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Tourism Tax Credit Earns Industry Support
(New York) A panel of Tourism Taxation experts today announced
unanimous support for proposed legislation that will help
stimulate an ailing travel and tourism industry by offering tax
incentives to the American public to travel.
The
Taxation Policy Task
Force, established by the World Travel &
Tourism Council (WTTC) and made up of academics, private sector
leaders, and government officials working in the travel and
tourism industry, unanimously endorsed the proposal awaiting
U.S. congressional approval to provide a tax credit of up to
$500 per individual or $1,000 for a couple filing jointly for
qualified personal travel and tourism (i.e. trips that exceed
100 miles from home and include at least one over night stay).
“If this proposal is passed by Congress, it will give vital
stimulus to the travel and tourism industry and create strong
conditions for a rapid recovery,” says Dr Richard Kelley, WTTC
Taxation Task Force Chairman, and Chairman of Outrigger
Enterprises, a hotel and resorts management company based in
Hawaii. “The tax credit will provide a great incentive for
Americans to take their first step toward ‘normal’ travel
patterns,” says Dr Kelley.
The proposal contained in Senate bill S. 1500 and H.R. bill 3041
includes:
1)
A tax credit for qualified personal travel expenses;
2)
Full deductibility for business entertainment expenses; and,
3)
Extended carry-back period for travel or tourism industry
losses.
In assessing the tax credit initiative, the Task Force measured
the proposal against WTTC’s guidelines for Intelligent Taxation,
concluding that it adhered to criteria on efficiency,
simplicity, and effective stimulus to growth. An information
sheet on the Panel’s review of the tax credit proposal is
attached.
WTTC sees the rebuilding of the transportation and lodging
sectors as central to the recovery of the U.S. travel and
tourism industry, which will in turn benefit other sectors of
the overall economy that provide complimentary products and
services to the industry. The travel and tourism industry has
been disproportionately hit by the events of September 11, and
remains burdened by tax increases, which the industry has
shouldered over the past several years.
The Task Force recommends that the tax credit be made easy for
individuals to claim on their federal income tax forms, and that
the deadline for taking the credit be pegged to six month’s from
the date of the bill’s enactment. The panel also recommends a
review of the situation after the six-month period for possible
extension.
For further information contact:
Scott Mills
Director, Communications
World Travel & Tourism Council
Tel: +44 (0) 870 727 9882
Fax: +44 (0) 870 728 9882
scottm@wttc.org |