Monday, June 19, 2017
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
The Bahamas has been warned not to “cut off our nose to spite our face” over plans to regulate and tax the vacation rental industry.
Matt Aubry, the Organisation for Responsible Governance’s (ORG) executive director, told Tribune Business that this nation needed to adopt a long-term strategy that embraced the sector’s potential economic growth benefits, rather than just a narrow focus on supervising it.
Questioning whether the Bahamas properly understood the vacation rental home market, Mr Aubry said “a more holistic and comprehensive” assessment was essential to developing plans for its development.
“It’s a sector that needs to be evaluated fully, not just from a taxation and regulatory standpoint, but its potential in the marketplace, so that we don’t cut of our nose to spite our face,” he told this newspaper.
“If we want to look at this thing in a more holistic and comprehensive way, we can understand things more from a development standpoint. There are so many opportunities that we’re looking at with limited data or with limited objectives.”
Mr Aubry was responding after Dionisio D’Aguilar, minister of tourism, told Tribune Business last week that the Government had entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Airbnb, the largest and fastest-growing vacation rental website.
Airbnb will collect all due taxes and fees associated with Bahamas-based vacation rentals listed on its website, and ensure those landlords are in full compliance with local rules and regulations.
The website, though, will not collect Value-Added Tax (VAT) on the Government’s behalf due to difficulties in determining whether a vacation rental has met the $100,000 turnover per annum registration threshold.
As a result, Mr D’Aguilar suggested the Bahamas will have to introduce some kind of room/occupancy tax for the vacation rental market, and give landlords a choice between paying this or VAT. Once it does this, the MoU with Airbnb will become a full agreement.
The Minister acknowledged that the Bahamas needed to achieve a delicate balance when it came to vacation rental regulation/taxation, and suggested he favoured a ‘light touch’ approach to ensure there was no market ‘shock’ that drove business elsewhere.
For an ORG-commissioned study by Oxford Economics, the research consultancy, recently identified the vacation rental market as a potential growth opportunity that could boost Bahamian ownership and entrepreneurship in the tourism industry, plus aid economic diversification.
However, it found that the Bahamas’ ability to make further inroads into this market was already being impeded by old, impractical laws and regulations that treated vacation rentals like mega resorts.
Apart from the International Persons Landholding Act imposing “especially strict rules” on foreign home owners, the study said all vacation-based properties have to be approved by the Bahamas Investment Authority (BIA).
“While vacation home owners and foreign owners can overcome these hurdles, this comes at a cost in terms of time and money,” the report’s author, the Oxford Economics consultancy, said.
“In the view of interviewees, most of the complexity reflects laws that are designed with mega-resorts in mind. For example, if the owner is not the primary occupant, then the applicant must present detailed business plans that addresses issues such as how many people will be employed, traffic issues, etc. For the vacation home rental market, this is not a practical approach.”
Mr Aubry told Tribune Business he backed ‘light touch’ approach indicated by Mr D’Aguilar, saying: “Particularly with this kind of business model, it’s critical.
“There needs to be an understanding of two things: What is going to be regulated, and the economic impact to this industry, and how does that relate to taxation and collection? What is the long-term impact?
“When you look at making policy for the second home vacation rental market, I don’t think we have quite understood this model and its applicability.”
Mr Aubry said that between Airbnb and Home Away, another popular vacation rental website, there were 1,200 Bahamas-based listings. He questioned, though, whether there had been “any follow-up” by the Bahamian authorities to “understand the scope and business” of these rentals.
Suggesting that this would inhibit the crafting of long-term strategy to aid the Government’s dual regulation and economic growth objectives, Mr Aubry said there was no ‘one-size fits all’ business model for the sector.
He used as an example his two neighbours, one of whom rented out their property one-two times’ per month, and another who did the same - but on a yearly basis.
“We have to define what it means and, more importantly, ensure we don’t put obstacles in the way of this,” Mr Aubry said, referring to ORG’s study. “We’re putting in something that changes their level of obligation and not thinking about the long-term processes.
“We’re putting in regulation for the short-term, but we need to be looking long-term. That’s where we have to look. What is the long-term strategic vision with this product, as we want to facilitate Bahamian ownership and entrepreneurship.”
Mr Aubry added that Airbnb already employed a form of self-regulation, where it vetted landlords and ensured they were removed from the site if their properties received consistent bad reviews.
Besides fostering Bahamian tourism industry ownership, the vacation rental market allows this nation to attract a different visitor niche that does not want to stay in mega resorts.
These are the tourists seeking the authentic experiences described by Dr Hubert Minnis when the Prime Minister addressed the Bahamas Hotel and Tourism Association (BHTA) last week, calling for an infusion of cultural and heritage-based activities into this nation’s product.
Vacation rental tourists also inject visitor spending directly into Bahamian-owned businesses that otherwise would not receive it. Tribune Business has this year seen a notable upsurge in tourists shopping at, or walking to, Super Value’s Winton store - indicating a likely rise in business for nearby vacation rentals.
This market is also a potential tool for developing, and spreading the tourism wealth, to Family Island economies as vacation rentals require less infrastructure than major resorts.
Mr Aubry suggested vacation rentals held potential for revitalising run-down areas and communities, with the benefits extending beyond just landlords.
“These kinds of industries that facilitate the ownership and participation in the tourism industry also create supply chains for local manufacturers and agriculture,” he told Tribune Business.
Such businesses would be better able to supply product to vacation rental homes than larger resorts, and Mr Aubry added: “The scale fosters a lot more local development if done right.”
Oxford Economics’ study, which analysed the impact of a 50 per cent increase upon current vacation rental activity, found this would grow stopover tourists by 8,350 annually, and generate $13 million in additional visitor spending.
Excluding 50 per cent of that $13 million from its analysis, as that represented lease costs, the ORG study said: “The full economic impact - direct, indirect, and induced - of additional spending by these new tourists is estimated at $9.8 million of additional GDP and 225 new jobs.
“The sectors most affected are community, social and personal services, which receives 35 per cent of the GDP impact and 50 per cent of the jobs impact, and hotels and restaurants, which receive 23 per cent of the GDP and 18 per cent of the jobs impact.”
Data obtained by Oxford Economics showed that the Bahamas had 1,878 properties registered with Airbnb, of which 908 - just under half - were deemed to be active.
Highlighting the vacation rental market’s growth and economic potential for the Bahamas, the ORG report showed these numbers were between eight to three times’ higher than comparable Airbnb data for Bermuda, the Cayman Islands and Turks & Caicos.
The Bahamas’ mean occupancy rate was lower than Bermuda’s and Cayman’s, at 38 per cent and 22 per cent, respectively, but higher than Turks & Caicos’s 16 per cent.
When it came to yield, the Bahamas’ mean Airbnb nightly rate of $306 was higher than Bermuda and Cayman’s, but lower than Turks & Caicos’s. This nation’s guest ratings were also in line with its regional rivals.
Mr Aubry said the research had been shared with the BHTA and Ministry of Tourism, and suggested that it could be “furthered” as part of future conversations on the vacation rental market.
Comments
Required says...
The biggest problem with the government's considerations to have Airbnb add VAT to rentals is the threshold issue, and the landlords' ability to reclaim the VAT from their expenses.
There are probably very few private landlords, i.e. those who rent their property "on the side" rather than as their main source of income, whose vacation rental sales reach the VAT threshold. Therefore, these rentals should not be taxed. Even if, undeniably, Airbnb's sales in the Bahamas overall easily exceed the threshold.
However, Airbnb merely acts as an agent. If their commission exceeds the threshold, then the government should consider making Airbnb pay VAT on that part of their transactions, and that part only.
If, however, the government wants to add VAT to the overall rental price, then the government must allow landlords who rent their properties via Airbnb to reclaim VAT on their inputs, e.g. repairs, cleaning, regular maintenance, of these properties.
Posted 20 June 2017, 3:20 a.m. Suggest removal
bcitizen says...
Would it even be legal to impose a tax just on Airbnb customers and not all online vacationers? What about long term rentals? This just seems like it will get messy in a hurry. Was not the reason VAT was put into place was to capture areas of the economy like this that were not being taxed? Before VAT tourists in a vacation rentals paid relatively no tax. Now they pay VAT on restaurants, electricity, water, phones, car rentals, property managers etc. So it is a fallacy that these rentals are escaping taxes as they were pre VAT. So now these rental homes will pay VAT on everything except the final rental price and might have to pay a special tax? This is on the verge of double taxation VAT on all your costs plus a extra tax where VAT is not chargeable. I thought The Bahamas needed to improve its ease of doing business. Not make it worse. I agree with Required if anything new is to be taxed maybe it should be a 7.5% Vat payed on Airbnb's rental fee.
Posted 20 June 2017, 1:41 p.m. Suggest removal
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