Japan Planning to Reopen Borders to International Travelers

A Japanese government advisor plans to call for reopening the country to tourists amid a recent decline in new Covid-19 infections and calls to ease strict border controls put in place in early 2020.
An unnamed, private-sector member of the Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy, which advises Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, is expected to submit the proposal in a meeting Wednesday, the regional newspaper reported without saying how it obtained the information. It was not immediately clear whether the member had the support of the council’s other members.
The report comes as Japan’s hospitality industry has been urging the government to reopen to more overseas visitors. Until the pandemic, tourism was a rare bright spot for Japan’s economy as the number of foreign visitors expanded five-fold between 2011-2019. Due to strict border measures, the number of foreign visitors slumped from nearly 32 million in 2019 to 250,000 in 2021.
In recent months, Kishida has eased entry restrictions for business travelers and students, and raised the daily cap for international arrivals, amid criticism that Japan’s border measures were excessive. Japan has been spared the worst of the global pandemic in the past two years, with relatively low deaths per capita from Covid-19.