South Korea tourism industry hammered by China boycott

This photo taken on May 18, 2017 shows a salesperson advertising a sale in front of a cosmetics store in the popular Myeongdong shopping area of Seoul. China's boycott of South Korea over a US anti-missile shield on the Korean peninsula shows it is becoming more aggressive in the way it flexes its economic muscles, analyst say. Beijing has banned Chinese tour groups from going to the South, hammering its tourist market and the duty-free shops of retail giant Lotte, which has been targeted for providing land for the controversial defence system.    / AFP PHOTO / Ed JONES / TO GO WITH China-economy-politics-SKorea-Taiwan, FOCUS by Allison JACKSON

This photo taken on May 18, 2017, shows a salesperson advertising a sale in front of a cosmetics store in the popular Myeongdong shopping area of Seoul. Beijing has banned Chinese tour groups from going to the South, hammering its tourist market and the duty-free shops of retail giant Lotte, which has been targeted for providing land for the controversial defense system. AFP

SEOUL, South Korea — Chinese tourist numbers to South Korea plunged by two-thirds in April after Beijing banned tour groups over Seoul’s deployment of a US missile defence system, official statistics showed.

Beijing imposed a boycott from March 15 on Chinese tour groups visiting the South in a spat over the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system.

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Washington and Seoul say it is purely to defend against threats from nuclear-armed North Korea, but Beijing fears it could undermine its own nuclear deterrent and has reacted with fury, imposing a series of measures seen as economic retaliation.

April was the first full month of the ban, and saw a total of 227,811 Chinese tourists visiting South Korea, down 66.6 percent on the 682,318 a year earlier, according to the state-run Korea Tourism Organization (KTO).

Total visitor numbers were down 27.2 percent from last year to 1.07 million, KTO said, blaming a “huge decline in Chinese visitors due to China’s ban on tours to South Korea”.

The tumbling figures have taken a heavy toll on duty-free shops in South Korea.

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Sales to Chinese visitors were down 40 percent at Lotte Duty Free, a Lotte spokesman said previously, adding that they usually make up 70 percent of the company’s overall sales.

The South Korean retail giant has been trying to make up for the loss but has been unsuccessful so far, he said, adding: “I’m not hopeful of a recovery anytime soon.”

Lotte, the South’s fifth largest conglomerate, has had to shut down dozens of its stores in China due to boycott calls after the group agreed to provide a golf course in South Korea as a site for THAAD.

Its accumulated losses as a result are reportedly expected to hit $1 billion in the first half of this year alone.

South Korea has been struggling to fill the gap with promotional campaigns to attract more visitors from other countries, mainly from Japan and those in Southeast Asia.

But Japanese travelers have also been put off by “negative media reports” about rising regional tensions over the North, KTO said, with their numbers falling 5.4 percent year-on-year in April. CBB/rga

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