Hotel tax is the best idea for Festival city
The hotels in Edinburgh make millions every year, not only during the Festival period in August, yet no doubt we will have to listen to the usual complaints from the hoteliers should such a tax be implemented. The usual statements concerning losing tourists, people not coming to Edinburgh etc will be trotted out but should be ignored. The fact is hotel prices during the Festival are pushed up in order to fleece the tourists with nothing being given back to Edinburgh.
The system works in many European cities and indeed when faced with such an item on a hotel bill when in one of these cities my first thought is always: “Edinburgh should be doing this.”
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdNever mind the usual moans from the hotel industry: tourists who want to come to Edinburgh will still come; an extra £7 per week for a hotel room will not be a deterrent. Any hoteliers objecting due to this possibility should be told to reduce their prices by £1 per night if it is such a worry.
David Bruce
Saughton Road North
Edinburgh
Does The Scotsman really think that a “transient visitor tax” is likely to damage the various festivals rather than potentially help them?
In August and at other busy times, city hotels are able to quadruple overnight rates because of demand; an additional levy of 0.5 per cent or 1 per cent is hardly likely to send people to Manchester, excellent though its (biennial) festival is.
Whether such a levy is best managed through a tourism business improvement district (BID) or directly through a business rate supplement needs detailed discussion.
A reminder: the most successful tourism destination country in the world – France – has operated such a tax for years and is still successful.
Richard Kerley
Centre for Scottish Public Policy
Edinburgh