Sri Lankan hotels overcharging for rooms – Lakshman Yapa
July 12, 2013 08:04 am
Sri Lanka’s hotels are
overcharging for rooms in an attempt to cash in on growing visitor numbers
after a decades-long war, a minister said Thursday. Investment Promotion
Minister Lakshman Yapa Abeywardena said some hotels had hiked up room rates
10-fold since the end of the war in 2009 without improving service.
“Soon after the war, the
industry took off and people started investing in hotels. Existing hotels which
were charging $50 to $60 suddenly increased rates to $600,” he said, describing
the rates as “unrealistic”.
“These high rates are
destroying the entire tourism industry,” Abeywardena told reporters in Colombo,
arguing that the country could pocket more from an increased number of visitors
if room rates were lower.
The minister made the
comments after giving formal approval for development of an $850 million “mixed
development” complex -- an official euphemism for a casino and hotel -- in the
capital.
“We can’t impose a ceiling
on rates, but they should realise that they are sending tourists to much more
value-for-money destinations like Thailand and Malaysia,” Abeywardena said of
some hotel owners.
“We should keep rates low
like in Thailand and make more money from other things like entertainment,
shopping and restaurants.”
Despite drawing a record
one million holidaymakers to the island last year, tourism contributed just one
percent to Sri Lanka’s $60 billion economy.
The number of holiday
makers coming to Sri Lanka in the first five months of this year increased by
13.2 percent compared to the same period a year earlier.
The minister said
discussions were also at an advanced stage with the local partner of Australia’s
gambling mogul James Packer for a $350 million “mixed development” in Colombo.
Local media reports have
said that two large scale casinos could add a billion dollars to the gaming
industry in the country and help Sri Lanka reach its target of 2.5 million tourists
by 2016, AFP reports.