It's time for Japan to cash in on its tourism boom
Earlier this month, Japan's government
announced a new initiative to cash in on luxury tourists. Japan will develop 50 "world-class" hotels through a series of investments and loans, according to Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga.
Japan currently has 32 five-star hotels, the Wall Street Journal
notes, citing data from
CBRE Hotels. For comparison, Thailand has 112, France 127 and Italy 187. The US has a staggering 793.
The announcement comes on the heels of what the
Wall Street Journal calls a "luxury hotel boom" in Japan. Luxury hotel brands like Four Seasons and Marriott International have announced plans to open hotels in the country, and existing luxury hotels are renovating to keep up with the times. The
Okura Tokyo Hotel opened in September after a $1 billion renovation with rooms costing as much $28,000 per night.
"Compared to other cities like New York and Paris, Tokyo still has very few luxury hotels," Miwako Date, chief executive of real-estate company Mori Trust Co. told the
Wall Street Journal.
One reason for this is that mass tourism hasn't been a priority of Japan's.
"For decades the government pushed industrial growth, so the country's cities filled up with drab business hotels that catered to armies of salarymen. Property developers dominated the real-estate market and clung to most of the prime city-centre spots," the Economist
wrote.
While Japan's plan to build 50 new luxury hotels signals its commitment to broaden — and capitalize on — its tourism market, these new hotels won't debut in time to solve the existing scarcity of hotel rooms.
Currently, Tokyo is facing a shortage of 14,000 hotel rooms during each day of the Olympic Games, Business Insider's Katie Warren previously
reported.
To alleviate the demand for housing during the Olympics, luxury cruise ships will serve as
floating hotels, and a new Airbnb partnership with the International Olympic Committee will also create "hundreds of thousands of new Airbnb hosts," Warren noted.
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