Industry veterans don't foresee a revival without a push for consumption
The hospitality sector mavens are wary about the slip between the cup and the lip
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Nearly two years after Covid-19 struck and crippled the hospitality industry, the government offered some succour to the sector through an extension of the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS). But many in the industry believe the finance minister’s announcement is merely cosmetic and will stop short of providing a booster to the sector hobbling with Covid-induced measures—shutdowns, night curfews, capacity restrictions etc.
In her Budget speech, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced that the ECLGS, which has provided additional credit to over 130 lakh MSMEs during the pandemic, will be extended by a year, to March 2023, with an eye on the fragile hospitality sector. Its guarantee cover is also set to be expanded by Rs 50,000 crore to a total of Rs 5 lakh crore, and the additional amount will be earmarked exclusively for hospitality and related enterprises. But the proposals failed to cheer up industry veterans, who were plumping for more direct intervention to revive the sector to pre-pandemic levels.
“This is a welcome move, but the government has acknowledged only 10 percent of the problem,” says Kapil Chopra, founder and CEO, The Postcard Hotel. “The Budget speech talks about job creation and boosting the economy, where is the push for consumption that would allow people to go out to eat and help restaurants survive?”