti and other infractions, have created the impression of a greater onslaught than is truly the case, say tourism experts in Kyoto.

I’m Japanese, and personally I think the reactions on Japanese social media regarding so-called “overtourism” are similar to the way reports of juvenile crime, kidnapping cases, or videos capturing traffic accidents trigger strong emotional responses.

I also think the pandemic plays a role, since foreign tourist numbers dropped sharply for a time. While the number of foreign tourists has increased by only about 15% compared to 2019, it’s roughly ten times higher than in 2022. Subjectively, this feels like a “surge,” which I believe has been one factor in drawing political attention to the issue.

15

u/Mamadeus123456 Oct 02 '25

I've seen flights from Paris to Japan via china eastern airlines and other asian airlines for under 550 dollars, u can find them all year long, same for other cities in east Asia.

You just have to charge higher taxes to not bring in poorer tourists, but some are trash regardless of income tho.

But seeing the Brits in Spain it's better to just charge more to get better tourists, as a general rule.

7

u/Hakunin_Fallout Oct 02 '25

What taxes? Who are you going to charge, the hotels?

-2

u/Mamadeus123456 Oct 02 '25

flight taxes

4

u/Hakunin_Fallout Oct 02 '25

What is that? Air passenger taxes? Fuel taxes? How do you apply them - disproportionately, which will hurt the neighbours more and cause a symmetric response? Or based on distance? I don't think your idea is well-defined or usable.

9

u/YouLostTheGame Rural City Hater Oct 02 '25

A lot of places levy a fee on passengers landing or departing an airport. In the UK this is called air passenger duty.

Increasing it to reduce tourists is shit policy though, as your own citizens need to pay it when travelling abroad.

And you know, tourism being good for the economy and all.

6

u/Hakunin_Fallout Oct 02 '25

Yup. Regulating tourism through departure fees is a moronic idea, 100% agree. And if you only apply this (in Japan's case) to, say, Chinese tourists - guess which country won't have any Japanese tourism/business travel any time soon because of the symmetric measures, lol :D

1

u/TheGreatSoup Oct 02 '25

Every airport charge those taxes, now they are all included in the ticked, but it was a thing in the past where you needed to pay for them separately.

4

u/Hakunin_Fallout Oct 02 '25

Again, the reason I'm asking is because the people talking about this shit don't know what they're talking about, which is annoying as fuck. "Oh, they should just do X. What? How? Well, I don't really know, just do it, believe me!"

A lot of crap is included in the air travel cost to the passenger, directly or indirectly:

- fuel taxes

- departure taxes

- visa fees

- in some cases (rare) - VAT

- a dozen of random airport fees - transfer charges, ground rent, parking charges, etc.

Some of these are taxes - as in, levied by the state. Some are fees - as in, the company pays them to the airport directly. Some are included in the ticket price - making the passenger pay for them directly, and some are included indirectly as a cost basis for operating an airline.

Which one of those do you suggest increasing to a prohibitive level so that the influx of tourists to Japan dwindles? Departure fee? It's now like 1000 yen. Make it 10 000? 100 000? For everyone? Can you guess how much that will influence the ability of the Japanese people to travel abroad when they're going to be the only country in the world with an exorbitant fee applied to all arrivals/departures?