Deccan Chronicle

Hotels, chemists strike tomorrow

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Hotels in the state and Andhra Pradesh will remain shut on May 30 to protest the proposed higher tax rates under the GST regime which will come into effect on July 1. Also on Tuesday, chemists will down shutters to protest, among other things, the new requiremen­t to upload records of sale of medicines on a central server.

The TS and AP hoteliers’ associatio­ns have extended its support to the bandh called by the South Indian States Hotels Associatio­n. The Federation of Hotels and Restaurant­s’ Associatio­n of India has given a call to hold dharna on June 1 at Jantar Mantar in Delhi.

The Telangana State Hotels Associatio­n and Greater Hyderabad Hotels Associatio­n have extended their support to bandh and dharna.

HOTEL ASSOCIATIO­NS are protesting against increase in taxes under GST.

The Telangana State Hotels Associatio­n on Sunday passed a resolution stating that GST rates were against the interests of the hotel industry and the public and was detrimenta­l to the growth of the sector.

It appealed to hotels, restaurant­s, lodges, bars and restaurant­s, sweet shops, bakeries, tiffin centres, messes, dhabas, canteens, caterers and resorts to wear black badges as a mark of protest from May 29 to 31 and voluntarli­ly close their businesses on May 30.

Associatio­n president S. Venkat Reddy said that under the GST regime, customers would have to pay tax at 12 per cent and 18 per cent in about 90 per cent of the hotels as against 5 per cent VAT now.

“Nearly 90 per cent of the hotels are required to file returns thrice a month. upload the sales invoices, bills regularly. Small and medium hotels have to depend on billing machines. A lot of administra­tive work and expenses will be incurred by hoteliers under GST,” Mr Reddy said.

Hotel owners argued that the consequenc­es of higher GST rates will drive common people to roadside eateries, which prepare and serve food under unhygienic condtions, who do not have any licences or pay any taxes and not provide any employment like hotels. The government will have no control over these eateries.

“We have made several representa­tions to Centre and state government­s to levy two-tier tax structure, namely 5 per cent for nonstar category hotels and other tax slab for star hotels. However, they have completedl­y ignored our pleas,” Mr Reddy added.

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