In a pre-budget memorandum to the Ministry of Finance, Federation of Hotel & Restaurant Associations of India has said the three key priority areas that need to be addressed include rationalisation of multiple tax structures that affect the sector.
Besides, it has asked for facilitating a broad spectrum of institutional mechanisms by which the hospitality industry, including small and medium enterprises, can access lower cost long-term finance. It has also sought fiscal concessions and incentives to mobilise capital investment.
However, he added: "Despite these adverse headwinds, the long-term potential of India's tourism sector and its strategic role in supporting our country's quest for inclusive growth, remains undiminished."
He said the demands will help "mobilise the massive capital investment of over Rs 1,25,000 crore required to augment the country's hotel room inventory by an additional 1,80,000 rooms, in view of the ambitious targets envisaged in the 12th Five Year Plan (2012-17)".
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"The minimum project cost mandated for inclusion of hotels in the Reserve Bank of India's Infrastructure Lending List should be lowered from Rs 200 crore to a more reasonable threshold of Rs 50 crore," FHRAI said.
On rationalisation of tax structure, FHRAI said: "Pending the introduction of a unified Goods & Services Tax (GST), hotel accommodation and air-conditioned restaurants should be included in the negative list for service tax."
FHRAI also said the GST should subsume, without any exceptions, all central and state-level indirect levies (including luxury tax, entry tax etc) and a composite tax rate applicable to the tourism sector under GST to be capped at 8 per cent.