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Tourism in Japan is a major industry and contributor to the Japanese economy. In 2019, the sector directly contributed 11 trillion yen (US$100 billion), or 2% of the GDP, and attracted 31.88 million international tourists.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Tourism in Japan" ... This page was last edited on 8 January 2020, ...
Tourism in Tokyo is a major industry. In 2006, there were 420 million visits by Japanese people and 4.81 million visits by foreigners. The economic value of tourist visits to Tokyo totaled ¥9.4 trillion yen .
The Statistics Bureau of Japan or SB/SBJ (統計局, Tōkeikyoku) is the statistical agency of Japan, subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (MIC). The SBJ have conducted the Population Census and large-scale surveys to establish key official statistics of Japan.
Japan welcomed more than 3 million visitors for a second straight month in April, official data showed on Wednesday, setting the stage for a potential record year for tourism. The number of ...
Seven years ago on Wall Street, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe urged investors to "buy my Abenomics," as he promised to chart a growth path for deflation-mired Japan. Fast forward to 2020, Abe, the longest-serving Japanese prime minister, is quitting due to ill health, leaving an economy that is smaller—badly hit by the coronavirus pandemic—and ...
Japan Tourism Agency seated itself with intentions to stimulate local economies and to further international mutual understanding, [5] following legislation of Basic Act on Promotion of Tourism Nation (in December 2006, to wholly revise Tourism Basic Act), [6] [7] committee resolutions in both Houses of the Diet in the legislation process, [8] [9] and decision at a Cabinet meeting of Basic ...
The International Journal of Contents Tourism (IJCT), affiliated with Hokkaido University professors Takayoshi Yamamura and Philip Seaton, is an English-language scholarly journal focused on the discussion of contents tourism and seichi junrei. Yamamura and Seaton's book Contents Tourism in Japan was pivotal to the popularization of the buzzword.