-KH News Desk (editorial1@imaws.org)

Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Minister of Tourism and Culture, announced that the government is actively considering a harmonized infrastructure status for the hotel industry. He made this statement during a comprehensive address at the 98th Annual General Meeting (AGM) and annual convention of FICCI.
Strategic Significance and Vision
The consideration of infrastructure status for the hotel industry is a long-standing demand from the sector and is a key component of the government’s ambitious vision to transform tourism into a $1 trillion sector generating millions of jobs by 2047, India’s centenary of independence.
The Minister emphasized the critical significance of granting this status:
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Unlock Capital: It is expected to unlock significant capital inflows.
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Expand Inventory: It will facilitate the expansion of the rooms inventory.
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Strengthen Competitiveness: It will strengthen India’s global price competitiveness in the tourism market.
Achieving the $1 trillion vision requires substantial private investment and reimagined hospitality models to compete effectively with regional peers. The tourism sector currently contributes 5.2% directly to India’s GDP and supports 84 million livelihoods.
Government Initiatives and Infrastructure Push
Shekhawat highlighted that the consideration is part of a broader government push to position tourism as a structural engine of economic growth. Key initiatives include:
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Infrastructure Programme: The government has invested over ₹12,000 crore in what the Minister called “one of the largest tourism infrastructure programmes in the world.”
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Destination Development: 50 global-standard destinations are being developed under a challenge-mode framework.
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Connectivity: India’s connectivity infrastructure has been transformed, with operational airports increasing from fewer than 75 to 127, and the development of 10 international-standard cruise terminals and 150,000 kilometers of new highways.
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Spiritual Tourism: The rejuvenation of temple corridors (including Kashi, Mahakal, Kedarnath, Puri, and Ayodhya) was described as “one of the most transformative tourism initiatives in modern India.”
Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Minister of Tourism and Culture, on the long-standing demand: “This is a long-standing demand that will unlock capital, expand rooms inventory and strengthen our global price competitiveness.”

- FICCI President Harsha Vardhan Agarwal noted the vast potential: “Despite India’s civilisational depth and diversity, it attracts only 10 million international visitors, compared with France’s 90 million… This shows not a gap in potential, but a vast opportunity waiting to be unlocked.”






