Two favorites
Cheng Yonghua, the Chinese ambassador to Japan, said Japanese-made rice cookers and electronic toilet seats are the two favorite purchases among Chinese shoppers.
A sales stand displaying six rice cookers at an electronic products mall in downtown Tokyo may best illustrate the Chinese spending spree as it boasts a big billboard displaying the Chinese characters for "welcome".
But some believe that Japanese cookers make rice taste better. Others view the toilet seats as being merely trendy gadgets because such products, which are capable of heating automatically in winter and spraying water to clean the body, are still rare in China.
Cheng views the spending spree as spontaneous behavior by Chinese.
The fact that such imports cost more in China has also meant that Chinese resort to "window shopping at high-end malls" at home.
The Chousun Ilbo newspaper in Seoul suggested in an editorial in its Japanese edition on May 23 that South Korea should learn from Japan's duty-free policy extended to foreign visitors.
The average spending by Chinese tourists is falling in South Korea but surging in Japan in comparison with last year.
As shoppers line up to buy electronic products at Tokyo's shopping malls, they can see notice boards stating, "Present your passport and you may get duty free" purchases.
Slogans and commercials in Chinese greet shoppers in downtown Tokyo, stating that payment by China's UnionPay is available and welcome. Meanwhile, the yen has been falling against the yuan since 2012. One yuan bought about 12 yen in January that year but now buys about 20 yen.
In a written summary on May 20, during the cherry blossom season, the Japan National Tourism Organization said the yen's depreciation and the exemption of consumption tax for foreigners have had a "powerful influence on the enthusiasm for shopping" by Chinese travelers.
Even Premier Li Keqiang joined the discussions about the toilet-seat sales boom when he spoke to political advisers from the tourism industry during China's annual two sessions meetings in March.
Li said an open mindset should be adopted and trade barriers opposed because "consumers have the right to enjoy more options".
Historical issues
An imbalance is surfacing, as the number of Japanese visitors to China is falling, and this is an issue of common concern among officials and industry insiders from both countries.
The number of Japanese travelers to China has fallen annually since 2011 and the numbers to South Korea has also dropped for the past two years, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization. There were 2.7 million Japanese arrivals in China and 2.28 million arrivals in South Korea last year.
Leading Japanese media have attributed the falls partly to increased territorial and historical issues between Japan and its neighbors.
Kazuo Ogoura, an adviser for think tank the Japan Foundation and a former Japanese ambassador to South Korea, said Japanese impressions of China and South Korea have become less favorable, and there has been widespread antagonism in Japan against the position taken by these two governments regarding historical issues.
Handa, the Japan Tourism Agency official, said the Japanese population is shrinking and the yen is depreciating, creating fewer choices for Japanese traveling abroad.
Decades ago, "there was a boom in Japanese visitors to China and South Korea. ... Now, many Japanese have no idea about the new attractions in China and South Korea, so better promotion is needed."