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Feb 08, 2018 / 09:38

Government urged to open up visa policy for tourist development

The People’s Committee of Ho Chi Minh City recently proposed the Government to apply the country’s visa exemption policy for more countries, aimed to make Vietnam’s hospitality industry more attractive.

The committee also asked the Government to increase the visa exemption time for some markets such as Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Russia, Korea, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain and Italy from the current 15 days to 21 or 30 days to ease tourists in exploring the nation.
 
Visa exemption policy is expected to help Vietnam boost its tourism industry
Visa exemption policy is expected to help Vietnam boost its tourism industry
Besides, the committee said, it is necessary to continuously apply a pilot visa exemption program for five Western European countries of the UK, French, German, Italy and Spain in the next five years or even exempt the visa for the countries’ tourists.
The country should also allow the visa exemption for international visitors, who re-entry into Vietnam within 30 days, the committee suggested.
Previously, industry insiders have also urged the Government to further open up visa policy for foreign tourists to make Vietnam’s tourist industry further growth, saying that Vietnam has set a target of welcoming 20 million foreign visitors in 2020 and developing tourism into a key economic sector, and one way of achieving that goal is to provide visa waivers for important markets.
Luong Hoai Nam, Deputy General Director of Vietstar Airlines, said that the open visa policy is one of preconditions for attracting arrivals, adding that most of tourists don’t care about visa costs but feeling uncomfortable when applying for a visa.
According to Nam, tourism visa is not a bilateral issue, which means that expanding or tightening visa depends on tourism policies of each country.
Vietnam’s visa policy has been considered a “bottleneck” of tourism. The complicated procedures and visa costs make Vietnam less attractive for foreigners than neighboring countries.
Visa exemptions are a global trend and Vietnam’s tourism competitors in the region are “very open” with their policies, Vu The Binh, vice chairman of the Vietnam Tourism Association, said.
Currently, Vietnam offers visa waivers to visitors from only 23 countries including ASEAN co-members. Indonesia, one of the world’s most liberalized countries for visas, grants visa-free travel to 169 countries. Singapore allows 158 nationalities to enter visa-free, while the figure for Malaysia is 155 and Thailand 61.
The visa exemption has been proved an effective measure to attract foreign arrivals to the country.
According to Binh, the visa-exemption policy for citizens from the UK, France, Germany, Spain and Italy that has been in force since July 2015 has boosted the number of European tourists to the country and did not decrease tourism revenue, he said.
The exemption policy attracted 720,000 tourists from these countries in the first 12 months – an increase of 96,000 tourists compared to the period in 2014 – yielding total revenues of US$126 million, while the deficit in visa fees caused by the exemption was $21.6 million, Binh said.
Similarly, 58,000 more European tourists visited the country last year and yielded $76 million in revenues, while the deficit in visa fees was $2.3 million, he said, adding that the increased number of tourists and revenues created development opportunities for several types of tourism service.
Binh also suggested that the government should extend its visa waivers by five years instead of reviewing them annually.
Travel firms also said they cannot use the visa exemptions for promotional campaigns as the policy could change after a year.
This short-term policy only works for individual tourists while businesses that offer large tours need a more stable policy, they said.