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San Pedro, Dominican Republic.- Caribbean Hotels and Tourism Association (CHTA) president  Enrique de Marchena said Wednesday that the Tourism Ministry’s (SECTUR) strategies to mitigate the global economic crisis’ impact on that sector contradicts with the Government’s policy of creating and increasing fees.

He also criticized the way City councils in tourism regions demand tax payments from investment projects, which are exempted by the incentives law.

Marchena said the attitude clashes with the Caribbean islands’ generalized policy to protect the tourism industry, in response to its difficulties.

He said it’s of concern that while Tourism minister Francisco Javier Garcia has pledged to promote awareness with his other Government colleagues, its agencies foment a growing practice creating taxes via the administrative route or exorbitantly increase the rates charged to the hotels. “The measures announced (by Garcia) are important, but most of them more than a plan against the crisis, are the type of regular policies which should’ve been put into practice three or four years and instead constitute an update which couldn’t wait.”

He cited the case of the private aqueducts which some have to build hotels where there’s no public water supply, and the Port Authority’s decision to collect taxes on marinas and tourist piers built by the private sector.

Marchena, speaking in the university UCE, said countries such as Antigua, Bahamas, Bermuda, Mexico, St Martin, St Kitts & Nevis, and St Vincent and the Grenadines have adopted serious measures including tax reduction and exemptions on fuel, yacht operators, the cost of rooms, imported article for hotels, payrolls, and foods and wines.

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COMMENTS
9 comment(s)
Written by: easyrider, 25 Jun 2009 11:42 AM
From: Dominican Republic, Punta cana
The D.R. is one of the most attractive tropical island destinations for tourists in the western hemisphere. It is of utmost importance that the image of the D.R. doe's not become tarnished by unreasonable taxes levied against the tourists visiting the country or the tourism infrustucture.
Written by: xwill7, 25 Jun 2009 4:59 PM
From: United States, Chicago
you are correct easyrider
Written by: gmiller261, 25 Jun 2009 5:15 PM
From: United States
Oh lord.. Some other new fiasco.

Did this guy just wake up?

Dominican Republic = Corruption, Corruption, Corruption….
Written by: Juango, 25 Jun 2009 7:47 PM
From: United States, far S. Florida (formerly Santo Domingo)
Javier Garcia & his Boss are so blinded with their ambitions of "mo' money", they fail to see how quickly they are killing the Goose the lays the Golden Eggs. Amazing ! How do they sleep at night. Are they really that inept ? !
Written by: synapse, 26 Jun 2009 1:01 AM
From: United States

Only in the DR could they be so consistently UNCOMPETITIVE with the rest of the Caribbean market, -- as if there was no competition.

Good Lord it took the DR 50 years to discover that it was the best industry to foment and now it will take them another 50 to figure out how to get it right. Other islands discovered 30 years ago that the cheap low quality ALL INCLUSIVE budget market was a poison pill and they let the DR have it because they decided to deliver high quality experiences to the affluent market rather than the masses that would keep the industry perpetually broke! Now the government wants to tax the masses into oblivion and end up with empty hotels because the affluent still don't go to the DR.
Written by: PuntaCanaMike, 26 Jun 2009 2:49 PM
From: Dominican Republic
I am trying to start my company....like watching oil based paint dry at 3 degrees celcius.

Right when you think you are ready...another fee and another long wait as nobody gives a crap that you "Want to stimulate this economy"!!!!
Written by: guillermone, 8 Jul 2009 5:12 PM
From: United States
I remember while leisurely walking out side and near a resort, dressed in casual beach attire, I approached a 3-wheel bycicle ice cream peddler. He looked Haitian, but spoke with a Dominican accent. I had a flash back of childhood memories, the fun and pleasure of eating ice cream. I requested a vanila flavored paleta. "Son 5", he said. "Cinco pesos, que barato". "No, $5 US dollars," he responded. Thinking it was a confusion, "no solo quiero 1palata." And again the ice cream man responded, "$5.00 dolares Americanos." I just could not believe this guy was trying to rip me off, just because he thought I was a tourist. And this was not just an isolated case. It happened to me repeatedly, all over the DR, as soon as they detected something foreign or non-dominican in me, prices immediately shot-up. The gov't exploits tourism and private Dominicans exploit the tourist. A perfect combination, the dynamic duo, one sticks you up in the front and the other in the back. It will back fire.
Written by: Perez, 11 Jul 2009 3:32 PM
From: Dominican Republic
wow! $5 for a paleta??? damn not even in the U.S. is a paleta that expensive!
Written by: Perez, 11 Jul 2009 3:33 PM
From: Dominican Republic
I meant $5 dollars*
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