Hanafin may scrap €10 air travel tax

MINISTER FOR Tourism Mary Hanafin conceded yesterday the Government’s controversial air travel tax was impacting negatively on…

MINISTER FOR Tourism Mary Hanafin conceded yesterday the Government’s controversial air travel tax was impacting negatively on decisions by airlines to adopt new routes to Ireland.

However she said scrapping the controversial €10 tariff should not be seen as a “panacea” for the problems besetting the tourism industry.

Speaking at the launch of Tourism Ireland’s global marketing strategy for 2011, Ms Hanafin said removing the tax in the upcoming budget was “under consideration” as it had failed to generate the expected revenue.

At the time of its introduction in 2008, it was hoped it would net the exchequer about €125 million. Ms Hanafin said yesterday the tax would bring in only about €80 million this year because of a fall-off in visitor numbers.

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While acknowledging that most industry players believed the tax was one of the key factors inhibiting people from coming here, she insisted there was no evidence to suggest it was influencing individual decisions to visit Ireland.

However, the Minister accepted the tariff was affecting airlines and the routes they chose which had a knock-on effect on air access to the island.

The Government was “carefully weighing up” whether abolishing the tax would result in a sufficient boost in tourist numbers and a return for the tourism sector and the economy, she said.

Tourism Ireland chief executive Niall Gibbons said 2010 had been one of the most difficult years on record for the industry.

The agency anticipated 6.8 million people will have visited Ireland from overseas by the end of the year, which represented a decline of 11.6 per cent on 2009. Despite the prevalence of bad news headlines around the world, the country maintained a strong brand as a tourist destination, Mr Gibbons said. Preliminary results from this year’s Fáilte Ireland visitor attitudes survey also suggested the value-for-money perception had increased by 10 per cent. “This was a very strong and positive trend which the agency would seek to capitalise on next year,” he said.

Tourism Ireland plans to launch an advertising campaign next year to restore growth in Ireland’s top four markets – Britain, the US, Germany and France.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times