TravTalk - India

‘With you, shoulder to shoulder’

- Hazel Jain

Cabinet Minister of Tourism and Environmen­t, Government of Maharashtr­a, talks to Hotel & Restaurant Associatio­n (Western India) members in a freewheeli­ng digital interview.

The young and dynamic minister who is pro-tourism and a friend of the hospitalit­y industry, discussed plans for the state with Gurbaxish Singh Kohli, President, HRAWI and Vice President of FHRAI, along with other key members of the associatio­n. The associatio­n is looking to him to address three points: Need for liquidity and working capital, how to exit lockdown, and how to survive post lockdown. The webinar saw around 800 participan­ts.

Aaditya Uddhav Thackeray

emphasised on the need for a collaborat­ive approach from all the stakeholde­rs for revival and growth of the hospitalit­y industry. “We recently had a meeting with the Ministry of Tourism in Rajasthan and the Government of Maharashtr­a to figure how we can collaborat­e in terms of tourism and hospitalit­y,” he said.

In the wake of the industry being virtually abandoned by the Central Government, the industry’s eyes are set on state for help. To this, Thackeray said, “The reason why we have not announced any package for this industry is because we are fighting a battle at the forefront. As the state of Maharashtr­a, our every digit, every effort is accountabl­e. This is a long-drawn battle and to fight it we need to look at economic

sustenance as well. Having said that, I am extremely keen that Maharashtr­a be the first state to declare something promising and deliver on that promise for everyone.”

State’s focus on tourism

“My aim is to make the entire state of Maharashtr­a run on tourism. The state government wants to develop Maharashtr­a as a tourism-positive state. Probably the single-largest budget allocation for tourism was done this year where Mumbai alone got 1,500 crore and the rest of

Maharashtr­a got a good budget, too. Then this pandemic happened,” said Thackeray. He also thanked the hotel industry that has helped the government of Maharashtr­a house healthcare profession­als and police force for quarantine. “That is a very generous and brave act, and the frontline workers are grateful to you for this,” he added.

Exit strategy

In terms of getting out from the lockdown, Thackeray revealed that some five lakh workers have

Need for liquidity and working capital and facilitati­ng working capital requiremen­ts

Exemption in electricit­y duty, which is charged at 21 per cent Property tax waiver for 6-9 months with the caveat that landlords should pass it on to the establishm­ents

Waiver of increased excise licence fees that are payable upfront Subsidies available to the manufactur­ing sector should be extended to hotels and restaurant­s

already started coming back to the 50,000 industries located in some of the green zones of Maharashtr­a. But, these zones keep fluctuatin­g because of the number of cases that keep rising or falling. “Our tourism and hospitalit­y industry will take some time to get back on its feet. I am going to write to the Centre for including some sort of package for the industry. Maharashtr­a has huge potential as a tourist destinatio­n. I want to pitch our state to the world. However, internatio­nal travel will probably not start before December 2020,” he stated.

Task force for state

“I want to establish a task force for Maharashtr­a and I want you – the industry – to have an equal voice in that. As you said, hospitalit­y has the industry tag to it but isn’t recognised as one. So, how do we work with other sectors closely in that? I would suggest that the task force we have made for the state’s economic revival – we have Deepak Parekh in it and a few more people from the finance and PE sectors

– I would like us to create one document which we can present to them so we can work in sync. They can tell us what is doable in the short, medium and long term,” Thackeray suggested. From this, he said, some things might be where the government can give a sustenance package. But first, he added, we will need to ensure safety to all visitors to the state

because that is going to be a major concern.

Business travel, a focus area

With Mumbai the financial capital of India, the industry urged him to help promote business travel in the city. “Business travel is our core competency so we cannot ignore that. We cannot leave that out. We already have a plan to make Mumbai, Pune and Thane more vibrant in terms of using F&B and hotel space innovative­ly. That was the initial plan, but we will have to execute this now. Let us work on two clear agendas: one is how to sustain this lockdown period and come out of it safely, and how do we use open space keeping in mind physical distancing norms,” Thackeray summed up.

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 ??  ?? Aaditya Uddhav Thackeray Cabinet Minister of Tourism and Environmen­t Government of Maharashtr­a
Aaditya Uddhav Thackeray Cabinet Minister of Tourism and Environmen­t Government of Maharashtr­a
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