Arab Times

New levy to hit Turkey’s tourism companies

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ISTANBUL, Aug 3, (RTRS): A new levy on Turkey’s tourism industry will hit hotels and travel agencies from October, squeezing businesses which have been forced to offer hefty discounts to overcome a slump in visitor numbers three years ago.

Half-year figures released this week show a healthy 13% increase in foreign arrivals to Turkey, while a 10% jump in revenue for the sector to $12.6 billion has given a valuable boost to an economy still stuck in recession.

But the levy announced in midJuly, which requires hotels and travel companies to pay up to 0.75% of their total revenues to Turkey’s newly founded Tourism Promotion and Developmen­t Agency will significan­tly erode profit margins, businesses say.

Turkey’s tourism sector was battered in 2016 after a series of bombings, a failed military coup and a crisis with Moscow after Ankara shot down a Russian jet on the Syrian border.

Many firms were forced to slash prices to lure visitors and figures show average spend per tourist is still down by a third from its peak of $974 in 2013.

Muberra Eresin, head of the Hotel Associatio­n of Turkey, said the fact that the levy would be calculated from total revenues meant even loss-making businesses would be forced to pay.

“We have experience­d a very difficult period in tourism and the sector is just getting on its feet again,” Eresin told Reuters. “The agency contributi­on poses a sustainabi­lity risk for businesses as it will not take into account a company’s profit or loss.”

Businesses affected by the levy, which will be paid monthly from October, include accommodat­ion facilities, food and drink outlets licensed by the ministry, travel agencies and private airport and terminal operators.

Their contributi­ons are expected to raise around 150 million euros ($166 million) annually for the agency, according to sector representa­tives.

Travel agency Tigris Tourism Chairman Davut Gunaydin said the levy should have been taken from profits, or imposed at a much lower rate. “The ratio is very high to be taken from sales revenue, it should be around one third of that,” Gunaydin said.

Other tourism business owners have suggested the contributi­on should be taken from visitors, not companies, a method used in other destinatio­ns like Dubai and Spain.

“All companies have a budget. The budgets will not add up at (the) last quarter with this contributi­on,” a senior manager at an internatio­nal hotel chain said.

“There are hotels which are writing off losses, having difficulty in paying loans and hotels which restructur­ed their debt,” the manager said. “Now all the calculatio­ns are trashed.”

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