Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Service charge loss costs IRCTC ₹693 cr

Corporatio­n’s revenue from ticketing went down by 56 pc

- Faizan Haidar

NEW DELHI: The withdrawal of service charge on online ticket bookings -- one of the incentives offered to customers after demonetisa­tion -- resulted in loss of business of ₹693 crore in 2017-18 for the Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporatio­n (IRCTC), according to the corporatio­n’s annual report.

In 2017-18, the corporatio­n’s revenue from ticketing operations was ₹204 crore. This was 56% down from ₹466 crore in 2016-17. That year’s business too was hit by demonetisa­tion (announced in November 2016; the service charge was removed on November 23 the same year), but only for part of the year.

In 2015-16, the corporatio­n’s ticketing revenue was ₹632 crore.

On average, around 6.75 lakh tickets were sold daily through IRCTC’S website in 2017-18. Total tickets booked on the IRCTC website that year were 246 million, 18% higher than the number of tickets booked the previous year.

According to the report, Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporatio­n’s e-ticketing service sells 65.83% of reserved tickets on Indian Railways booked online.

IRCTC used to levy ₹20 per e-ticket for NON-AC classes and ₹40 per e-ticket for AC classes as service charge.

The loss of business is calculated by simply multiplyin­g the number of tickets sold with the correspond­ing servcie charge.

IRCTC said in the report that the annual expenditur­e of ₹80 crore incurred on the ticketing system on the web site, marketing, operations and after sale service is being compensate­d by Ministry of Railways.

“The withdrawal of service charge on the tickets, though, has reduced the income from this segment; efforts are being made to encash full potential of website along with mobile applicatio­n schemes by data monetizati­on, e-auctioning and retail management,” said an IRCTC official who asked not to be named.

IRCTC witnessed a 3.1% decline in total revenue to ₹1,544 crore in 2017-18. Apart from ticketing, the corporatio­n also earns money from sales of Rail Neer, onboard catering, and licence fees from outsourced catering vendors.

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