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More Japanese turn to incentive Vietnam tours
Major
travel companies serving Japanese tourists have said more and more
Japanese have chosen incentive tours rather than designed their own
trips as seen previously. Around ten years ago the Japanese visitors to
the country were mostly young women and elderly people. During their
Vietnam trips, they preferred shopping and sightseeing, according to
the tour operators.
The trend is changing as less young Japanese
people are coming while more guests are picking incentive tours
instead. However, the elderly still keep arriving here.
“Demand for
incentive tours has been on the rise since the middle of last year and
the increase will continue this year. We serve groups of Japanese
tourists taking incentive tours every month,” said Dinh Nguyen Ngoc
Giang, O.S.C Travel (S.M.I. Group) Co.
Nguyen Van Tran, general
director of APEX Travel Co., Ltd, the biggest foreign-local joint
venture catering to Japanese travelers in the country, said the company
would arrange incentive tours for several groups this month and in the
following two months. The size of each group served by APEX is big, at
100 to 200 people, and in particular, there are groups of 400.
“We’re promoting incentive tours for the Japanese in Vietnam,” he said.
Giang of O.S. C Travel said there had appeared some positive signs as
the value of the Japanese yen was increasing, and tourist numbers kept
growing. Foreign business people are coming back to Vietnam for
investment and trade opportunities given the continued economic
uncertainty in some regional countries.
According to the
Prospective Travel Trends in 2011 of JTP, a leading Japanese travel
group, the number of Japanese making overseas trips will reach 17.3
million this year, up 3.7% from last year.
Asian destinations are
preferred as the high exchange rates for yen there will work against a
major increase in consumer prices.
Giang said the new travel trend
could eat into earnings of local travel firms as elderly people are
cash-minded, especially at a time when woes are still gripping the
Japanese economy. “Tour operators will certainly earn less than in the
past,” she said.
Around 442,000 Japanese visited the country last
year, up 24% from 2009. The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism
expects the country to receive one million Japanese visitors by 2015
and it is preparing a scheme to attract more guests from this important
market.
Source: The Saigon Times |
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