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Airbnb – a scapegoat?

26 Jun 2019 - by Deena Robinson
Comments | 0

GOVERNMENT plans

to regulate Airbnb and

other home-sharing apps

in South Africa, amid

growing concerns that they

are damaging the hotel

industry. But are Airbnb

hosts taking the fall for a

decline in the hospitality

industry?

The Tourism Amendment

Bill states that short-term

home rentals will now

be legislated under the

Tourism Act and empowers

the Minister of Tourism

to determine thresholds

regarding these short-term

home rentals.

Tshifhiwa Tshivhengwa,

ceo of the Tourism

Business Council of SA,

argues that the government

is simply trying to level

the playing field. “All those

in the hospitality industry

have rules they need to

adhere to, while Airbnb

does not. The Bill is trying

to normalise the industry,”

he says.

Tshifhiwa explains that

night thresholds are a

possible regulatory method,

where Airbnb hosts will

have to comply with certain

rules or operate as a

formalised accommodation

option should they exceed

the stipulated number of

nights they are allowed.

A spokesperson for Airbnb

told TNW that the platform

had clear and progressive

rules that supported the

sustainable growth of

home sharing, adding that

Airbnb was in productive

discussions with the SA

government to help hosts

share their homes, follow

the rules and pay their fair

share of tax.

An Airbnb host in

Durban denied that those

offering their homes on

the platform were getting

special treatment and told

TNW that any income she

received from Airbnb was

taxed as she was paid from

overseas. She added that

business was declining for

many, and Airbnb was the

scapegoat.

“We recognise that Airbnb

is here to stay, but there

is chaos in the industry

that government must now

regulate,” said Tshifhiwa.

The Airbnb host

acknowledged that the

platform was cutting into

the business of hotels and

bed-and-breakfasts, but

added that it had enabled

people who had never

had an opportunity to go

on holiday, to do so more

cheaply.

Government intervention

in Airbnb operations is not

unprecedented, with cities

like Barcelona and New

York introducing regulations

that require hosts to be

licensed with the city or

face substantial fines. 

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