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Toward a new visa vista in South Korea(2)

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2015-04-15 09:47China Daily Editor: Si Huan
Jeju Island is among the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists. Nearly half of last year's 6.1 million Chinese tourists to the Republic of Korea visited the island, which has offered visa exemptions for Chinese since 2008.(Photo/China Daily)

Jeju Island is among the most popular destinations for Chinese tourists. Nearly half of last year's 6.1 million Chinese tourists to the Republic of Korea visited the island, which has offered visa exemptions for Chinese since 2008.(Photo/China Daily)

More than 6.1 million Chinese tourists visited the ROK in 2014, up 41.6 percent over the previous year, the ROK's tourism authority reports. Tourism flow between the two countries reached 10 million during the period.

The new rules will increase the ROK's efficiency in processing the surge of Chinese applications and enable more visits, the ministry says.

Last year, more than 3.31 million visas were issued to Chinese residents, a 50 percent increase from 2013, the ROK's embassy in China reports.

Visa policy holds great sway over inbound and outbound travel, points out Jiang Yiyi, director of the China Tourism Academy's International Tourism Development Institute.

About 2.8 million Chinese tourists-nearly half who visit the ROK-visit Jeju Island, which has offered visa exemptions for Chinese since 2008, Jiang says.

In the first two months of 2015, more than 300,000 visited Jeju, says Li Haishun, head of the Jeju tourism body's Beijing office.

About half of Chinese tourists to the ROK are individual travelers. The trend seems likely to gain momentum.

There's shrinking interest in traditional group sightseeing tours, publicity manager of the ROK tourism authority's Beijing office Zhu Linlin says.

"More people from Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, especially those born in the 1980s and 1990s, are choosing individual travel," Zhu says.

The ROK is adapting, she says.

Chinese born in the 1980s account for about 60 percent of visitors. Those born in the 1990s are a "new force", comprising more than 20 percent, a Ctrip study finds.

About 70 percent are women.

Spending ranges from about 1,000 yuan ($160) to nearly 1 million yuan, the study says.

Chinese tourists will receive prepay cards, starting in the second half of this year, the ROK Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism reports. They can deposit money on the card and use it to shop and take public transportation.

Both countries will initiate travel-promotion campaigns this year.

Bilateral tourism expansion will offer more options, including new airline routes.

There were more than 800 flights between the countries at the end of 2013, the China Tourism Academy reports.

Chinese tour guides and restaurants, and easy shopping channels targeting Chinese, have proliferated in stride.

The new visa policy suggests that pace will likely accelerate before it slows down.

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