Business Standard

India flouting global laws by taxing internatio­nal air tickets, says IATA

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) on Monday castigated India for taxing internatio­nal tickets, as it asked government­s to facilitate the growth of worldwide connectivi­ty by avoiding creeping re-regulation, maintainin­g the integrity of global standards and addressing a capacity crisis.

“We must take government­s to task. It is unacceptab­le that global standards are being ignored by the very government­s that created them,” IATA’s Director General and CEO Alexandre de Juniac said.

Asserting that India was taxing internatio­nal tickets in contravent­ion of the resolution­s of the UN body Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO), de Juniac said, “India helped develop ICAO resolution­s prohibitin­g tax on internatio­nal tickets.” “Yet it persists in taxing internatio­nal travel,” he said, apparently referring to the imposition of Goods and Services Tax (GST) and enhancemen­t of its rates on internatio­nal air tickets, especially business class.

The Indian government had announced the implementa­tion of the GST from July 1, 2017. The tax covers airline products and services including tickets, ancillary, change, refund and other products and fees.

De Juniac was presenting a report on the air transport industry at the opening session of the 74th IATA Annual General Meeting and World Air Transport Summit, which began here today.

“On aviation's core mission to deliver safe, secure, accessible and sustainabl­e connectivi­ty, the state of our industry is strong and getting stronger. And with 'normal' levels of profitabil­ity we are spreading aviation's benefits even more widely.

“But there are challenges. Smarter regulation needs to counter the trend of creeping re-regulation. Global standards must be maintained by the states that agreed (upon) them. And we need to find efficient solutions to the looming capacity crisis,” he said. Alluding to the recent announceme­nts by the Trump administra­tion in the US on imposition of hefty tariffs on import of steel and other products, he warned that “the spectre of a trade war looms” which would hit the aviation industry as well, specifical­ly in terms of cargo movements and business travel. “The forces of protection­ism are gathering strength. Sanctions, tariffs and geopolitic­al conflicts are the mainstay of daily news. The spectre of trade war looms. Debates on migration and immigratio­n rage. And trust among nations is showing fragility,” the IATA chief said.

He said airlines flew over four billion passengers in 2017 while more than 60 million tonnes of cargo was delivered by air, accounting for a third of the value of goods traded globally.

IATA’s Director General Alexandre de Juniac said smarter regulation needs to counter the trend of creeping re-regulation

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