The tourism industry in the Pacific region is
again raising grave concerns over the negative impact of the UK
government’s proposed further increase in Air Passenger Duty
(APD), scheduled for November 2010. Members of the Pacific Tourism
Leaders’ Forum, meeting in Sydney, are calling the tax ‘ill
conceived and draconian’.
Tourism is among the top three income generators
for most countries in the Pacific region and is the top sector for
employment in almost all of them. Long haul tourism contributes
significant numbers and the industry fears that this segment is at
considerable risk because of the planned further increases in APD.
Participants at the meeting, organised by PATA,
fear that such taxes act as a barrier to trade and development
within the region, given its high dependence on the tourist
dollar.
The planned increase in Air Passenger Duty in
November adds significant additional costs to business and leisure
travellers visiting the Asia Pacific region. A family of four
travelling from the United Kingdom to any destination in Band D
(distance of 6,000 statute miles or more) face a travel bill of
GBP 340. In January 2007 that same family paid just GBP 80
sterling.
“The UKAPD has raised alarm bells across the
region’s tourism sector and catalysed the formation of the forum.
This tax is politically motivated and is clearly the result of
poor policy making,” said Matt Hingerty, Managing Director of the
Australian Tourism Export Council and a member of the PTLF. “It is
difficult to understand that a global economic power such as the
United Kingdom could act with such insensitivity. This draconian
tax serves only to generate revenue with absolutely no benefit to
the environment that it purports to protect.”
The PTLF
comprises major stakeholders from the region’s travel and tourism
industry embracing public and private sectors and is a broad
representation of the communities served across the region.
“The impact will be even more severe if other European nations
choose to adopt this type of tax on travel. Indeed, the effects of
such a regressive tax would be catastrophic for the smaller
economies in the region,” Mr Hingerty added. “The forum finds some
comfort in the fact the Britain’s major opposition party
(Conservatives) has pledged, in its election manifesto, to review
and reform the Air Passenger Duty. The next Chancellor of the
Exchequer must act swiftly and decisively. Jobs are at stake
across our region.”
PATA Regional Director - Pacific Chris
Flynn said, “One of the attractions of the Pacific region is its
pristine beauty, known and appreciated by generations of travellers. The long haul tourism industry has helped to preserve
natural environments because of the income generated for regional
governments.
“Threats to tourism revenue will lead to
pressure on natural resources as locals look to other sources of
income – and that’s bound to include the leveraging of these
resources. The disruption of air travel caused by the volcanic
eruption in Iceland illustrates the sensitivities of the region.
New Zealand, for example, lost several million dollars a day in
tourist revenue when flights from Europe were grounded.”
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