Half of the tourism tax imposed will go to the
state where it is collected; parade participants
at the 4th Usunan
Festival competition in Kota Belud, Sabah, Malaysia pictured
|
Malaysian tourism and culture minister Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz has
announced that the tourism tax will be split 50:50 between the federal and
state governments, rather than 90:10, a welcome move for the Malaysian
Association of Tour and Travel Agents (MATTA).
This means that state governments are to receive RM5 (US$1.30) for every
RM10 collected in the tourism tax.
This is a sharp contrast to the initial share of 33 per cent, or RM3.30
for every RM10 collected, before the tourism ministry reduced it further to 10
per cent, the percentage used when the tax was implemented.
MATTA president, Tan Kok Liang, said: “It is certainly a right move in
empowering the states to be more involved with tourism, which brings immense
opportunities and economic benefits to its people.
“The additional funds would allow the states to showcase areas in their
own backyards they know best. Each district can develop a strong ecosystem to
attract and ensure visitors enjoy their stay so that they will want to come
back for more and recommend to others,” he remarked.
This will enable state tourism organisations to be “more aggressive in
overseas promotions”, Tan stated, as the funds could be invested into tourism
infrastructure development and digital marketing such as destination apps that
provide information and on-the-spot bookings.
“A portion of the extra fund should be allocated for human capital
development to train frontliners to provide better customer service, including
learning to communicate in basic foreign languages,” he added.
Nazri had said the funds will be channelled to the states every quarter for
their tourism promotions and activities. The government had raised almost RM40
million in revenue from the tourism tax collected in the first four months of
its implementation.
-TTG Asia.
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