Weak yen, rising flight costs and heightened safety concerns among reasons for only 17.5 per cent of Japanese holding a passport, study finds
Just 17.5 per cent of Japanese currently hold a passport, according to a recent study, a figure that industry experts say reflects the growing preference for domestic travel amid a weak yen, rising flight costs and heightened concerns about safety in many parts of the world.
Those findings align with research by the outbound promotion division of the Japan Association of Travel Agents (JATA), according to executive director Hiroshi Tanimura.
“The research we have done especially indicates that young people are not willing to travel overseas and prefer to travel within Japan,” he told This Week in Asia.
“The weak yen is one big reason why overseas travel is 70 per cent of what it was before the pandemic.”






