India, Oct. 23 -- Tourism in India has always been more than leisure - it is a dialogue between civilisations, a carrier of heritage, and a catalyst for inclusive growth. Yet for decades, despite our extraordinary diversity - from Ladakh's monasteries to Kanyakumari's shores - its full potential remained constrained by fragmented taxation and high costs. The recent reforms in the Goods and Services Tax (GST) have begun to change that story.

For years, India's tourism and hospitality industry bore the weight of a complicated tax regime. A patchwork of levies - service tax, value-added tax (VAT), luxury tax - created confusion and inflated travel costs. The introduction of GST brought simplification, but the recent rationalisation of rates...