China's travel curbs reduce Japan's December duty-free sales

Geopolitical tensions leading to Beijing's travel advisories caused a sharp drop in duty-free sales at major Japanese department stores in December. This decline underscores Japan's vulnerability to shifts in Chinese tourism, a vital engine for economic recovery.

Duty-free sales at Japan's leading department store operators plummeted in December, illustrating the strain prolonged geopolitical tensions with China are placing on the retail sector. At J Front Retailing's Daimaru and Matsuzakaya stores, these sales fell 17% year-on-year, pulling overall sales down 1.9%. Takashimaya reported an 11% decline in tax-free sales, attributing the inbound spending slump partly to Beijing's advisory discouraging trips to Japan; despite steady domestic demand, this capped the company's overall sales growth at 4.1%.

Matsuya noted an approximately 11% drop at its flagship Ginza store, blaming the lack of Chinese tourists. Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings saw duty-free sales across its domestic stores decrease 14%, which dragged total sales down 0.5%.

Since borders reopened after the COVID-19 pandemic, Chinese visitors have been essential to Japan's economic rebound, accounting for about one-fifth of the nation's ¥8.1 trillion ($51.6 billion) in tourism revenue. This dependence has turned into a liability, leaving retailers exposed to changes in Chinese travel patterns as political frictions reemerge.

Growth in visitors from China slowed in November to its weakest rate in nearly four years, following Beijing's travel curbs in response to Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's comments on Taiwan. China has also directed airlines to cut flights to Japan through March, potentially inflicting further hardship on Japanese retailers and the tourism sector in coming months.

As a cornerstone of Japan's growth, tourism faces risks to corporate earnings and the wider economic recovery if the pullback persists. Hiromu Komiya, an economist at the Japan Research Institute, estimates Japan could forfeit up to ¥1.2 trillion in tourism revenue this year should restrictions continue.

مقالات ذات صلة

Tokyo shopkeepers cheerfully serve Japanese customers in a bustling store, shrugging off fewer Chinese tourists amid diplomatic tensions.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

تتجاهل الشركات اليابانية المخاوف بشأن انخفاض عدد السياح الصينيين

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

أدى خلاف دبلوماسي بشأن تصريحات رئيسة الوزراء اليابانية ساناي تكايتشي حول تايوان إلى تحذير الصين مواطنيها من السفر إلى اليابان، مما أدى إلى انخفاض عدد السياح الصينيين، لكن أصحاب الأعمال في طوكيو يتجاهلون في الغالب مخاوف التأثير على المبيعات. يقول المديرون إن زيادة المتسوقين اليابانيين قد عوضت الانخفاض. وفي الصين، تشهد إلغاءات الرحلات الجماعية ارتفاعاً متسارعاً.

توقفت عدة وكالات سفر صينية رئيسية عن بيع رحلات إلى اليابان بعد إصدار الحكومة تنبيهاً يحث المواطنين على تجنب البلاد وسط تصاعد التوترات حول تايوان. أثار الإجراء تصريحات رئيسة الوزراء اليابانية ساناي تاكايتشي التي اقترحت التدخل العسكري المحتمل في حالة طوارئ تايوان. بدأت الإلغاءات في فنادق يابانية، وتم تأجيل إصدار أفلام يابانية في الصين.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Chinese government is directing travel agencies to cut group tours to Japan as tensions over Taiwan persist between the two nations. One agency has been ordered to reduce tours to about 60% of previous levels, while another has been urged to halt all sales. The action aims to encourage Chinese citizens to heed Beijing's advisory against visiting Japan.

In the wake of China's January 7 ban on dual-use exports to Japan's military—prompted by politician Sanae Takaichi's Taiwan remarks and already protested by Tokyo as 'extremely regrettable'—analysts warn of vulnerabilities in the semiconductor sector, where Japan holds key leverage amid escalating tensions.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Chinese customs authorities have intensified inspections on imported Japanese sake and food products, causing delays in clearance procedures. Trade sources indicate the measures began in November following Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's remarks on a potential Taiwan contingency, appearing as an effort to heighten economic coercion against Japan. Japanese sake exports to China reached ¥11.67 billion in 2024, the highest by any country or region.

Amid ongoing China-Japan tensions sparked by Sanae Takaichi's prior Taiwan remarks, Japan is bolstering ties with South Korea while facing Beijing's new export curbs on rare earths and dual-use items, prompting stockpiling and G7 coordination.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Sales from seven major Japanese convenience store chains reached a record 12.06 trillion yen ($76.34 billion) in 2025, driven by high-value-added products, rising inbound tourism, and ties to the Osaka World Exposition, according to an industry report.

 

 

 

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