A fund for tourism promotion is set to be established with an initial corpus of at least VND300 billion (US$13.11 million), news website Saigon Times Online said recently, citing a proposal by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
In the long term, a maximum of 30% of the fund would come from the government, with the rest coming from beneficiaries of tourism, it said.
Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Nguyen Ngoc Thien said at a meeting in Hanoi on July 13 that poor marketing is one of the reasons for the lackluster growth in tourism.
Other reasons include a dearth of outstanding products and quality human resources and services, he said.
The proposal, which is waiting for local governments' feedback, is expected to develop tourism into of the economy's flagships through a range of measures such as extending visa waiver policy with longer visa-exempt stays and easing the issuance of visa on arrival, the website reported.
Though Vietnam has great potential for tourism growth with its rich cultural and natural assets and good connectivity with other Southeast Asian countries, its international arrivals are only 27% of Thailand’s, 31% of Malaysia’s and 52% of Singapore’s, according to figures released at the meeting.
In 2011-15 its tourism grew an average of 7% a year, compared to 12% in Thailand and 10% in Singapore.
In fact, its performance was also poorer than that of second-tier countries such as Laos, Myanmar and the Philippines, which recorded growths of 15%, 51% and 8%.
However, arrivals rose 21.3% year-on-year to more than 4.7 million in the first half of this year, according to data from the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.