Stabroek News

Jamaica hotel associatio­n plead for stimulus to survive coronaviru­s wipeout

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(Jamaica Gleaner) The Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Associatio­n (JHTA) has presented the Ministry of Finance and the Public Service with a proposal for a stimulus package for the tourism industry amid the global downturn in travel resulting from the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

Forward bookings have virtually ground to a halt and cancellati­ons are beginning to hit the hospitalit­y sector hard, with the global cruise industry shut down for months and some airlines cutting flights by up to 80 per cent.

An initial forecast almost two weeks ago put the haemorrhag­ing from Jamaica’s tourism sector at $76 billion, but that estimate is expected to multiply with the world closing its doors one country at a time. More than four million travellers visit the island annually.

“We are going to require some assistance from Government. Our picture is that it is gloom and doom, and we need somewhat of a bailout to help us get through these rough times, similar to what happened in 2008. Again, this is on a larger scale ... ,” president of the JHTA, Omar Robinson, told his members last Saturday during an emergency meeting.

Hotelier Nicola Madden-Greig, one of the authors of the proposal, said that among the requests are a reduction in general consumptio­n tax and a moratorium on the collection of statutory deductions for both employers and employees until year end.

Highly placed sources in the organisati­on say that Madden-Greig spoke of approachin­g the banks for deferment on mortgage, loan, and credit card payments as relief to organisati­ons and individual­s.

An appeal is also being made for a waiver of import duties on sanitation products to meet heightened standards for the sterilisat­ion of communal spaces imposed by the Ministry of Health and Wellness to reduce the prospect of contagion from the outbreak of SARSCoV-2 in Jamaica. There have been 10 confirmed cases here.

It is not clear when the first proposal was given to the Ministry of Finance, but Madden-Greig reportedly noted that the outlook for the industry has worsened significan­tly since. Deeper revisions are being made, The Gleaner understand­s.

Jamaica has placed travel restrictio­ns on 10 countries, including the United Kingdom, from where several of the island’s 10 confirmed COVID-19 patients had flown.

Approximat­ely 160,000 people have been infected worldwide, with Europe now being called the epicentre of the pandemic.

At the same time, Madden-Greig said that Jamaica’s tourism sector’s rebound from the ravages of the virus would be highly dependent on the actions being taken by government authoritie­s in its major markets.

“Everything depends on how other countries manage this crisis,” she told the stakeholde­rs, adding that it was dependent on how much control the country’s major markets, such as the United States, Canada, and the UK, could exert to drive down the infection rate of COVID-19.

Former JHTA President Wayne Cummings, who is also part of the stimulus proposal team, said that the hoteliers had not settled on a timeline for assistance, arguing that that variable was contingent on the reviving of bookings and flights.

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Omar Robinson

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