Tourists hit 'cheaper' Japan

Tourists hit 'cheaper' Japan

His head wrapped in cloth and wearing black head-to-toe, Michael Studte throws darts, turns summersaults and twirls lassos in a ninja class for foreign tourists in Japan.
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Ninja class, geek gadget stores and "manga" animation museums are newer tourist draws in Japan.

"It didn't seem quite like the normal touristy showy sort of thing," the 40-year-old information-technology engineer from Perth, Australia, said Wednesday, a little breathless after pushing down a mock opponent.

Foreign visitors have always flocked to old tourist spots in Japan like Kyoto, the Sapporo Snow Festival, hot-springs baths and Mount Fuji.

But these days, they're also checking out new offbeat ways to experience Japan like ninja classes, a geeky pop culture in Tokyo's Akihabara gadget district and animation museums displaying manga, or Japanese-style cartoons.

And they're coming in record numbers -- many of them from elsewhere in Asia. Last year, an all-time high 8.34 million foreign tourists visited Japan, up 14 percent from the previous year.

Japan -- traditionally considered an expensive destination -- has become cheaper for many because of the recent surges in the euro, Australian dollar and other Asian currencies against the yen, says Junsuke Imai, a government bureaucrat in charge of promoting the 25 trillion yen ($232 billion; 157 billion euros) a year tourism industry. The government has set a goal of raising that to 30 trillion yen ($278 billion; 188 billion euros) by 2010, Imai said.

Even Americans, whose dollars have weakened against the yen, are visiting Japan in about the same numbers. The 815,900 visitors last year was unchanged from the previous year.

Eager to accommodate the droves of foreign tourists, Tokyo department stores now employ clerks who speak Korean, put up signs in English and French, and accept Chinese-style debit cards, which were previously rejected.

The number of Japanese stores, restaurants and hotels that accept a dominant debit card, China Union Pay, has jumped 50 percent to about 8,400 from the previous year, partly because of efforts by the government to promote tourism.

"Chinese people easily buy three times what average Japanese buy in one visit," says Hiroyuki Nemoto, director of Invest Japan Business Support Centers, a government-backed organization.

Department stores are hoping to make up for dropping consumer spending among Japanese with the stronger buying power of China, South Korea and other Asian nations.

Visitors from neighboring Asian nations are finding it quicker and easier to travel to Japan to buy European designer items than to go all the way to Europe, said Tatsuya Momose, spokesman for the tony Takashimaya department store in Tokyo.

"We are so grateful for this," he said of the flood of Asian shoppers.

The appeal of Japan as a travel destination is mostly its novelty, as Koreans have already traveled a fair amount to the U.S., Europe and China, said Park Yongman, counselor at the Embassy of the Republic of Korea in Tokyo.

"These days, Japan is seen as the best place to travel," he said, adding that the changing image of Japan has done wonders.

Young Koreans don't harbor the bitter memories of Japan's brutal colonization of the Korean Peninsula before and during World War II. These days, Japan is emerging the perfect spot to enjoy animation, video games, movies and other entertainment, he said.

For the first time ever, the 2.6 million Koreans visiting Japan last year surpassed the 2.2 million Japanese visiting Korea. Adding to the momentum is the strengthening won, up 6 percent against the yen over the last year.

The visitors at the 15,000 yen ($139; 94 euro) ninja class said they had seen ninja in samurai movies, manga and the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles," and wanted to try it out.

The travel agency that set up the 2-1/2 hour ninja class, H.I.S. Experience Japan Co., also offers make-your-own-sushi workshops, "taiko" drumming classes, a visit with sumo wrestlers and sake tasting.

Ninja master Masayuki Waki, 49, who was teaching newcomers the art of fleeing grabs and choke holds, acknowledged foreigners were more interested in spirituality and other things Japanese than are most Japanese.

"They are so dedicated," he said. "People abroad are far more drawn to the sensibilities of survival than are Japanese, who tend to take comforts for granted."

Jason Chan, 28, an information-technology business analyst from London, who has also visited Spain, Germany and Hong Kong, said he had fun playing ninja.


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Hawaii looks to China, South Korea for tourists

Hawaii looks to China, South Korea for tourists


HONOLULU, Hawaii (AP) -- Hawaii tourism officials are looking to China and South Korea to help offset continuing declines in the number of visitors from Japan, the state's largest source of foreign tourists.

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A dip in the number of visitors from Japan has Hawaii officials aiming to increase tourism from China and South Korea.

The interest in those markets comes at a time when the overall number of tourists to Hawaii is also declining. Nearly 7.4 million visitors came to the islands last year, a drop of 1.2 percent from 2006.

While arrivals in January increased over the same month last year, the number of visitors in 2008 is expected to decline by 1.4 percent.

"I wouldn't bet the mortgage on the fact that January is going to continue," said Rex Johnson, head of the Hawaii Tourism Authority.

While January saw a surge in Canadian visitors, arrivals from Japan dropped by 5.2 percent. More than 1.3 million Japanese visited Hawaii last year.

Marsha Wienert, state tourism liaison, said more Japanese visitors are not returning to Hawaii after their first trip in favor of new, cheaper destinations, such as Taiwan.

Increased fuel costs are leading to higher ticket prices, she said.

While state tourism officials are trying to increase tourism from Japan, they are also turning to China and South Korea.

South Korean tourist arrivals have been hovering at around 35,000 a year -- far below the high of 123,000 in 1996.

Visitors from the country must currently apply for a visa in person at the U.S. Embassy in Seoul before they leave for the United States.

Short-term visitors from Japan and selected other nations, in contrast, may enter the United States without obtaining a visa in advance.

Tourism officials say they hope South Koreans will be able to do the same by the end of 2008 or the beginning of next year under a law signed by President Bush last year that allows more countries to qualify for visa waivers.

"We are very optimistic once Korea becomes a visa waiver country ... that Hawaii will reap major benefits where tourism is concerned," Wienert said.

She added that Hawaii also expects to see increases in visitors from China, where the islands could not actively promote themselves until recently.

But Frank Haas, assistant dean of the school of travel industry management at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, said the Chinese face many obstacles in traveling to Hawaii.

They must apply for visas in person and don't have convenient flights to the state, he said. He added that while the country has a growing middle class, it does not have the spending power of Japan.