South Koreans' expenditures in Japan down 60 percent due to boycott

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By APD writer Alice

South Koreans' expenditures made in Japan plunged 60 percent in August from a year earlier as the growing trade row between Seoul and Tokyo led to a boycott of Japanese products here, including traveling to the Asian neighbor, according to the data compiled by the Korea Customs Service.

The number of transactions made with credit cards in Japan valued $600 or above reached 11,249 cases in August, which marked a drastic decline from 28,168 cases reported last year.

In terms of the combined value, the figure reached $12 million -- including only those $600 or above -- down 57 percent from $28 million posted a year earlier, it added.

"The numbers show that South Koreans are refraining from visiting Japan since Tokyo's economic retaliation," said Rep. Shim Ki-joon of the ruling Democratic Party, claiming the figure is expected to decrease further down the road.

The number of South Korean visiting Japan also reached 308,700 in August, down 48 percent on-year, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization.

South Korea and Japan have been facing an unprecedented trade dispute, after Tokyo abruptly started to regulate exports of three industrial materials to Asia's No. 4 economy in July, citing security issues.

Japan's export restriction is widely seen as a retaliation against a Seoul court's ruling last year that ordered Japanese firms to compensate victims of their wartime forced labor, during Japan's 1910-1945 brutal colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.

Thus, South Koreans have been staging a boycott against Japanese products, calling for Tokyo to make a sincere move in settling the historical issues.

(ASIA PACIFIC DAILY)