BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- If Taiwan authorities lifted the ban on
mainland tourists, the main result would be a positive economic stimulus that
would be felt in a variety of sectors, said experts attending a forum held here
on Sunday.
Huang Fucai, professor of the tourism department of mainland-based Xiamen
University, said promoting cross-Strait tourism will benefit Taiwan's hotels,
restaurants, transportation sector as well as its retail industries.
"It will also solve Taiwan's unemployment problems by increasing job
opportunities in Taiwan," Huang said at the third cross-Strait economic, trade
and cultural forum.
Huang said Taiwan's tourism industry has developed slowly in recent years
and Chinese mainland residents, who have longed to travel to the island for
years, would give it a boost.
Lee Ming-Huei, president of Taiwan Hospitality and Tourism College,
estimates that Taiwan would reap revenues of 26.5 billion New Taiwan Dollars
(about 803 million U.S. dollars) if it hosted a 1,000 mainland tourists a day.
"It will greatly boost the tourism industry and economic development in
Taiwan," Li said.
He urged Taiwan authorities to remove unnecessary restrictions on mainland
tourists as soon as possible.
The Chinese mainland has lifted its ban on travel to Taiwan by mainland
tourists, aiming to expand people-to-people contacts and help boost Taiwan's
tourism industry.
Since October 2006, non-governmental tourism organizations on the mainland
and in Taiwan have conducted five rounds of talks and reached consensus on major
technical issues, but they have not been able to conclude a final agreement.