Hotel Industry warns tourism will suffer at 18 per cent GST on rooms

Industry says 5 per cent GST rate will result in doubling up of foreign and domestic travel and tourism induced employment.

Update: 2016-11-07 14:08 GMT
The Centre sanctioned Rs 406.25 crore to the state government to take up 41 tourism projects between 2008 and 2015, but released only Rs 180.73 crore.

Mumbai: The Hotel and Restaurant Association of Western India (HRAWI) today said the government's four-tier structure in Good and Services Tax (GST), in which the service sector will be taxed at 18 per cent, will cause the tourism sector a major setback.

In the recently concluded meet on GST, the government has declared a four tier structure of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent of which the service sector will be taxed at 18 per cent.

"It is estimated that the lower GST rate of 5 per cent will contribute to a decrease in our Current Account Deficit, increase in the GDP, doubling up of both foreign and domestic travel and also doubling up of tourism induced employment, across each state and nationally," HRAWI President Dilip Datwani said.

India's tourism competitors in South East Asia (excluding Japan and China) earn among themselves over USD 150 billion in foreign exchange and attract almost 100 million tourists annually, he said.

According to estimates, a GST rate of 5 per cent will more than double both foreign travel coming to India to 20 million tourists and domestic travel within India to 2.5 billion.

"We welcome the 5 per cent tax slab on food, which is a positive outcome of subsumed taxes for hotels and restaurants. However, the 18 per cent levy on services or room revenue in our case, compared to our neighbouring countries which charge a Tourism tax between 4 to 7 per cent, rules out fair competition," HRAWI former President Kamlesh Barot said.

Overseas, he said, GST can have least slabs as they have minimum exclusions unlike ours. "A foreign tourist planning a trip across Asia may entirely skip India or spend fewer days in our country on account of these perceived high room rates because we also don't refund taxes to foreigners like many countries do," added Barot.

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